Carnagie Trust Co. v. Security Life Insurance

68 S.E. 412, 111 Va. 1, 1910 Va. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 9, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 412 (Carnagie Trust Co. v. Security Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carnagie Trust Co. v. Security Life Insurance, 68 S.E. 412, 111 Va. 1, 1910 Va. LEXIS 1 (Va. 1910).

Opinion

Keith P.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Carnegie Trust Company and Robert J. Davidson filed their bill in the Chancery Court of the City of Richmond, from which it appears that the Carnegie Trust Company is the holder and owner of certain voting trust certificates, representingT2,200 shares of the capital stock of the Security Life [12]*12Insurance Company of America, and 188 shares of the capital stock of that company, and that Robert J. Davidson, trustee of the Guarantee Title and Trust Company of Pittsburg, is the holder of voting trust certificates representing 12,667 shares of the capital stock of said Security Life Insurance Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Virginia, with its principal office in the city of Richmond and its chief executive offices in the city of Chicago, State of Illinois; that the principal business of the insurance company is to do a general life insurance business; and that there have been legally issued and are now outstanding fifty thousand shares of its capital stock, each of the par value of ten dollars. The bill then sets out in detail the negotiations entered into between certain named persons which resulted in what is known as the “February Agreement,” from which it appears that, by an agreement made the 1st day of February, 1907, between Otis, Johnson, Durbin, Kieran and Duff, parties of the first part, who are named as “trustees,” and other parties of the second part, who are named as “subscribers,” the trustees have agreed to purchase 30,000 shares of the capital stock of the Security Life Insurance Company of America, all of which stock had been issued and •stands on the books of the company in the names of the trustees; “and whereas said subscribers have arranged to procure an interest in said shares so purchased, as hereinafter provided, and

“Whereas, all parties hereto, in order to promote and protect the value of said stock, and to secure the satisfactory management of said security company for a period of years, are desirous that the title to all of said stock shall at all times stand on the books of said security company in the name of the trustees during the continuance of this agreement, and that said stock shall be held together in one block and voted •as the trustees, or a majority of them, may determine, for the period of twenty-five (25) years from February 1, 1907, and

[13]*13“Whereas, said sale of interest in said stock to the-subscribers has been made by the trustees, and accepted by said subscribers, upon the express condition that the same should not vest in the subscribers any right to vote said stock, during the period of this agreement, or any title thereto, except such rights as are in terms conferred by the trustees* certificates hereinafter provided to be issued by the trustees,. and

“Whereas, said Otis, Johnson and Durbin, the three trustees first named above, now hold as trustees under a trust agreement, dated June 14, 1906, certain shares of the capital stock of said security company, and have issued under-that trust agreement certain trustees’ certificates to various, parties, and

“Whereas, the said Otis, Johnson and Durbin have agreed to procure the exchange of the trustees’ certificates issued by them under said agreement of date June 14, 1906, in exchange for the trustees’ certificates calling for a like amount of' stock to be issued as hereinafter provided;

“Now. therefore, it is agreed by and between the parties hereto, in consideration of the premises, and of their mutual covenants each with the other, as follows:

“First: Each subscriber hereto, or to any counterpart hereof, agrees to pay to the trustees upon the signing of this agreement the amount set opposite his respective name, and for each twenty-five ($25.00) dollars so paid, each subscriber,, his legal representative or assigns, shall be entitled to receive at the expiration of this agreement, one share of the capital stock of said Security Life and Annuity Company of' America. The sums paid by the subscribers shall be used and retained by the trustees as their own property for the purchase price of the trustees’ certificates to be - issued to subscribers as hereinafter provided. Provided, however, that the subscribers to the trust agreement, dated June 14, 1906, [14]*14who become parties hereto as provided in the succeeding clause hereof, shall not be required to pay any money to the trustees, the surrender of their trustees’ certificates issued under ■said agreement of June 14, 1906, being accepted by the parties hereto in lieu of other payment.” It then provides that ■the subscribers to the trust agreement of June 14, 1906, may become parties to the agreement of February 1, 1907, by signing the last-named agreement and surrendering the trustees’ •certificates held by them under the agreement of June 14, 1906, and shall then be entitled to receive trustees’ certificates issued under the agreement of February 1, 1907, in strict accordance with its terms, it being expressly stipulated upon the face of each certificate, that “no voting right passes by or under this certificate or by or under any agreement, expressed or implied. This certificate is issued under and pursuant to the terms of a certain agreement dated February 1, 1907, entered into by and between Joseph E. Otis, W. O. Johnson, W. T. Durbin, P. J. Kieran and Edward E. Duff, as trustees, of the first part, and sundry other subscribers to said agreement, of the second part. This certificate is transferable only •on the books of the undersigned trustees by the registered holder either .in person or by attorney, duly authorized according to the rules established for that purpose by the trustees, and on surrender hereof; and until so transferred, the trustees may treat the registered holder as the owner hereof for all purposes whatsoever, except that the delivery of stock •certificates hereunder shall not be made without surrender hereof.” Provision is then made in the trust agreement for the termination of the trust in 3932 upon the expiration of twenty-five years, and in the meantime for filling any vacancy that may occur among the trustees or their successors.

By clauses nine and ten of the “February Agreement” it is provided, (clause ninel that “The trustees may, in their discretion, select some bank in Chicago to act as transfer agent •for the trustees’ certificates herein provided for. And in that [15]*15event, no such trustees’ certificates shall be valid until countersigned by such transfer agent;” and (clause ten) that “Said trustees, or their successors in trust, from time to time, shall vote the shares of stock embraced m this agreement at all meetings, general or special, of the stockholders of said security •company upon any matter, proposition or thing which may be submitted to any such meeting, and they shall possess in that respect the same powers as though they were the sole, unrestricted owners of such stock. The trustees may use said voting power in the election of any ,_such trustees as officers or .directors of said security company.”

The bill does not charge that the agreement dated February 1, 1907, and filed as an exhibit with the bill, was procured bv fraud; it does not charge that it is fraudulent upon its face; and there is no charge of any fraudulent purpose or act upon the part of the trustees or any other person, natural or artificial, who is made a party to the bill.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 412, 111 Va. 1, 1910 Va. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carnagie-trust-co-v-security-life-insurance-va-1910.