Cosgriff v. Schneiter

600 P.2d 540, 1979 Utah LEXIS 922
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1979
DocketNo. 15943
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 600 P.2d 540 (Cosgriff v. Schneiter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cosgriff v. Schneiter, 600 P.2d 540, 1979 Utah LEXIS 922 (Utah 1979).

Opinion

CROCKETT, Chief Justice:

Plaintiffs, successors in interest to Walter E. Cosgriff, brought this action for a declaratory judgment that they owned the controlling interest in the Lake Hills Golf Club, Inc., of Billings, Montana. Defendants, successors in interest to George H. Schneiter, joined issue and counter-claimed requesting a judgment that the stock ownership of that corporation is owned equally between plaintiffs and defendants and asked for reformation of stock certificates to conform thereto. Upon a trial to the court, it made findings in favor of and rendered judgment for the plaintiffs. Defendants appeal.

In September of 1956, George H. Schneiter (“Schneiter, Sr.”), Walter E. Cosgriff (“Cosgriff”) and Ven Savage (“Savage”) formed the Billings Golf Club, a Montana corporation. The name was later changed to the Lake Hills Golf Club (“Lake Hills”).

The authorized capital of the corporation was stated as 500 shares with a par value of $100 per share. In 1956, there were three issues of stock, resulting in Cosgriff owning 84 shares and Schneiter, Sr. and Savage owning 83 shares each. In the following year Cosgriff and Schneiter, Sr. bought out Savage’s interest for $23,000, of which each paid Savage one half. In accordance with their agreement, on October 10, 1975, the 83 Savage shares were issued as transfer shares as follows:

(a) Certificate No. 10 for 41V2 shares to Cosgriff;
(b) Certificate No. 11 to Schneiter, Sr. for 40¾⅛ shares; and
Certificate No. 12 for one share to George M. Schneiter, (“Schneiter, Jr.”). (C)

The defendants make a contention that the one share issued to Mr. Schneiter, Jr. was an extra share issued by the corporation, which would give the Schneiters equal ownership with Mr. Cosgriff. In that regard certain facts are to be noted: George M. Schneiter, Jr.’s own testimony was that the $100 he paid for the share was given to his father; and that he could not recall, nor was there any evidence, which would show that the money was paid to the corporation. Further, certificate No. 11 shows the typed words “forty and one half shares,” and handwritten over that is the figure “41½.” The stub contained in the Lake Hills stock record book for Certificate No. 11 is so obliterated that the number of shares written thereon cannot be read. There was evidence that it was Mr. Schneiter, Jr. who obliterated the stub.

Within a month of the transfer of the Savage stock, the corporation issued the remaining 250 authorized shares. Of these Cosgriff and Schneiter, Sr. each received 125 shares. This resulted in Cosgriff owning 250½ shares and the two Schneiters owning 249½ shares of the stock. On the basis of the evidence, and particularly in view of the fact that Schneiter, Sr. kept the corporate records and issued the certificates, the trial court was justified in viewing the corporate records and the certificates as correctly reflecting the number of shares owned by the respective parties.

The gravamen of the defendants’ contention is that notwithstanding the facts above stated, there is other evidence which should have convinced the trial court that the records did not represent the facts. They maintain that the unequal division of the Lake Hills stock was not intended by the parties, but rather was the result of a mutual mistake; and also argue that the plaintiffs and their predecessor, Cosgriff, engaged in conduct that caused the defendants to believe that the stock was owned equally by the parties, and that the plaintiffs should therefore be estopped from asserting otherwise.

[542]*542The evidence relied upon by the defendants consists primarily of certain assertions about the ownership of the stock, particularly some made by plaintiffs’ predecessor, Walter E. Cosgriff, the main ones of which we quote the pertinent parts:

Cosgriff’s letter of September 3, 1957, to Savage stating:

[each of the parties have] a right to purchase our pro rata share. It is contemplated that $25,000 shall be raised . . . which would mean that each of us would have to put up $8,333.33

Cosgriff’s letter of September 18, 1957, to Schneiter in regard to repurchasing Savage’s stock:

you [Schneiter, Sr.] would want and would expect to put up half of this money so that we would each own a 50% interest

Schneiter, Sr.’s transmittal letter enclosing Cosgriff’s share of Savage’s repurchased stock:

I issued the stock to him [Schneiter, Jr.] out of my portion thinking that you would probably prefer to maintain a fifty percent interest.

Cosgriff’s letter of May 29, 1961, to the Sporting Goods Industries Clearing House:

Mr. George Schneiter is still co-owner of the Lake Hills Golf Club . . . The other half of the stock belongs to me.

Mr. Robert Barr’s letter of July 6, 1972, on behalf of Continental Bank and Trust to Prudential Federal Savings and Loan Association:

Please be advised that the Lake Hills Golf Club is owned by Mr. George Schneiter (one-half) and by the above reference account, Cosgriff Heirs, whom we represent (one-half) .
I can assure you that inasmuch as there is equal ownership it would not be in the best interest of this account to arbitrarily call these notes, and the principals involved have no intention of doing so .

Sparing detailed analysis of the foregoing items, we make the following observations: It is not surprising to find that when controversy over the ownership of property arises, parties tend to see evidence and occurrences as serving their own interests. Specifically in this instance, the defendants seem to so observe the just-quoted statements as consistent with their desires. However, for the trial court, whose obligation it is to be impartial, it is not only permissible, but it is in keeping with his judicial responsibilities, that in making his analysis of those assertions he consider the circumstances out of which they arose and the purpose for which they were made. In doing so, he could well regard them as but references to the general character of the respective ownership interests of the parties, and not as purporting to deal with their specific numbers of shares. What is said about their purchase of Mr. Savage’s shares refers to the equal ownership of the shares they were acquiring, rather than to equal ownership of their previously owned shares in the corporation. The letters to Sporting Goods Industries and to Prudential Federal Savings, seen in their entire context, appear to be for the general purpose of supplying information as to credit.

In viewing the total evidence, the trial court found that the ownership of the stock was intended to be as issued, with Cosgriff owning one more share than Schneiter, to give him the controlling interest, just as the shares were originally issued. This was not changed when they purchased Mr. Savage’s shares for which they each paid half and each received half. The trial court found in accordance with the plaintiffs’ evidence: that Mr. Schneiter, Sr. had told Cosgriff that he wanted to bring his son, Schneiter, Jr., into the corporation, and for that purpose would issue one of the Savage shares to the son, to which request Cosgriff had no objection; and this is what appears to have been done.

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Bluebook (online)
600 P.2d 540, 1979 Utah LEXIS 922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cosgriff-v-schneiter-utah-1979.