Cobb v. Library Bureau

157 N.E. 46, 260 Mass. 7, 1927 Mass. LEXIS 1391
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 157 N.E. 46 (Cobb v. Library Bureau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cobb v. Library Bureau, 157 N.E. 46, 260 Mass. 7, 1927 Mass. LEXIS 1391 (Mass. 1927).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

These two suits in equity depend on the same statement of facts, with minor differences, and raise the same questions of law. The plaintiff in each suit seeks specific performance by the defendant, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of New Jersey, and having a principal-place of business in Boston in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, of a written extra compensation and stock [10]*10subscription agreement dated'October 27, 1925; the specific relief sought being the delivery of certain shares of common stock of the defendant upon the payment to it by the plaintiffs of certain specified sums. Both bills were filed June 23, 1926. The cases were tried together. In each a commissioner was appointed to take the evidence to be reported to this court. The trial judge entered findings and an order for decree in each case. Following this order, on December 17, 1926, final decrees dismissing the bills with costs were entered, and the plaintiffs appealed to this court.

The pertinent facts are as follows: The plaintiffs on January 2, 1925, then being substantial stockholders in, and two of the three vice-presidents of, the defendant corporation, each subscribed for shares of the common stock of the Library Bureau and agreed to pay therefor the sum of $100 per share in the manner set forth in a written contract, and the company agreed to issue and sell the said stock and receive payment for the same as provided in the agreement, and subject to all the terms thereof. Under these contracts each plaintiff was in each calendar year to pay in cash six and one quarter per cent of the total amount of his subscription; and the company at the end of each calendar year undertook and agreed to credit or pay in cash to the subscriber, as extra compensation for his services during the preceding calendar year, six and one quarter per cent of the subscription; this was to be applied upon the purchase price of the shares subscribed for, provided the subscriber was not in default in his payments, so long as any balance remained unpaid and the subscriber was still in the active employ of the company. After full payment, the subscriber was entitled to receive the stock issued free from all restrictions, and the same dividend on his stock as other holders of common stock received. But so long as any part of the subscription was unpaid, and the option in the agreement remained in force, the stock subscribed for, the subscription, or any right thereunder, could not be assigned, sold, pledged, or otherwise transferred by the subscriber except with the consent of the board of directors.

[11]*11“‘In case the Subscriber shall cease to be an officer or employee of the Company or its business successor or assigns from any cause whatsoever other than death or physical disability prior to the completion of payment of the above subscription, said Company shall have the following options, one or the other to be exercised within sixty (60) days from the date of such termination: (1) Of cancelling this Agreement by returning and paying to the Subscriber all the amounts theretofore paid upon the purchase price of the shares subscribed for; or (2) Of selling the stock subscribed for at the subscription rights hereunder at any broker’s board or at public auction in the City of Boston, Massachusetts, at any time or times without advertisement or notice, and with the right to the Company to become a purchaser thereof freed and discharged of any equity of redemption, and applying the net proceeds to the liquidation of any unpaid balance hereunder, returning the overplus, if any, to the Subscriber; and the Subscriber shall still remain liable for any amount so unpaid.’ In case, prior to the completion of payment of the above subscription the Subscriber shall die or cease to be employed by the Company or its business successor or assigns by reason of physical disability, he or his estate, as the case may be, shall be entitled to receive Common Stock at par value up to the nearest even multiple of $100. below the amount of all payments theretofore made upon the above subscription, including extra compensation to the date of such death or termination of employment. This subscription shall thereupon be and become ipso facto cancelled as to the balance of said stock and the Company shall repay to said Subscriber or his estate the balance of the subscription account over and above such even multiple of $100., if any. ... In the event of a cancellation of this agreement in any manner above provided or in the event of a termination of the Subscriber’s employment by the Company from death or any other reason, the Subscriber’s account shall be credited with only a pro rata proportion of the extra compensation payment for the calendar year in which such cancellation or termination shall occur, representing the period from the first of the calendar year to the [12]*12date of such cancellation or termination of employment, and thereafter all credits for extra compensation shall cease.”

After the agreement had been in force about a month, in February, 1925, the company was recapitalized and holders of common stock became entitled to receive six shares of new stock of no par value for one of the old, the par value of which was $100. In the late summer or fall of 1925 negotiations were begun between holders of the majority of the common stock of the defendant corporation for its sale to the Rand Kardex Bureau, Inc., a New York corporation engaged in similar business and having headquarters in Tonawanda, New York. These negotiations were conducted by N. B. H. Parker, president of the defendant, and by James H. Rand, Jr., president of the Rand Kardex Bureau. In October, Rand agreed with the plaintiffs that if each would sell him the shares of stock which the plaintiff owned outright under the new allotment at $41 a share, and to which the subscription agreement in no way related, Rand would enter into an agreement for the ultimate purchase of one half of the subscription stock when it was fully paid for, and the Library Bureau would approve and adopt his agreement as its own. Accordingly the plaintiffs transferred the shares which they owned outright; and on October 27, 1925, Rand signed, and on November 2, 1925, the defendant corporation approved and adopted as its own, the new agreement, which reads in part as follows: “The three Vice-Presidents to be given the absolute privilege of paying enough additional cash to make with the credits to January 1, 1927, full payment for one-half the stock subscribed for by them and receiving such stock and Rand, Jr. will, if so requested, pay them $40 per share for it on January 1, 1927, without affecting the balance of their Stock Subscription Contract.”

On January 13, 1926, Cobb tendered his resignation, to take effect January 31, and received on January 15, an acceptance “effective January 31, 1926.” Under pressure and at the suggestion' of Rand, Washburn resigned on January 18, 1926, as of January 31, 1926. In connection with these resignations the treasurer of the defendant [13]*13promised each plaintiff to give him an extra month’s salary-in view of the time he had been with the company, but he was to have no responsibilities or duties after January 31, 1926, and his time was to be his own. On February 9, each plaintiff received a “salary check” for February, 1926. The judge, warranted by the evidence, found that both plaintiffs ceased to be employees within the meaning of the contract on January 31, 1926.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 N.E. 46, 260 Mass. 7, 1927 Mass. LEXIS 1391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-library-bureau-mass-1927.