Des Moines Gas Co. v. West

50 Iowa 16
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 6, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 50 Iowa 16 (Des Moines Gas Co. v. West) 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 Gas Co. v. West, 50 Iowa 16 (iowa 1878).

Opinion

Beck, J.

a. corpora-of°stookfoidí er: trustee: fraud. I. The plaintiff, the Des Moines Gas Company, was organized as a corporation in 1864. Its capital stock was fixed by the articles of incorporation at one hundred thousand dollars, represented by one ° thousand shares, and the limit of its indebtedness at twenty-five thousand dollars. It assumed authority,, under Code, § 1059, “to make contracts, acquire and transfer-property, and to possess- the same power in such respects as private individuals.” The object of the incorporation was the construction of works and laying of pipes to supply the city of Des Moines with gas.

B. F. Allen, one of the original incorporators, and president of the company, owned seven hundred and sixty-nine shares of its stock. In 1871 he borrowed of the Newark Savings Institution two hundred thousand dollars, and pledged seven hundred shares of the stock, with other collaterals, as security upon the loan. After this transaction, which was in July, 1871, Allen surrendered all his certificates of stock, including those so pledged, and new certificates were issued; those representing seven hundred shares were issued to him, as trustee, with-' out specifying for whom or for what fund he held the stock, or in- any manner specifying the character of the trust. Eighty-five shares were issued to him in his own right. This number was made up of the sixty-nine shares he had before held and sixteen other shares acquired from some other per[21]*21son. This transaction was in August, 1871. Allen thus held seven hundred shares as trustee, and eighty-five in his own right.

When the certificates of stock to Allen, as trustee, were delivered to the Newark Savings Institution does not appear, further than such transfer was made in 1873, before this amendment of the articles of incorporation of the company was attempted, to which we shall hereafter have occasion to refer. There was nothing on the books of the incorporation showing that the Newark Savings Institution had any interest in the stock or held it.

Notwithstanding the indebtedness ' of the company was restricted by its articles of incorporation to twenty-five thousand dollars, bonds to the amount of one hundred thousand dollars were issued, bearing date November, 1872. It is highly probable that they were actually issued in 1873, and antedated for some reason demanded by the peculiar practices of Allen in his financial operations. No deed of trust, was executed, or at least recorded, to accord with the recitals on the face of the bonds. It was probably discovered that the restrictions in the articles of incorporation would stand in the way of negotiating the bonds. They were deposited in the safe of Allen’s bank, until his necessities overcame his caution, when, though as worthless as blank paper, they were every one used to secure large sums borrowed by Allen. Long after the mortgage foreclosed in this ease was executed, a deed of trust was given to E. R. West, trustee, to secure these worthless bonds. They cut no figure in this case further than to show the recklessness with which Allen trifled with the rights of others in carrying out his dishonest schemes. It is presumed that the holders of these bonds have no hopes of enforcing them, as they do not appear in this case. But West, the trustee, who appears to have been always the ready instrument of Allen in his schemes of fraud disclosed by the record, insists in his cross-bill upon the validity of these bonds.

[22]*22Allen, having discovered that, under its articles of incorporation, the gas company could not be made liable for indebtedness in excess of twenty-five thousand dollars, procured the services of an attorney to devise a way of creating a valid debt against it. He was, at this time-, its president, and it will be remembered all his stock was pledged to the Newark Savings Institution. It was found necessary, in order to accomplish Allen’s purpose, to amend the articles of incorporation of the company, which was done in this manner: The attorney prepared new articles of incorporation, which his clerk copied into the book of the company, together with minutes of a meeting of stockholders, purporting to record the action whereby the new articles were adopted. No notice of this meeting was given, and, in fact, none was held, but the minutes disclosed regular proceedings, and they were duly signed by Allen and his confederates. Thereupon the bonds and deed of trust were executed. As we have shown, seven hundred shares of Allen’s stock were transferred to him as. trustee. He continued to be the president of the corporation.

The bonds were sent to his banking house in New York city for sale. Accompanying them was what purported to be a copy of the deed of trust securing their payment. The deed of trust recites that the bonds were issued “to retire ” the old stock of the , company. The copy on which the bonds were sold recites that the bonds were issued for the purpose of completing the gas works and making extensions .thereof. The bonds were sold, and the Charter Oak Life Insurance Company and its co-defendants became purchasers for value, and without notice of the fraudulent acts and intentions of Allen and his confederates. The proceeds of the bonds were appropriated to Allen’s use, and not one cent thereof ever went into the hands of the gas company.

■ The main contest in the case is between the owners of the bonds, the Charter Oak Insurance Company and others, and the stockholders of the gas company, the Newark Savings Institution and others. There is no contest as to who ara [23]*23the holders of the bonds and stock. ■ The ownership of fifteen bonds is not known, and the decree of the Circuit Court provides for the protection of the unknown owners. This provision of the decree will be hereafter referred to. We will proceed to consider the conflicting claims of the holders of the bonds and stock.

It must be admitted that the parties holding the bonds acquired them in good faith and for value, and were not informed of the fraudulent designs and practices of Allen and his associates. On the other hand the Newark Savings Institution acquired the stock without actual notice of Allen’s operations, and in no manner participated in his frauds. They are all equally innocent, and equally the victims of the bold and unscrupulous financial adventurer, who, the record shows, had the address to gain credit in three separate schemes upon his interest in the gas company, to an amount in each exceeding its value. His stock he had pledged at its face; the second series of bonds he sold at par; and the first and worthless series he hypothecated for large sums of money. The equities of these victims, so far as they' are based upon their innocence and sufferings, are about evenly balanced. But so far as equities arise from their acts and relations to the parties, the same cannot be said. These equities we will now proceed to consider.

It will be remembered that the Newark Savings Institution took Allen’s stock as collateral security upon the loan made to him. It permitted him to have uncontrolled management of the stock and of the corporation, and until his failure revealed the paucity of his assets and his tortuous operations, it had made no effort to secure honest and competent management of the gas company. Before the bonds were issued it held in pledge all of Allen’s stock, and had the power to prevent the fraud perpetrated by Allen in getting up the amended articles of incorporation, and in issuing the bonds. It well knew that, as the holder of the stock, it had the power to control the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Iowa 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/des-moines-gas-co-v-west-iowa-1878.