Denny v. Guyton

40 S.W.2d 562, 327 Mo. 1030, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 606
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 27, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 40 S.W.2d 562 (Denny v. Guyton) 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
Denny v. Guyton, 40 S.W.2d 562, 327 Mo. 1030, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 606 (Mo. 1931).

Opinions

*1042 ATWODD, J.

— This ease comes to the writer by reassignment after a second hearing by the Court en Banc. It is an appeal from an order and judgment by the judge of the Circuit Court of Jackson County entered September 12, 1927, at the September, 1927, term, sustaining motions of J. D. Guyton, H. M. Beers and W. R. Harrington for a new trial and in arrest of judgment and setting aside judgment-for $1,352,568.41 rendered against them December 24, 1926, at the November, 1926, term, by his predecessor in office who tried the cause. The proceeding was a suit in equity there commenced January 18, 1922, by Josiah C. Wolcott against J. D. Guyton, H. M. IBeers and W. R. 'Harrington, individually, and the administrators of the estate of J. M. Grant, deceased, to set aside a contract of sale, secure an accounting and obtain a money judgment for plaintiff. Josiah C. Wolcott died testate on or about November 2, 1922, before' the suit came to trial, and it was revived in the name of Younger R. Denny, his executor. The trial began December 28, 1925, and ended February 16, 1926. The case was taken under advisement until December 6, 1926, when the trial judge filed an opinion finding the issues for plaintiff. Before judgment was entered plaintiff dismissed as to the administrators of Grant’s estate. J. D. Guyton died testate December 24, 1930, whereupon the cause was duly revived against Margaret A. Guyton, Fannie G. Carkener and J. Frank Guyton as his executors.

Appellant’s abstract of the record consists of more than two thousand pages of printed matter, and many original exhibits have been filed here for our examination. The evidence embraces a history of years of intense business activity involving the expenditure of many millions of dollars and resulting in correspondingly large profits. Preliminary to our consideration of the issues, which relate to sufficiency of the petition to> state a cause of action, sufficiency of the evidence to prove the allegations of joint adventure and fraud, and propriety of the accounting had, we shall indicate rather fully the import of the pleadings.

Plaintiff went to trial on his amended petition, filed December .10, 1925, which alleged in substance that, prior to September 1, 1914, *1043 Wolcott, Guyton, Harrington, Beers and Grant bad been extensively engaged in the business of buying and selling horses and mules and bad large stations and plants at Kansas City, Lathrop and St. Louis, Missouri, and other places, which stations and business enterprises were being conducted in the names of three different Missouri corporations, to-wit, The Guyton and Harrington Mule Company, Stock Yards Horse and Mule Company, and Wolcott, Beers and Grant Horse and Mule Company. The stockholders, directors and officers of said corporations consisted in a large part of the same persons, the entire capital stock of said Guyton and Harrington Mule Company being owned by said Guyton and Harrington, and the entire capital stock of the other two corporations being owned as follows: Guyton and Harrington one-fourth each, and Wolcott, Beers and Grant one-sixth each. After September 1, 1914, other corporations and partnerships were organized and entered into for the more convenient handling of said business as follows, to-wit: A certain Missouri corporation known as Womack & Nichols Mule Company, controlled by said five parties, was reorganized and its corporate name changed to Womack and Stroud Mule Company, the stock being owned by said parties in the proportion of one-fourth each by said Guyton and Harrington and one-sixth each by said Wolcott, Beers and Grant; a partnership was formed known as Biddle and Company in which a part of said horse and mule business was conducted by said parties under an arrangement subsequently pleaded by which they were to share the profits of said business; parts of said business were conducted by them under various trade names, among them the trade name of C. & A. Company, and the name of Wolcott, Beers and Grant; and a certain partnership was formed between said Guyton and one Reed, Tough and others, known as the C. & A. Horse Company, and the profits accruing therefrom to the said Guyton were to be shared by him and the said Harrington, Wolcott, Beers and Grant as further set forth in the petition.

The petition further alleged that about September 1, 1914, and after the beginning of the World War, “pursuant to an understanding and arrangement between the said Guyton, Harrington, Wolcott, Beers and Grant, the said defendants, Guyton and Beers, at the expense of the Stock Yards Horse & Mule Company, went to Montreal and entered into an arrangement with the British Government through the Commanding Officer of the Remount Commission of said Government at Montreal whereby large purchases of horses and mules were made by said Government with the said J. D. Guyton, and in view of the enormous increase in their business, resulting from said purchases, and in contemplation of a further enormous increase in the purchase of horses and mules by the British Government and. other belligerent allied powers, which were then engaged in the War *1044 or which might afterwards come into the War as allied or associated powers, and for the more convenient and adequate financing of said enterprises, which required an enormous amount of borrowed capital, exceeding the borrowing capacity of the said Guyton, Harrington and Beers, and for the more convenient and simple handling of said business, and the division of the profits thereof, and for the more effective concentration and employment of all the resources of all the parties and corporations which they owned and to enable the said parties to form, use and employ other corporations, partnerships and trade names in adequately meeting the demands of such enormously expanded business, the said Guyton, Harrington, Wolcott, Beers and Grant engaged together under an oral agreement as joint adventurers in the business of buying and selling, and generally dealing in horses and mules throughout the United States and in foreign countries, and agreed that the said joint adventure should include all of the business thereafter transacted by the said mentioned individuals, corporations, partnerships, trade names, and any other corporations or partnerships thereafter formed by said parties, and that the profits realized to said parties from the operation of all such corporations, partnerships and trade names should be pooled and divided among the said joint adventurers on the basis of a division to the then stock ownership o$ each of said parties in the capital stock of the Stock Yards Horse & Mule Company, to-wit: One-fourth to each the said J. D. Guyton, and W. B». Harrington, and one-sixth each to the said H. M. Beers, J. M. Grant and Josiah 0. Wolcott, and it was further agreed .that the said joint adventure should continue as long as said corporations, partnerships or trade organizations, or any of them would be engaged in the business of supplying horses and mules to the British Government or to any of the allied or associated powers engaged in the War. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W.2d 562, 327 Mo. 1030, 1931 Mo. LEXIS 606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denny-v-guyton-mo-1931.