Casari v. Victoria Amusement Enterprises, Inc.

194 A. 503, 327 Pa. 382, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 575
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 11, 1937
DocketAppeals, 173 and 181
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 194 A. 503 (Casari v. Victoria Amusement Enterprises, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casari v. Victoria Amusement Enterprises, Inc., 194 A. 503, 327 Pa. 382, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 575 (Pa. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaffer,

From the decree entered in this equity proceeding plaintiffs, 181 in number, and defendants both appeal. A brief was filed under Rule 61 and argument made in behalf of certain persons not parties to the suit, who are shareholders of Victoria Amusement Enterprises, Inc., one of the defendants.

To state all the facts to which our attention is called would require a quite lengthy recital, and would be productive of no worth-while result, so far as making clear the real issue and the equitable principles which are to be invoked in deciding it, as one fact dominates the whole controversy, and that is that John L. Pipa, Jr., was the attorney for plaintiffs, as preferred shareholders of Chamberlain Amusement Enterprises, Inc., and for all the other preferred shareholders of that corporation; *385 everything which he did in connection with its affairs was in that relation, and as their agent. Under the situation here presented, the legal cord which bound him to them likewise connected J. A. Welsh and Stephen L. Gribbin, the two other individual defendants, and made them, as well as him, trustees for all the preferred shareholders of any and all property which had belonged to the Chamberlain Company which came into their hands.

The Chamberlain Company was in financial difficulty. Pipa was employed by its preferred shareholders to represent them. In their behalf he procured the appointment of Stephen L. Gribbin, also a lawyer, as receiver for the company. J. A. Welsh became attorney for the receiver. Before that, along with Pipa, he had acted for the preferred shareholders. They had both received fees from their clients. The Chamberlain Company was the owner of several theatres which it operated. After the receivership had been in existence for some time, the trustee for the bondholders proceeded to foreclose one of the mortgages against the properties which was in default. Pipa at a meeting of the preferred shareholders informed them of the foreclosure proceedings and advised them that he would purchase the properties for them. He appeared at the sale and bought in three of the theatres. At the conclusion of the sale he filed with the sheriff a written statement to the effect that he was acting for the preferred shareholders in purchasing the properties. Three others he did not at that time acquire. Subsequently these came under his control. He was required under his bid to pay to the sheriff $17,600. His clients had not put him in funds to make this payment. On the day of the sale he put up $5,000 of his own money and was granted a few days’ indulgence by the sheriff to pay the balance. In the interval he called a meeting of his clients, which was attended by about seventy of them, some money was raised, just how much is not clear, and a considerable sum was orally pledged. The meeting broke up with the understanding that a fur *386 ther gathering of the shareholders would be arranged by Pipa. No further meeting was had, however, because Pipa arranged with the Pennsylvania Trust Company, which was trustee of the mortgages, that it would refinance the enterprise under a new corporation. Out of funds provided by the Trust Company the necessary money was paid to the sheriff and Pipa was repaid the sum he had advanced. As a result of the financial arrangement which was entered into by Pipa with the Pennsylvania Trust Company, it eventually turned over to him $25,000 of third mortgage bonds covering the properties in payment for his services in the reorganization and refinancing of the properties. Pipa, Welsh and Gribbin proceeded to organize the new company under the name Victoria Amusement Enterprises, Inc. Having done so they then notified the preferred shareholders of the Chamberlain Company that they could become preferred shareholders in the new corporation, with a number of shares equal to that which they held in the-old one, upon payment of sums equal to ten per cent of the par value of the shares held in the old company. Some of the shareholders of the old company paid the assessment, some of the ones who paid are those who appeared before us under Rule 61. Pipa, Welsh and Gribbin took an assignment of all the outstanding common shares to themselves. The common shares alone possessed voting rights.

It was at this point that Pipa, Welsh and Gribbin made their mistake. They did not act fraudulently but mistakenly. Pipa, however he regarded himself, was at all times acting as attorney for all the preferred shareholders. He so stated in writing at the sheriff’s sale. He could not divest himself of their livery without their consent, and could not do anything adverse to their interests. When he arranged for the refinancing of their enterprise and the bringing of the properties together again he was acting as their agent. He could not claim ownership of the properties himself. Welsh and Gribbin *387 knew what Ms relation was when the new company was organized. It, and all its stock, belonged to the preferred shareholders of the old one. It was for them, not for him, Welsh and Gribbin, to say on what terms the holders of shares in the old company should come in. They, Pipa, Welsh and Gribbin, could not, as they attempted to do, deny to any of the old shareholders the right to a place in the new enterprise, and exclude them from continued ownership of their own property if they did not meet the requirements, which they, Pipa, Welsh and Gribbin, prescribed and pay ten per cent of the par value of their old shares as a condition precedent to membership in the new company, and fix their status as that of preferred shareholders in the new concern without voting rights. They, the three men named, because of their relation to the plaintiffs and the other preferred shareholders in the old company, when they secured control of the properties, held them as trustees for those for whom they had been acting.

Pipa first took the position that the theatres belonged to him. This was asserted in the answer which he filed. He had taken title in his individual name.

All three of the individual defendants ultimately recognized, somewhat belatedly we think, that they stood in a trust relation, as they filed a written statement at the close of the long hearings which were held, in which they “admit that the common stock of the Victoria Amusement Enterprises, Incorporated, issued or authorized to them or either of them, is held by them under a voting trust agreement, principally for the benefit of the bondholders of said corporation, under a verbal agreement between the Pennsylvania Trust Company, trustee for the said bondholders, and John L. Pipa, Jr., and secondarily for the benefit of the preferred stockholders of the Victoria Amusement Enterprises, Incorporated, who have subscribed and paid for said preferred stock.” It does not lie in the mouth of the three defendants to say on what terms they hold the common stock so far as the *388 preferred shareholders of the old company are concerned, the stock of the new company belongs to them unconditioned by the three defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
194 A. 503, 327 Pa. 382, 1937 Pa. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casari-v-victoria-amusement-enterprises-inc-pa-1937.