Champion Funding & Foundry Co. v. Heskett

102 S.W. 1050, 125 Mo. App. 516, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 139
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 3, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 102 S.W. 1050 (Champion Funding & Foundry Co. v. Heskett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Champion Funding & Foundry Co. v. Heskett, 102 S.W. 1050, 125 Mo. App. 516, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 139 (Mo. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Action to recover judgment on three promissory notes executed by defendant. In the answer, defendant admitted the execution and delivery of the notes, but alleges they were procured by fraud and prays for their cancellation and for other equitable relief, the nature of which will be disclosed in the statement of the facts of the case. The learned trial judge, sitting as a chancellor, heard the evidence, found the issues in favor of defendant and entered judgment accordingly, from which plaintiff appealed. The facts pertinent to the issues raised by the pleadings are somewhat involved, but must be fully stated in order to discuss intelligently the questions of law presented.

In February, 1903, Archie H. Rife, of Dallas City, Illinois, the inventor of a certain type of carburetor obtained United States letters patent covering his invention and in July of the same year duly assigned the same to the Champion Funding Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Iowa for the purpose of selling territorial rights to vend the device. The stockholders contributed five thousand dollars in cash to the capital stock and the company sold some county rights realizing proceeds that brought its net assets, exclusive of the value of the patent, to about eleven thousand dollars. The sales were made with the agreement on the part of the company that when it should become possessed of funds to the amount of fifty thousand dollars, it would erect a suitable factory and proceed to manufacture the device to supply the demands of those who had purchased county rights. Without waiting for the consummation of this purpose and with affairs in the [521]*521condition stated, its five stockholders, who owned all of the capital stock, concluded to form a new corporation to conduct the business on a different plan from that being pursued.

Accordingly on the fourteenth day of January, 1904, these stockholders succeeded in incorporating the present company under the laws of Arizona with an authorized capital stock of six hundred and fifty thousand dollars, which was distributed as follows: Three hundred thousand dollars was given to the five stockholders of the old company in consideration of the assignment and transfer to the new company of the “patents and improvements, patent rights, unsold territory, factory site, office equipment, business, copyrights and moneys in bank” owned by the old company; fifty thousand dollars was set aside for the re-purchase by the new company of .certain territorial rights, which had been sold; and the remaining' three -hundred thousand dollars was placed in the treasury for the purpose of being sold to raise funds for the uses of the corporation. The three hundred thousand dollars of stock given in purchase of the assets of the old company was divided in this manner: The assets transferred by tbe old to the new company (exclusive of the patent) which, as stated, amounted to eleven thousand dollars, were deemed to have paid for one hundred and fifty thousand dollars of this stock, and each of the five stockholders in the old company ■received thirty thousand dollars as his share thereof, for which he was accounted to have paid the sum of two thousand and two hundred dollars. The remaining one hundred and fifty thousand dollars of this stock was divided into five portions of thirty thousand dollars each and it was proposed to sell each portion to some person whom the five original stockholders desired to have associated with them in the control of the corporation at the price of two thousand and two hundred dollars cash for each portion, so that the corporation [522]*522would be controlled by a board of ten members, , each of whom would own thirty thousand dollars' of stock, for which he would have paid two thousand and two hundred dollars. The proceeds to be derived from sales of such portions were to go into the treasury of the company, so that, in effect, the members of the old concern received one hundred and .fifty thousand dollars in stock of the new corporation for all of the assets transferred, including the patent, and the remainder of the stock was to. be sold for the benefit of the corporation.

A novel plan was adopted for the sale of the treasury stock, which as stated, amounted to three hundred thousand dollars and from which the directors expected to derive the means to further the enterprise. This stock was divided into portions of five shares each (the par value of a share being one hundred dollars). Each stock purchaser was required to buy a certificate for one. of these portions at the price of five hundred dollars, the par value of the shares, and in addition was required to buy the right to vend the carburetor in two counties, for which he must pay the sum of one thousand dollars. His purchase of stock and county rights entitled him to receive appointment as an agent of the company for the sale of stock and county rights to others and for each sale he might make in his own or any unsold territory he was to receive a commission of five hundred dollars, and for each one made in territory sold to another he was to have a commission of four hundred dollars, and one hundred dollars was to be paid to the owner of the territory. All sales were to be made on exactly the same terms; that is, each purchaser was to buy five shares of stock, two county rights and an agency for which he was to pay the gross sum of one thousand and five hundred dollars. Agents were not expected to close sales. They were provided by the company with pamphlets, circulars and other printed “literature” extolling in superlative language the merits of the carburetor and [523]*523with “cards of introduction” to the president of the company. Armed with these, they were to endeavor to persuade those who were worth one thousand and five hundred dollars, or more, to. go to the principal office of the company at Burlington, Iowa, and investigate for themselves and, as an inducement, the company, on being advised by an agent of the contemplated visit of a prospective purchaser of the requisite qualification, sent the latter money to pay his railroad fare and agreed, to defray his hotel bill while in Burlington. The introduction card presented by the visitor, which had to be signed by an agent to obtain an audience for its bearer, determined which agent was entitled to receive the commission should a sale be effected. The value placed upon county rights to vend the carburetor was uniform. Any two counties in the United States could be bought for one thousand dollars, and the purchaser who bought the right ih two of the most populous and wealthy counties in the country, paid no more therefor than must be paid for the right in two desert counties. It was to be a case of “First come, first served,” and each purchaser was to be given the choice of unsold counties.

Nor did the plans of the promoters leave out of consideration provision for the manufacture and distribution of carburetors. The citizens of . Dallas City, Illinois, a town across the river from Burlington, offered a bonus of three thousand dollars for the location of the company’s factory in that place. The offer was accepted and at the time defendant became interested the foundation of a somewhat pretentious factory building had been laid. It was the avowed purpose of the company to complete the building, equip it with the necessary machinery, and supply the demand for carburetors "that might result from the disposition of county rights. Until that could be done, the -practical utility of the invention was to a great extent conjectural. A few carburetors had been made and installed, one to an ordinary [524]

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.W. 1050, 125 Mo. App. 516, 1907 Mo. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champion-funding-foundry-co-v-heskett-moctapp-1907.