Daniels v. Briggs

180 N.E. 717, 279 Mass. 87, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 888
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 16, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 180 N.E. 717 (Daniels v. Briggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniels v. Briggs, 180 N.E. 717, 279 Mass. 87, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 888 (Mass. 1932).

Opinion

Wait, J.

This is a bill by a minority stockholder in the C. A. Briggs Company against the company, W. E. Briggs, a director of the corporation, and C. A. Briggs, its president, treasurer, a director and owner of all but two shares of its stock except the eighty shares owned by the plaintiff. The plaintiff and the individual defendants constitute the board of directors. The bill charged maladministration and misfeasance; refusal to declare and pay dividends although the corporation has a surplus and is in position to pay them; the payment of inordinate salaries to the individual defendants; arbitrary control exercised to compel minority stockholders to part with their stock at less than its real value; the issue to C. A. Briggs of a large number of shares at par value, when the actual value was greatly in excess of par, for salaries alleged to be due but, in fact, not legally due him. It was filed November 14, 1924. By a supplemental bill allowed July 17, 1929, the offences complained of were alleged to have continued. It prayed appointment of a receiver, an account by the individual defendants of moneys due from them to the corporation, the cancellation of certificates of stock not [90]*90issued for legal consideration, an account of the accumulated profits and net earnings of the corporation, and an order for the payment of dividends as well as for general relief. Appeals by the defendants from orders overruling demurrers are not pressed.

After hearing on a master’s report, to which no exceptions were taken, the court decreed that C. A. Briggs was bound and he was ordered to return to the corporation six thousand one hundred twenty-five shares of its corporate stock illegally issued to him, and was bound and was ordered to pay to it stated sums with interest from stated dates (1) for money loaned without authority to the King Rubber Company, (2) for money received improperly as interest on amounts loaned by him to the corporation, (3) for the amount of a cash dividend received by him on the six thousand one hundred twenty-five shares illegally issued; and, further, that he was accountable to the corporation for $5,920 and for $3,720 improperly credited to him but in regard to which no relief was ordered because those amounts were credited as part of the sum received by it for the stock illegally issued. It decreed that C. A. Briggs was not now accountable on account of overdrawn salary. Furthermore it ordered payment of a sum taxed as between solicitor and client to be paid by the corporation to the plaintiff out of the amounts ordered to be paid by C. A. Briggs to the corporation. The decree was declared to be without prejudice to the assertion of a claim by C. A. Briggs for any indebtedness which might be found due to him from the corporation, and without prejudice to further proceedings for payment of a dividend after the financial condition of the corporation had been determined by compliance with the decree. The plaintiff appeals; but confines his objection to so much of the decree as deals with the matter of salary. The defendants appeal.

Neither master nor judge found any liability or wrongdoing on the part of W. A. Briggs. The decree does not mention him. His appeal is well taken. The bill should be dismissed as to him with his costs to be paid by the [91]*91plaintiff. Stratis v. Andreson, 254 Mass. 536, 540. He is entitled to a record that as against him the allegations of the bill are not sustained.

There is no merit in the plaintiff’s appeal. The master found that a reasonable compensation for the services of C. A. Briggs to the corporation was $15,000 per year in the years from 1919 onward. In December, 1911, it was voted that as treasurer of the corporation he “be paid a salary of $14,000”; in December, 1912, it was voted “That the salary of C. A. Briggs be fixed at $17,000 per year”; in January, 1914, it was voted “That the salary of the Treasurer, Mr. Charles A. Briggs, be $7000 a year,” and in January, 1919, it was voted that he “shall receive a salary of $25,000 for the ensuing year, commencing January 1st, 1919.” The plaintiff presided at all these meetings. There were no other votes relating to C. A. Briggs’s salary. He was credited or he withdrew as salary each year the following sums: in 1919, 1920 and 1921, $25,000; in 1922, $20,000; in 1923, 1924 and 1925, $4,000; and in 1926, 1927 and 1928, $8,000, a total of $131,000. He was accustomed to fix his salary with reference to the profits of the year, and often did not draw his full salary. He had a running account with the company and so informed the plaintiff. He managed the business and made it successful. The judge ruled that if C. A. Briggs took the amounts actually paid or credited to him in each of the years as full payment he could not subsequently set off the difference between those amounts and a fair compensation for the years; but found and ruled that he did not accept the credits and payments as payments in full and “is now entitled to set-off against previous overdrafts the balance due him for the years 1923 to 1928, inclusive, on the basis of a fair salary of $15,000 per annum.” There was evidence stated in the report to support this as finding of fact. The vote of 1914 fixing a salary of $7,000 per year in terms related only to a salary as treasurer. The plaintiff apparently was then and till 1919 receiving a salary as president. Obviously that vote could be found not to be controlling in the years following 1919 as to the amount to be [92]*92paid C. A. Briggs, the president, treasurer and manager. We think the finding justified. Ball v. Hopkins, 268 Mass. 260, relied upon by the plaintiff, is not controlling here. The early votes and the course of conduct known to the plaintiff show that compensation was contemplated to be paid. We find no error in failure to compel a return to the corporation. Meyer v. Fort Hill Engraving Co. 249 Mass. 302. Stratis v. Andreson, 254 Mass. 536. Calkins v. Wire Hardware Co. 267 Mass. 52, 66, 67.

The defendant C. A. Briggs’s appeal is based on several grounds.

There is no merit in the contention that the plaintiff must fail because he has not done all that he might to procure action by the corporation. Where the acts complained of are the acts of those in complete control of the corporation, a minority stockholder may bring such a bill as this to remedy them without first requesting action by the corporation. Hill v. Murphy, 212 Mass. 1. Brewer v. Boston Theatre, 104 Mass. 378. Dunphy v. Traveller Newspaper Association, 146 Mass. 495.

We find no error in the ruling that the burden rested upon C. A. Briggs to justify the payments or credits to him of $5,920 and $3,720, rather than upon the plaintiff to show them improper. In this proceeding C. A. Briggs stood in the position of one bound to account. The books of the company, kept under his supervision, charged him with those amounts. It was for him to establish his discharge from them. Little v. Phipps, 208 Mass. 331. Pappathanos v. Coakley, 263 Mass. 401, 408. This burden he did not sustain.

The ruling and finding with regard to loches must stand.

' Although until 1919 the plaintiff was both president and a director, and although at all times the books were open to his inspection and were honestly kept, the master found that he was not an accountant nor skilled as a business man.

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Bluebook (online)
180 N.E. 717, 279 Mass. 87, 1932 Mass. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniels-v-briggs-mass-1932.