Davenport v. Crowell

65 A. 557, 79 Vt. 419, 1907 Vt. LEXIS 125
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedJanuary 10, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 65 A. 557 (Davenport v. Crowell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davenport v. Crowell, 65 A. 557, 79 Vt. 419, 1907 Vt. LEXIS 125 (Vt. 1907).

Opinion

Watson, J.

The first question presented is whether defendant Crowell is liable to the E. P. Carpenter Company for loss or damage incurred through transactions of exchanging notes with the Rand Avery Company, a corporation of Boston.

The bill is brought by the orator as a stockholder in the former company, and if the case is otherwise made out, no question is made but that, in the circumstances shown, the bill is properly brought by him.

The E. P. Carpenter- Company was organized for business in this State in 1884 with a capital stock of twenty-five thousand dollars, divided into shares of the par value of one hundred dollars each. It does not appear who all the stockholders were nor how the stock was paid for, except that E. P. Carpenter, the orator, and defendant Crowell were the principal stockholders, and a considerable part of the stock held by them was paid for by their individual notes to the company. The business of the company was the manufacture of organettes, organs, and later pianos were added.. Soon after the company began business Carpenter became a director and the president thereof, the orator a director and the clerk, and Crowell a director and the treasurer. The orator and Crowell continued to be directors for the remainder of the time the company was in business, but the orator ceased being clerk [426]*426and Crowell ceased being treasurer early in 1889; thereafter Martin Austin, Jr., was clerk, the orator treasurer, and Crowell president. While Carpenter was president he practically managed the business affairs of the company. His connection with the company, except as stockholder, was severed about the time Crowell was made president, and thereafter the business appears to have been managed by the orator and Crowell in connection with Austin who in this respect was the most active of the three.

In 1888, beginning about the last day of May and ending in October, the company exchanged notes with the Rand Avery Company to the amount of about $9,000.00. The Rand Avery Company failed in the latter part of that year, as a result of which the E. P. Carpenter Company lost by reason of being compelled to pay the notes thus exchanged approximately eight thousand dollars. It is contended that the notes so given to the Rand Avery Company and the notes received of it in exchange which the E. P. Carpenter Company indorsed, were in their nature and essence accommodation paper; that the accommodation was extended for the benefit of Crowell and Carpenter, in the “major part” at least, on the one side, and of the Rand Avery Company on the other, none of the notes representing any real business transaction; that the E. P. Carpenter Company had no power to become a party to- notes for the accommodation of another person or corporation; and that since Crowell participated in or consented to- the transactions in question, he is liable for the resulting loss or damage. On the other hand it is contended by the defendants that the orator by reason of his assent or acquiescence is equitably estopped from taking this position.

It is found that almost from the beginning of its business the E. P. Carpenter Company lacked funds necessary for [427]*427a “working capital,” and to make up for this, it adopted the practice of obtaining accommodation notes from various parties and also of borrowing checks, giving in exchange therefor its own notes or checks; and that this practice continued until 1890' or later. These findings show that the corporation from force of circumstances adopted the practice of exchanging paper for accommodation to make up for a deficiency in its funds with which to do business, as early as in 1884 or 1885, — some three or four years before the transactions with the Rand Avery Company, — and this practice was thence continuous for a period extending two years or more after that company failed. During all this time, as before seen, the orator was a director; and he wAs the clerk of the corporation until early in the year 1889 when he ceased holding that office and was thereafter the treasurer. In the office of the company, the place where the meetings of the stockholders as well as those of the directors were held, were the company’s books kept in due course of business, and among- them were books in which were entered outstanding notes and bills, both payable and receivable, showing among other things the dates of issue and of maturity, the maker and payee; though some of the entries respecting the notes received of the Rand Avery Company were not made at the time the notes were received, but were later. The report states that the orator had full and free access to these books, did in fact examine them more or less, and knew or ought to have known of the issuing of the notes in question during the period when they were being issued, and that he had actual knowledge of these notes and of their character immediately after the failure of that company. As far as the case shows, no loss or damage ever resulted from this practice except in connection with the last [428]*428named company, and neither regarding the transactions with that company nor regarding those of a similar character had with others were objections ever made by the E. P. Carpenter Company or by any of its stockholders until the bringing of this suit twelve years or more after the practice ceased and more than fourteen years after the transactions were had of which the orator here complains. All of the funds realized from accommodation paper under the practice went to the use of the corporation unless, as the orator claims, it be a portion of the avails of the notes exchanged with the Rand Avery Company, concerning- which we will speak presently.

Erom the facts found by the master in the respects above mentioned, the court below might well have inferred that the orator had full knowledge of the adoption of such practice at the time it took place and acquiesced therein. And to sustain the decree below this Court will presume that such inference was there made. The case of Burt v. British, Etc. Assur. Ass., 4 De G. & J. 158, is much on point showing a similar conclusion of fact based upon very like circumstances.

Under .our practice of appointing special masters to hear causes in equity on the evidence and report the facts to the Court (V. S. 936-942), such masters are officers of the Court of Chancery and that court may infer such facts from those reported as necessarily or fairly result therefrom. In this respect, reports of such masters stand like those of auditors, concerning which this rule has long been established. Kimball v. Estate of Baxter, 27 Vt. 628; Pratt v. Page et al., 32 Vt. 13.

It is said, however, that knowledge by the orator of the issuing of the notes with the Rand Avery Company is not found by the master, and that the finding that he “ought to [429]*429have known” does not reach the situation. How the case might stand in this respect were the transactions with that company alone to be considered it is unnecessary to inquire; for during the continuance of the practice named it was not necessary for a stockholder who had assented thereto or acquiesced therein have personal knowledge of all the different 'transactions had under it in order to be bound by it. If he would avoid the effect of the practice the burden is on him to show a subsequent withdrawal of his assent or acquiescence before the performance of the acts with the consequences of which he seeks to charge an officer or agent of the company who participated therein. In Gregory v. Patchet, 33 Beav.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dutch Hill Inn, Inc. v. Patten
303 A.2d 811 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1973)
Azure v. Hunter
132 S.E. 726 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1926)
Comings v. Powell
122 A. 591 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1923)
Mortensen v. Frederickson Bros.
190 Iowa 832 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1921)
Johnson v. Desmarais
112 A. 199 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1921)
Bradley v. Blandin
110 A. 309 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1920)
Powers v. Rutland Railroad
92 A. 463 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1914)
Smead v. Lampher
86 A. 1005 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1913)
Fitzsimons v. Richardson, Twigg & Co.
84 A. 811 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1912)
Barber v. Bailey
84 A. 608 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1912)
Roberts v. W. H. Hughes Co.
83 A. 807 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1912)
Lynch's Admr. v. Murray
83 A. 746 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1912)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 A. 557, 79 Vt. 419, 1907 Vt. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-crowell-vt-1907.