Des Moines Bank & Trust Co. v. George M. Bechtel & Co.

51 N.W.2d 174, 243 Iowa 1007, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 390
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 8, 1952
Docket47363
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 51 N.W.2d 174 (Des Moines Bank & Trust Co. v. George M. Bechtel & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Des Moines Bank & Trust Co. v. George M. Bechtel & Co., 51 N.W.2d 174, 243 Iowa 1007, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 390 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

*1014 Bliss, J.

By stipulation of tbe parties, approved by this court, the appeal was presented on a printed record of 550 pages of pleadings, procedural matters, and the findings, opinion and decree of the trial court of 148 pages. The evidence is not set out in the printed record. The printed arguments have over 600 pages. The evidence is before us, for review de novo, in 8000 or more pages of depositions and transcripts of testimony, and many thousands of exhibits accumulated in twenty or more years in the operation of this corporation, consisting of corporate records, books of account, minute books, correspondence, computations, and instruments and records of numerous kinds.

The original notices were served on the defendants on or about April 22,1943, and the petition of plaintiffs, later amended, was filed May 7, 1943. Trial was begun before Judge Peisen on September 9, 1946, and continued to November 22, 1946, and terminated shortly thereafter by his death. Judge Narey was appointed as trial judge, and after reading the testimony already taken he proceeded with the trial on September 2, 1947, and concluded with the testimony on November 17, 1947, and rendered judgment and decree on May- 25, 1948. The appeal was presented to this court at the April 1951 period.

One phase of the controversy was before this court on issues of law in State ex rel. Weede v. Iowa Southern Utilities Company of Delaware, 231 Iowa 784, 2 N.W.2d 372, 4 N.W.2d 869, and from a decree on a fact issue in said case (State ex rel. Weede v. Bechtel) in 239 Iowa 1298, 31 N.W.2d 853, 8 A. L. R.2d 1162.

The named plaintiffs herein are mostly persons living in the territory served by the Utilities company who bought their preferred stock from employees of the company or of others, all of whom were selling as agents of Bechtel & Company. To such as they and to the general public the preferred stock was sold at par and accrued dividends, particularly during the period when the major units of property were acquired. To the stockbrokers in New York City and elsewhere who had the selling rights out-, side of Iowa the Bechtel company delivered the preferred stock at discounts substantially under par.

Leona E. Tunnell and her sister, Alta M. Price, and William Randall acquired their stock in 1921 when the company was a *1015 Maine corporation, and exchanged it for preferred stock in the Delaware company in 1924. The other named plaintiffs acquired their preferred stock in the Delaware company, for the most part, between 1924 and 1932, inclusive.

The petition, as amended, alleged, and the plaintiffs contend, that George M. Bechtel and Harold R. Bechtel, in conspiracy, co-operation and connivance with others of the defendants, fraudulently and wrongfully and in breach of their fiduciary relations to the Delaware company, in the acquisition of property for said company, secretly obtained it at prices greatly less than the prices at which it was turned into- the company, and that the Bechtels and J. Ross Lee and other defendants wrongfully appropriated the excess consideration. Plaintiffs also alleged and contend that the Bechtels wrongfully took from the company large sums of money as operating or management fees in connection with the company, and approximately $700,000 in dividends on the common stock paid out of capital assets, and wrongful commissions and expenditures. Plaintiffs alleged and contend also that defendant Edward L. Shutts, E. F. Bulmahn and others, without the authority or knowledge of the directors, wrongfully appropriated by means of a secret account in the Harris Trust & Savings Bank of Chicago many thousands of dollars of the company’s funds.

The individual defendants and the Iowa Southern Utilities Company of Delaware answered separately, and denied the allegations, and affirmatively pleaded that the recovery and relief prayed for were barred by statute of limitations and by laches, and as to certain defendants by discharges in bankruptcy, and that some issues are settled by prior adjudication.

No service was obtained on the defendants Edward de Rivera, H. H. Polk, and W. C. Langley & Co., and there are no appearances for them. After the commencement of this action, Martha R. Bechtel, the wife of George M. Bechtel, died, as did J. Ross Lee, and George M. Bechtel, as executor of the estate of Martha, and DeElda Lee, as executrix of the estate of her husband, were substituted respectively as defendants.

We will refer separately hereinafter to each specific item of wrongful conduct for which the plaintiffs seek recovery for the *1016 company on bebalf of themselves and of other stockholders similarly situated.

The numerous separate transactions involved in this appeal and the enormous record compel the court to limit the factual statement to a very inadequate presentation of the matters involved, in order to keep the opinion to a reasonable length. The controversy grows out of the very close and involved relations between the Iowa Southern Utilities Company and George M. Bechtel & Company. The latter was simply the: name adopted by George M. Bechtel when he entered the business of buying and selling bond issues of the various municipalities of Iowa in 1891, with his main office at Davenport. The word “Bankers” followed the company name on his stationery, but he was not a banker in the commonly accepted or commercial sense of the word. In the earlier years he handled only municipal bonds, but when that business slackened he dealt also in other corporate bonds. It was claimed for him that he handled ninety per cent of the municipal bonds issued in Iowa. But he never accepted deposits except money of his customers left with him for bond purchases which was immediately redeposited to his credit in other regular banks. He never operated in the manner of the customary commercial or savings bank. Checks were not drawn upon him. He was not a member of the Davenport clearinghouse and he did not comply with statutory provisions or regulations applicable to' banks.

When his son, Harold, finished school, and was later discharged from Army service, he began working for his father, and in January 1926 his father and he formed a partnership and retained the old business name of the father. After some years of apparently real success they met with reverses. .On January 2, 1933, the Securities Department of the State of Iowa discovered that the Bechtels had neglected to' renew their license to sell securities. Further investigation disclosed that the funds of various municipalities in their hands were not being kept segregated, but were mingled with their general deposits in other banks. A license was denied them and injunction and receivership proceedings were instituted, and in September 1933 involuntary bankruptcy proceedings were begun against the Bechtel partnership and its two partners, and carried to con-- *1017 elusion, and their discharge in 1934. Although the Beehtel company was a partnership G. M.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.W.2d 174, 243 Iowa 1007, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/des-moines-bank-trust-co-v-george-m-bechtel-co-iowa-1952.