Commonwealth Title Insurance & Trust Co. v. Seltzer

76 A. 77, 227 Pa. 410, 1910 Pa. LEXIS 676
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 18, 1910
DocketAppeal, No. 150
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 76 A. 77 (Commonwealth Title Insurance & Trust Co. v. Seltzer) 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
Commonwealth Title Insurance & Trust Co. v. Seltzer, 76 A. 77, 227 Pa. 410, 1910 Pa. LEXIS 676 (Pa. 1910).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Moschzisker,

March 14, 1910:

Two of the defendants have appealed from a decree ordering them to pay to the plaintiffs certain sums representing illegal profits found to have been made by these defendants as officers of a corporation in which the plaintiffs were stockholders. One of the two defendants was the president and the other was a director of this corporation. The corporation had practically its whole capital invested in a valuable piece of real estate. The first of the defendants came in contact with the agent of another corporation which desired to buy this real estate. The defendant was informed of this fact, and although he knew that his company was willing to sell its property, instead of treating with the agent on that basis, he led him to believe that the real estate could not be purchased. After . this, negotiations were carried on between the two which resulted in a written contract whereby the agent'was granted; an option to purchase from the defendant a sufficient number of the shares of‘stock of the corporation to control it. This contract on its face bears evidence of its real purpose, which was to place the agent or his constituent in a position to secure the desired real estate. The defendant conceived the scheme of buying in enough stock to gain control of his corporation immediately after his first meeting with the agent of the other corporation. Not having sufficient funds to properly finance the matter, he took in the other defendant, and thereafter they were associates in common in the enterprise, each bound by the knowledge and actions of the other. Together they accumulated the stock covered by the written contract. The deal went through exactly as desired: the agent secured enough stock to control the corporation which owned the real estate, and its property was duly deeded to the corporation represented by him; the purchase price, [415]*415which was not found to be inadequate, being subsequently divided among the stockholders of the former corporation. Certain of the stockholders, believing that the officers had so manipulated the sale of the property as to make a secret and illegal profit for themselves at the expense of their corporation, filed a bill against the defendants in question and several of the other officers of the company. The corporation was also included as one of the defendants for the purpose of securing the appointment of a receiver. The bill came on for hearing with answers filed by the several defendants denying all of its serious allegations.

The trial judge filed an adjudication with full and elaborate findings of fact, which we do not deem it necessary to further outline here at any great length. The important findings upon which the decree against the two defendants must either stand or fall are to the effect that from the inception of the negotiations between the defendant, who was the president of the real estate owning corporation, and the agent of the company which desired to purchase the real estate, it was understood that the effort to get control of the stock of the former was solely for the purpose of forcing the sale of its property to the latter, and the accumulation and transfer of the large block of such stock was made in order to facilitate and effectuate that purpose. Further, that the sale and transfer of the property was carried out by means of a meeting of the stockholders of the real estate owning corporation, at which meeting the directors and officers were given authority (“but not the binding direction”) to accept the offer made by the company represented by the agent with whom the stock deal had been made; and that this meeting was immediately followed by a meeting of the directors, participated in by the two defendants, and by resolution of that body the transfer of the property was duly authorized. The trial judge finds that this meeting and all that took place there “was part of the same transaction of which the making of the profitable contract for the sale of their (the defendants ’) 2,250 shares of stock formed another and inseparable part, and it was understood and intended by them so to be. The profit realized by [416]*416(the two defendants) on their sale of stock was an incident to. the sale of the property.” On the facts as'found, the court below reached the conclusion that the two defendants, having, as managers of the real estate owning corporation participated, in making the sale of its property, were bound to account for the profits made by them in the stock deal with the agent of-the purchasing company, the contract for that purpose “being,, in fact, an integral part of the same transaction and related to the sale of the property.”

The defendants contend that the trial judge fell into error in drawing the deduction that the stock deal and the sale of the real estate were parts of one and the same transaction; and we are asked to reverse the findings based on- this deduction and to set aside the decree. “When the judgment of. the court below is based upon a deduction from other facts, the conclusion, being the result of reasoning, is subject to revision and to correction, if erroneous:” Woodward v. Carson, 208 Pa. 144. With this rule in mind we have gone over the record and the notes of testimony with exceeding care,, but we are unable to say that we find any error in the fundamental facts as stated by the trial judge or in his deductions therefrom. It is not only perfectly conceivable that an urn prejudiced mind might reasonably reach the conclusion that all. of the negotiations, arrangements, and contracts in the stock deal,- and the sale and the transfer of the real estate, were really parts of one and the same transaction, but anyone reading the testimony and looking at the documentary evidence would find his mind irresistibly travelling to the conclusion that, although the parties endeavored to give to them the appearance of separate transactions and even on occasions talked to one another as if they were such, nevertheless they all the time knew that everything they were doing was intended to bring about the sale and transfer of the real estate from the corporation represented by the defendants to the corporation represented by the agent. These defendants as managing officers were under an inherent obligation not to. in any manner use their ■ positions to advance their indi- , vidual interests as distinguished from the interests of their [417]*417corporation. When the presment of this corporation was approached by a likely buyer, instead of persistently maintaining the attitude that there was no possibility of the property being acquired by purchase, and then proceeding to use this information for liis own personal benefit, and incidentally to the detriment of his corporation, he should have overlooked his own welfare and acted entirely for the benefit of Ms corporation. An officer is but the agent of his corporation, and in all transactions in which its interests are involved he must act for it with unselfish singleness of purpose. If in any such transaction it appears that he has acted against the interest of Ms corporation, the mere fact that the means used to accomplish the unlawful end would if standing alone be lawful in themselves will not save such officer from responsibility to account for profits thus made by Mm which otherwise might have gone into the coffers of his corporation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 A. 77, 227 Pa. 410, 1910 Pa. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-title-insurance-trust-co-v-seltzer-pa-1910.