Checotah Hardware Co. v. Hensley

1914 OK 254, 141 P. 422, 42 Okla. 260, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 348
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 9, 1914
Docket3254, 4071
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1914 OK 254 (Checotah Hardware Co. v. Hensley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Checotah Hardware Co. v. Hensley, 1914 OK 254, 141 P. 422, 42 Okla. 260, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 348 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

BREWER, C.

No. 3254 involves an appeal from the order of the court overruling a demurrer. No. 4071 is an appeal from the final judgment in the same suit. A stipulation has been filed in the last case asking that it be advanced and consolidated with the first appeal. In pursuance thereof, the cases are hereby consolidated and will be considered and treated as one.

The plaintiff M. H. Hensley brought the suit against the Checotah Hardware Company, a corporation, and two individuals, alleged to be stockholders and officers of the corporation. As nearly as we can gather from the allegations of the petition and the prayer for relief, the suit has two distinct aspects. Its first branch is to have a sale of stock formerly owned by plaintiff, and sold to the individual defendants, rescinded, and set aside, and the shares of stock reissued to plaintiff, thus re-estab *262 lishing his status as a stockholder. The second branch is to recover for the corporation large items of real property held by the individual defendants and alleged to have been paid for out of the funds of the corporation. Also to have the corporation declared the owner of a -large block of its corporate stock held by the individual defendants, and alleged to have been bought with corporate funds. The court overruled a general and special demurrer to the petition on October 6, 1911, and the first appeal is to review that order. After the demurrer was overruled, and on the same day, the court allowed defendants 30 days to answer. Defendants immediately appealed and did not answer within the 30 days. But on December 20, 1911, defendants filed a motion to be allowed to answer, accompanied with a full verified answer, and' an affidavit of counsel that the defense was meritorious, that he had interviewed the witnesses, etc., and stated further that counsel had been of the opinion that the appeal from the order disposing of the demurrer operated to suspend further proceedings in the case, thus rendering further pleadings unnecessary. The court refused to permit defendants to further plead or file their answer or make defense of any kind, adjudged them in default, and rendered a decree against the corporation and individuals on the petition, without evidence, by which the sale by plaintiff of his shares of stock was rescinded, and the shares were ordered reissued to him. The decree also ordered the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the corporate assets, it also decreed that the corporation was the owner of $12,000 of its capital stock standing in the name of the individual defendants. The court also decreed that 130 tracts or parcels of land of an aggregate value of $110,000 bought and held by the individual defendants had been paid for with corporate funds, and declared them trustees holding title thereto for the corporation, and ordered a conveyance of same. This second appeal is prosecuted to review the action of the court in refusing to let them file their answer and make a defense, and because of the rendition of the final decree as above stated.

We are of opinion that both appeals should be sustained.

*263 1. The first appeal because the petition does not sufficiently plead a case. The relief sought for the corporation, of course, could not be demanded or sued for by plaintiff, until he had established his status as-a stockholder; and then only on certain conditions, necessary to be both pleaded and proven. So unless plaintiff’s petition was sufficient to show a right to rescind the sale by which he had parted with his stock a year before the suit was filed, thereby establishing his status as a stockholder, it would be unnecessary to look further into the allegations. We take it as fundamental that, to rescind a sale long since fully executed, the facts claimed to justify the right should be fully and carefully stated. In this petition it is nowhere shown how many shares of stock plaintiff had sold, nor what had been paid for them; whether it was their full value or less. The total stock of the corporation is not disclosed, nor is the par value of the shares mentioned. The offer to restore the sum received for the stock is:

“The plaintiff hereby offers to do equity and tenders to the defendant Jack Thompson the amount he has received for said stock.'”

No one can tell from the petition how much this was, any more than he can tell how much or what value of stock was sold.

The court in rendering a default decree in this case declared the sale of the stock rescinded, and ordered defendants to reissue plaintiff stock to the extent of one-sixth of the entire capital stock (the entire capital stock is not shown), and then adjudged that this stock be thus reissued, “upon the repayment by M. H. Hensley of the amount he received therefor in money, together with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent.” How much stock was to be reissued, and how much money with interest must be restored to Thompson, as a condition precedent to the re-issuance of the stock, cannot be ascertained either from the decree or the petition on which it is based, and it must follow that it is not an enforceable decree. It would take another suit and adjudication to determine the obligation imposed upon the parties by this decree. Yet the decree is just as full and certain and *264 specific, as is the pleading upon which it is based. It follows Ibat plaintiff has not stated a cause of action by which he could reinvest himself with the character of a stockholder. Unless he was able to plead and prove this status, he was a mere meddler with the corporate affairs; it being no concern of his whether it pursued and recovered its corporate assets or not.

Therefore we conclude that the allegations of the petition relative to the rescission of the sale of plaintiff’s stock are not sufficient to support a decree therefor. This disposes of the case; but, inasmuch as it may be possible, under the facts,' to plead a good cause of action, we will add that we think on one point the further allegations of the petition with reference to recovering the corporate property are not sufficient. Ordinarily a stockholder has no right to either prosecute or defend suits in his own name for the corporation in which he holds the stock. If the corporation has lost property or assets through the fraud of others, or by any other means, it is its duty to, and ordinarily it alone can, in its corporate name, pursue and recover the property. There is, however, an exception to the rule, and plaintiff contends he has brought himself within the exception. After stating the general rule that corporations must ordinarily enforce their own rights and prosecute their own causes of action, it is said in 10 ,C}rc. 963 :

“Subject to exceptions hereafter stated, this rule is applicable in equity as well as at law; so that shareholders cannot ordinarily sue in equity to redress wrongs done to the corporation. The ordinary remedy for injuries to the corporation is to be sought primarily through corporate action. If the directors' irr office will not act in an emergency requiring immediate action,, the remedy is for the shareholders to elect a board of directors who will take the proper action.

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Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 254, 141 P. 422, 42 Okla. 260, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/checotah-hardware-co-v-hensley-okla-1914.