Craig v. Bessie Furnace Co.

19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 545, 27 Ohio Dec. 471, 1917 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 29

This text of 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 545 (Craig v. Bessie Furnace Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Craig v. Bessie Furnace Co., 19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 545, 27 Ohio Dec. 471, 1917 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 29 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1917).

Opinion

Kinkead, J.

This is a proceeding under Sections 8640-8645, providing for applying to the court for the appointment of inspectors to receive and count the votes at a meeting of the subscribers of .the stock of the defendant company for the election of directors. ■ The petitioners own more than the ten, percent, of the stock as re[546]*546quired by statute conferring the right to resort to this proceeding.

It is alleged that certain stockholders other than plaintiffs entered into an agreement by which the voting power of 1,900 shares of the total present outstanding 2,250 shares of the stock of the company was vested in the Union Trust Company, a banking corporation of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Irrevocable proxies were given by holders of 1,900 shares of capital stock to the trust company authorizing it to represent the holders of such stock at 'any regular or special meeting of the stockholders, and tó vote the same upon any question pertaining to the management, control and operation of the property, and for the election and re-election from year to year of the directors.

Plaintiff stockholders, it is alleged, did not give assent or approval to the agreement.

The management of the company since such agreement has been in certain persons, the parties to such agreement being residents of Pennsylvania. Complaint is made that these persons have refused to give information to some of the officers and directors concerning the affairs of the company, that complete possession of all the books are in the hands of the non-resident officers .and directors, and that such books have been taken outside the state.

Some of the parties to this agreement, who gave proxies, have sold their stock. 'The proxies given the trust company it is stated have been canceled and revoked, but that the trust company will claim the right to vote the stock by virtue of the proxies, and thus continue the domination and control of the company under the persons named.

The defendant company and George S. Davison, Allen S. Davison and Albert P. Meyer, with whom this voting contract was made and in whom it appears the management and control of the company was to be vested and in whom it has since been and will continue to be if the terms of the contract are to be carried out, file answer herein making denial of charges made by the petitioners. They also set forth with some detail the [547]*547facts and circumstances leading up to the making of the agreement, and the object and purpose thereof.

In short, it is alleged that the company was in financial straits and badly in need of funds with which to meet pressing current demands as well as additional capital to insure its success. The conditions of the contract were that the former management was to be relinquished and the same be transferred to those now in control, and that the Davison Company should continue to be the exclusive selling agent of the company during the five years covered by the contract. It was agreed that those assuming the new management of the company should arrange for advances of necessary funds as well as to secure a large loan as additional capital. The new parties were also to subscribe for $25,000 of the remaining unissued stock of the company.

The existing unsold bond issue was to be retired and a new mortgage loan for $100,000 was to be secured. A loan was made by the Union Trust Company for this amount which was guaranteed by Davison, it being apparent that such loan would not have been secured or made but for such contract and proxies. 'The grounds for asking appointment of inspectors is that the agreement transferring the voting power is void; or if it is not void, that the samé may be revoked and the proxy be withdrawn at the pleasure of a holder of the stock.'

From certain allegations in the complaint of plaintiffs it is apparent that because some of the stock owned by those who gave the five-year irrevocable proxies has been sold to others, the proxies are thereby revoked and the assignee thereof is entitled to vote; that instead of allowing the assignee of such stock to vote, the trust company will claim the right to vote.

It is apparent that the purpose of having inspectors appointed is the hope or expectation that such inspectors' — impartial between the interests — may possibly receive and count the votes cast by the assignees of the stock instead of the votes east by the trust company under the' proxies.

The claim is made that the parties to the agreement resident in Pennsylvania will continue in control of the company if the proxy agreement is carried out.

[548]*548The primary question is the scope and purpose of the statutory-authority under which this proceeding is brought, and the power and duty of the court, as well as that of inspectors who may be appointed pursuant to the statute.

In the first place it is important to note that this proceeding is in no sense a civil action in which controverted legal rights of parties may be presented and determined. It is not contemplated that petition, answer and reply shall be filed presenting controverted or uncontroverted facts for adjudication of the rights of parties. No judgment can be rendered, and no appeal or error can be prosecuted from any order made by court or judge. Under constitutional amendment of 1912 error can be prosecuted only from a judgment. Ohm Civil Trials (Revised Ed.), Sections 1213, 1285c, Article IY, Section 6, Constitution.

It is apparent that the hope and wish is that the holders of the stock, instead of the holder of the five-year irrevocable proxies, shall be permitted to vote. It has been intimated that i-f impartial inspectors of election are not appointed by the court, the rights of holders of the stock will probably be prejudiced by action of those in the majority, to whom the voting power has been assigned to the trust company.

It is difficult to perceive how legal rights may be prejudiced by any action taken at a stockholders’ election. It is assumed that if the court does not appoint inspectors, that the meeting will be in the control of those having control of the proxies given pursuant to the agreement made.

In consideration of the application to appoint inspectors, the court is without power to actually determine the legality of the agreement and the proxies. It can merely express an opinion which may be neither sound nor respected, according to the views of interested parties. If the opinion should be against the validity of the contract and proxies, and inspectors were therefore appointed, the probable result might be that the contract and proxies would be disregarded and the parties for whose benefit the latter were given would lose control of the company contrary to the intent and purpose of the contract, provided the inspectors followed such opinion of the court.

[549]*549It certainly was not the design of the statutes, Secs. 8640 et seq. to thus determine important legal questions and rights.

In deciding whether the court considers the appointment of inspectors proper and right, it naturally is moved by its opinion concerning the validity of the contract by the terms of which the proxies were given. However, the court might well be content with refusing the appointment if it believed that by so doing contractual rights might thus be disturbed without proper legal adjudication.

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Related

Smith v. San Francisco & North Pacific Railway Co.
47 P. 582 (California Supreme Court, 1897)
Shepaug Voting Trust Cases
60 Conn. 553 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1890)
Luthy v. Ream
110 N.E. 373 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 545, 27 Ohio Dec. 471, 1917 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/craig-v-bessie-furnace-co-ohctcomplfrankl-1917.