Cummings v. Parker

157 S.W. 629, 250 Mo. 427, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 163
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 31, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 629 (Cummings v. Parker) 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
Cummings v. Parker, 157 S.W. 629, 250 Mo. 427, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 163 (Mo. 1913).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

This is a suit in.equity at the instance of a stockholder to set aside a conveyance made by one corporation to another and to appoint a receiver and wind up the affairs of the grantor corporation. From a judgment for defendants on the merits at a trial before Judge Barnett as chancellor in the St. Charles Circuit Court, after hearing plaintiff’s evidence alone, plaintiff appeals.

Two corporations are involved, one we will call Fish Club, the other Shooting Club — a certain Realty Company also figures in the record (whether it has stockholders or is incorporated is dark). The Realty Company is not sued, Fish and Shooting Clubs are parties defendant, the individual defendants are the di[431]*431rectors of Fish and Shooting Clubs (the personnel of each directorate being the same). Plaintiff is a stockholder in Fish Club and is a “member” of Realty Comnany, but is not a stockholder in Shooting Club.

At a certain time in 1908, Fish Club made a conveyance of its club house on the banks of the Mississippi, with its appurtenances, to Shooting Club. It is of that conveyance plaintiff complains, fraud being the gravamen of his cause of action.

No assignment of error here calls for the reproduction of the pleadings, hence the case may proceed on appeal on the theory they were sufficient to permit the introduction of the evidence and grant relief, if fraud was approved.

On the facts, the case is this:

In 1888 one Gallagher owmecl, say, eighteen hundred acres of land and water in St. Charles county, which, we will assume, were likely for fishing and hunting. At that, time about thirty hunting and fishing gentlemen of St. Louis, including plaintiff, with an eye to that tract and presumably clubable men, took stock in and organized a corporation, named, the Dardenne Game and Fish Club, with a capital at the outset of $5000, divided into twenty-five shares, presently increased to $6000, divided into thirty shares, with the charter purposes following, to-wit: “To purchase, obtain, lease, own, control, sell or otherwise dispose of such tract or tracts of land, or spaces of water as might be suitable for wild or tame birds, game, animals and fish; also such licenses or privileges for hunting, shooting, fishing, catching or preserving such birds, game, animals and fish on suitable lands or waters; to stock such land and waters, and acquire and enjoy the product and profit thereof; to acquire, buy, build, lease and have, in connection with such lands and waters, houses, boats or other- appropriate conveyances and appliances; to keep and maintain a club house or club houses at the city of St. Louis or where said lands and [432]*432waters may be, with all suitable sustenance, furniture and comforts for the use of the members thereof; and to control all of the property and business of the corporation by such by-laws, rules and regulations as it might adopt, or authorize the directors to adopt, including making of assessments for yearly dues, not to exceed $100 on each member for one year, with all powers conferred by law or incident thereto.”

Pursuant to those charter purposes Fish Club bought from Gallagher a little the rise of two acres of land adjacent to his 1800-acre tract, and at the same time leased from him the latter tract, or at least the exclusive hunting and fishing rights thereon, for a term of ten years. The fish was theirs and the game was theirs — provided they could take the one or shoot the other, a distinction with a difference, as shrewd observers have remarked. Fish Club paid $300 for the two acres and took a deed. By its lease it contracted to pay a rental on the Gallagher 1800-acre tract of $600 a year. Presently it built a club house and appurtenant out-buildings on the two acres at an outlay of, say, $3000, and became the owner of some boats and other fishing and hunting incidentals.

For the ten years next following, Fish Club kept and performed its lease with Gallagher, and as headquarters for its corporate purposes occupied its club house. At the end of its first term, the Gallagher lease was renewed for a like term with like conditions and the renewed lease was also kept and performed by Fish -Club. The second term expired in 1908, and at about that time Realty Company was born; whether (as said) it was a corporation issuing stock to its members or was some form of unincorporated voluntary association, we do not know. Neither its capital, purpose nor organization is disclosed. With some few exceptions, the members of this Realty Company (including plaintiff) were also stockholders of Fish Club. At or before the expiration of the term of said renewed [433]*433lease, this Realty Company became owner in fee of said 1800-acre tract by purchase from its then owner. At about the same time the other corporate defendant, the Dardenne Shooting* Club, was organized. Its capital stock is not disclosed nor are its corporate purposes defined. But the case travels below and here on implied concessions that the latter ran on the lines of those of Fish Club. With a few exceptions (one of’ whom was plaintiff) it had the same stockholders.

Outside the testimony of the one witness, put on the stand by plaintiff, there was no oral testimony introduced. Read into the case, during the progress of this witness’s testimony, were certain instruments, to-wit, leases and deeds (the terms of which have been sufficiently stated already) and the proceedings of one stockholders’ meeting of Fish Club (of which more hereafter), together with the proceedings of its board of directors of a certain date.

The case on some phases was darkly developed. Doing the best we can with the record, we take the facts to be that at some time in the history of Fish Club, near the close of the renewed lease, a question arose what it should do with its two acres and its club house appurtenances. This in view of the fact that for reasons wholly dark Fish Club either could not, would not, or did not, get a renewal of the lease on its fishing and hunting preserves, now owned by Realty Company, and the question was (not whether it would sell at all, but) whether it would sell to Realty Company or to Shooting Club. It seems, too, that the Realty Company at some time let the fishing and hunting privileges on the 1800-acre tract to the Shooting Club. But when and why this was done are wholly left to conjecture. No attempt was made to enlighten us. It does appear that at said stockholders’ meeting of the. Fish Club plaintiff wanted the sale made to Realty Company and that the other members of Fish Club [434]*434wanted it made to Shooting Club. This appears from a discussion at the stockholders’ meeting, faintly outlined in the minutes. Whether Realty Company would not let the preserves to Pish Club, but preferred to lease to Shooting Club, or whether Pish Club did not want to lease its old preserves from its new owner, Realty Company, is also left to conjecture only. There is not a ray of light thrown by the testimony on that question. (The witness introduced by plaintiff, Mr. Goddard, one of the defendants, said Pish Club could not get its lease renewed and the investigation stopped, plaintiff resting content at that point.) Why plaintiff was not a stockholder in the Shooting Club is also left to be guessed. Was it of choice or necessity, of whim or principle? All is dark.

The sequel was that Pish Club presently conveyed to Shooting Club for $4550. The evidence put in by plaintiff unmistakably shows that this price was in excess of the actual market value of the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 629, 250 Mo. 427, 1913 Mo. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cummings-v-parker-mo-1913.