Coleman v. Hagey

158 S.W. 829, 252 Mo. 102, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 107
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 9, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 158 S.W. 829 (Coleman v. Hagey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coleman v. Hagey, 158 S.W. 829, 252 Mo. 102, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 107 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This is an equitable proceeding to divest title to certain real property out of defend■ant-s and vest it in plaintiff " as trustee in bankruptcy of the Hagey Stove Company, a corporation, and for judgment against defendants in the sum of $32,000 of $50,000 in cash claimed to have been taken from the treasury of the corporation by the defendants. Upon a trial in the circuit court a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, from which defendants appeal.

Pleadings. The petition alleges the adjudication of the ITagey Stove Company as a bankrupt in the United States District Court for the Eastern Division <of the Eastern Judicial District of Missouri, in February, 1908, and the subsequent election of plaintiff as 'trustee of said estate, and that he qualified and has since been acting as such. That the Hagey Stove -Company was organized under the laws of the. State of Illinois in December, 1890, but has always had its plant or place of business in the city of St. Louis in the State of Missouri; that the capital stock of said -company is $100,000, and that same was issued as fully paid and non-assessable. That, at the time, as hereinafter alleged, of the withdrawal of part of the -capital stock by defendants, they were the owners of ■all the shares of said stock, composed its board of directors, were its only officers and had and exercised -exclusive control and management of its affairs.

That at the time of the incorporation of said Hagey Htove Company the statutes of Illinois contained provisions forbidding the payment of dividends out' of capital stock, and forbidding the decrease'of the capital stock of any corporation without notice to the shareholders and after the assent of two-thirds of ail [112]*112tiie stock bad been given at a meeting of the shareholders that such decrease should be certified to and filed with the Secretary of State and similar action taken in regard to the recorder of deeds of the county, followed by three weeks’ public notice of such decrease in a newspaper nearest to such county.

That prior to November, 1905, said corporation purchased certain real estate in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, for $17,000, which is described "as per municipal subdivisions.

That in November, 1905, the total assets of the corporation which represented its capital stock of $100,000 was invested in real estate valued at not exceeding $30,000; cash, $50,000; machinery, manufacturing products, raw material, office fixtures, patents and trade marks, aggregate value, $38,000.

That said corporation could not under the laws of either Illinois or Missouri distribute assets among its shareholders in excess of $18,000.

That defendants with a view of taking over or distributing among themselves, individually, the assets of said corporation, conveyed said real estate to one Robert M. Nichols, who thereupon conveyed the same to one of the defendants, Henry Given Hagey, who now holds same in trust for himself and the other two defendants; that defendants, thereupon, divided between them the $50,000 in cash and appropriated same to their own use. Thereafter the total remaining assets of said corporation were $38,000, and the actual capital stock had been reduced to said sum. That no other manner was pursued to reduce the capital stock. That said corporation was permitted to and did continue in business thereafter until its adjudication in bankruptcy under the original articles of incorporation with the representation that it had a full paid capital of $100,000; and in the course of its business, subsequent to the aforesaid transactions by defendants, said corporation incurred and now owes [113]*113debts in tbe sum of $26,209.15, to divers creditors all of whom extended credit to said corporation on the faith and with the belief that it had a capital stock of $100,000, as represented in its articles of incorporation.

That all of said creditors have duly proven their claims against said bankrupt estate. That plaintiff is obligated to pay all claims and demands against said estate so far as he is able to do; that he has converted into cash all of the assets of said estate save those herein sued for, and has paid ont of the fund collected a dividend of ten per centum of the demands allowed; that there remains a balance in his hands of $4740.80, insufficient to pay said demands in full,, without deducting costs and expenses of administration. Then follows a specific allegation as to the costs and expenses necessary for plaintiff as trustee to pay in the process of administering the estate, not necessary to be given here; this is followed by the prayer which we give in its own words: “Wherefore, the plaintiff prays that title to the aforedescribed real property be divested out of the defendants and vested in the plaintiff as trustee of said bankrupt estate* and that the plaintiff have judgment against the defendants for thirty-two thousand dollars of the fifty thousand dollars of’the money of said corporation, by them taken as aforesaid, without prejudice, however,, to the rights of said defendants to claim in said bankruptcy court any surplus of said property or fund after discharging the obligations of said estate and the expenses of the adminstration thereof; or, in the alternative that the plaintiff be awarded judgment, against the defendants for the amount of money and the value of the property by them taken out of the assets of said corporation in diminution of the capital stock thereof, and that said judgment be made a lien and charge upon the real property aforesaid, likewise [114]*114without prejudice to the rights of said defendants to claim in said bankruptcy court any surplus thereof after the payment of said demands and the expenses of administration of said estate; or*, as a further alternative, that this cause be referred to a referee to ascertain and report the proper expenses of administration of said estate, as aforesaid, and the aggregate of the liabilities thereof, and that a decree be awarded the plaintiff therefor against the defendants and made a lien and charge upon said real property, and that said decree be enforced by a sale thereof, as well as by a general execution against the defendants, and each of them, and for such other and further relief as to the court may seem meet and proper in the premises.”

Defendants’ answer is substantially as follows:

That if there is a cause of action stated in the petition plaintiff has an adequate and complete remedy at law for the redress of all of his grievances.

That plaintiff was not nor is he now the assignee of the owner of the real estate described in the petition or the alleged or claimed cause of action stated therein, nor has he ever as trustee of said bankrupt corporation acquired any interest in the premises described in the petition or any right or title thereto, or any right or title either in law or equity to contest or set aside as such trustee in bankruptcy the alleged or claimed transaction or transactions between defendants and said corporation.

Defendants admit the incorporation of the Hagey Stove Company in Illinois, and that it had its place of business in the city of St. Louis, Missouri, where it at all times did business after its organization; that it has been adjudicated a bankrupt as alleged and that plaintiff is its trustee regularly elected and duly qualified, and that this action was brought by plaintiff as trustee under the authority of the referee in bankruptcy; that the capital stock of said corporation was [115]

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.W. 829, 252 Mo. 102, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-hagey-mo-1913.