Corey v. Independent Ice Co.

76 A. 930, 106 Me. 485, 1910 Me. LEXIS 25
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 5, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 76 A. 930 (Corey v. Independent Ice Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corey v. Independent Ice Co., 76 A. 930, 106 Me. 485, 1910 Me. LEXIS 25 (Me. 1910).

Opinion

Spear, J.

These cases involve a bill in equity and an information in the nature of quo warranto and depend substantially upon the same state of facts. The finding of the sitting Justice was in favor of the plaintiffs in each proceeding, and the cases are here on appeal by the defendants. The Independent Ice Company is a corporation organized under the laws of Maine. At the date of filing the bill the plaintiff Ferris, was president and Corey was treasurer and both were directors of the corporation. There had been issued 1000 shares of preferred stock and 500 shares of common stock, the common stock having no voting power. The control of the corporation was therefore vested entirely in the ownership of the 1000 preferred shares. Of these preferred shares the plaintiffs held a total of 491, of which Corey owned 245, Ferris 246, and [487]*487each had a certificate representing his stock ownership. The remaining 509 shares of preferred stock were represented by a certificate standing in the name of the defendant Stone, described as "trustee.”

The plaintiffs allege that until shortly before the filing of the bill they supposed that the defendant Stone held the 509 shares of stock as trustee for the defendant company. At about this time upon information that Stone claimed to hold these shares in trust for other parties than the defendant company, the plaintiffs made a formal demand on Stone that these shares as the company’s property should be delivered to them, the officers of the corporation entitled to hold them. This demand the defendant Stone refused to comply with, and in return threatened to so vote the 509 shares at the impending annual meeting as to deprive the plaintiffs of their official positions and of the control of the affairs of the corporation. Thereupon the bill was filed.

The plaintiffs’ contention as set forth in the language of their brief, is this : "The basis of the plaintiffs claim as set forth therein is that the 509 shares are actually held in trust by the defendant Stone for the corporation, and are actually its property, because the purchase price was paid out of the funds of the corporation under circumstances which show an intention and agreement to create a trust or, at least, that a resulting trust arose by operation of law.

The plaintiffs’ claim accordingly is that the outstanding certificate was illegally held by said Stone except as trustee for the corporation ; and since the stock belonged in equity to the corporation, he had no right to vote thereon or to make use of the same to deprive the plaintiffs of their official positions and the control of the corporation, to which, as owners of a majority of the stock legally outstanding, they were entitled.

The bill prays for an injunction to restrain the defendant Stone .from voting on said shares or exercising any rights as stockholder or owner thereof; as further an incidental relief there is a prayer that the defendant Stone be ordered to deliver up such certificate to the plaintiffs, as officers of the corporation and proper custodians of its property.

[488]*488The annual meeting was held after the filing of the bill at which the defendant Stone voted said 509 shares against the protest of the plaintiffs as a result of which vote the defendants named in the quo warranto proceeding were declared elected to the respective offices, as set out in the petition. The defendants thereupon took possession of the offices and excluded the plaintiffs from the performance of their duties as president, treasurer and directors of the corporation. The quo warranto proceedings were instituted to oust the defendants named in that case from the respective offices which they had occupied.

The averments of the information are practically the same as those of the bill in equity except so far as they recite occurrences subsequent to the filing of the bill. The two suits are complimentary to each other. The quo warranto proceeding involves the same question as the bill in equity except that they are instituted to correct a wrong accomplished, while the bill is filed for the prevention of a wrong.

The plaintiffs also state the issue as follows:

"The issue, therefore, which the cases present is whether the plaintiffs as holders of a majority of the stock outstanding entitled to vote are entitled to elect the officers of the corporation, control its affairs and enjoy the incidental benefits of such control, or whether the defendant Stone has such a title to the certificate standing in his name as "trustee” as to entitle him to vote thereon, to elect officers and enjoy the incidental benefits of control. The controversy is one between stockholders or alleged stockholders for control of the corporation.”

It is also asserted that the equity suit is not a minority stockholders’ bill, but rather a bill to declare that the plaintiffs are majority stockholders; that the bill has for its object to enforce directly individual rights of the plaintiffs rather than rights of the corporation; that the corporation itself is not a necessary party to the bill.

To the bill, setting forth the foregoing contentions, the defendant filed (1) a demurrer, (2) a plea in bar, and (3) an answer to [489]*489the merits. The plea in bar raises the defense of res adjudicata and in the opinion of the court must prevail.

It appears that in May, 1907, Frank H. Foster of Somerville and Eugene S. Currier of Chelsea, both of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, brought a bill in behalf of themselves and all other stockholders of the Independent Ice Company against Reuben H. Hopkins and others, among whom were Robert B. Stone and the Independent Ice Company, Robert B. Stone and the Independent Ice Company being the same parties referred to by these names in the plaintiff’s bill. It is evident from the plaintiff’s bill that the gravamen of their complaint is (1) that a seventy-five thousand dollar loan ($75,000)-from the American Loan & Trust Company was made and intended to be made to the Independent Ice Company, and (2) that the 476 shares of the capital stock held by Stone as trustee were purchased with the proceeds of this loan and that the other 33 shares, purchased by funds advanced by Flanders, by final agreement were to be paid for by the Independent Ice Company out of the proceeds of the sale of its bonds, and thus become the property of the corporation. Therefore stripped of all verbiage, the substantial allegations of the plaintiffs’ bill are (1) that the Independent Ice Company was the actual .debtor for the seventy-five thousand dollar loan and (2) that the defendant Stone held the 509 shares of preferred stock as trustee for the Independent Ice Company, and not as trustee for any other parties.

It seems to us that these were the precise questions presented in the bill before the Massachusetts court. After alleging a conspiracy on the part of the defendants to get a controlling interest of the Independent Ice Company the bill says: "In furtherance of this conspiracy they caused the said Independent Ice Company to secure a loan from the American Loan and Trust Company of Boston, of seventy-five thousand dollars and with the sum so borrowed, the said company purchased from said Homans and Burnham the 476 shares of the capital stock owned by them and paid its debts, for which sum Homans and Burnham were in some way responsible, to the amount of Sixty-five Thousand, Two Hundred and Forty-seven Dollars and Eighty-nine cents ($65,247.89). The [490]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 A. 930, 106 Me. 485, 1910 Me. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corey-v-independent-ice-co-me-1910.