Dieterle v. Ann Arbor Paint & Enamel Co.

107 N.W. 79, 143 Mich. 416, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 664
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1906
DocketDocket No. 40
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 N.W. 79 (Dieterle v. Ann Arbor Paint & Enamel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dieterle v. Ann Arbor Paint & Enamel Co., 107 N.W. 79, 143 Mich. 416, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 664 (Mich. 1906).

Opinion

Moore, J.

This is a bill filed by a judgment creditor of the Ann Arbor Paint & Enamel Company, to have the [418]*418original subscribers for stock and subsequent stockholders of said company held liable pro rata for the payment of the indebtedness to complainant, and of all other creditors of said corporation, and for the appointment of a receiver to bring about that result. No other creditor has joined in the proceeding. The bill of complaint was dismissed in the court below. The case is brought here by appeal. The defendant company was organized in March, 1902, with the following statement in its articles of association:

“Articles. The capital stock of the corporation hereby organized is the sum of twenty five thousand dollars, and the number of shares thereof is 2,500, of the par value of ten dollars each.
“ Article 4. The amount of said stock actually paid in at the date hereof is the sum of seven thousand dollars, being 28 per cent, of said capital stock.”

Its stockholders were stated therein to be as follows:

Wm. G Henne..................Ann Arbor.. 30 shares.

J. W. Haas............ “ .. 15 shares.

Louis J.'Lisemer......... “ .. 10 shares.

William J. Aprill______________ “ .. 13 shares.

Henry C. Exinger.......... “ _. 25 shares.

Charles L. Miller_________________ ._ 12 shares.

Sam C. Andress------------ “ .. 10 shares.

Alber Weimer........... “ .. 7 shares.

Otto C. Andress----------------- .. 10 shares.

Charles Wuerth.............. “ .. 12 shares.

OttoSohaible___________ “ .. 10 shares.

William Binder.............. “ .. 8 shares.

Louis W. Schnierle............. “ .. 10 shares.

John H. Gersting--------------- “ .. 5 shares.

John H. Gersting, trustee....... “ .. 95 shares.

Fred J. Sohleede............... “ .. 10 shares.

George Spathelf, Jr............. “ _. 15 shares,

L. C. Weinmann_________ “ _. 15 shares.

Thomas J. Rice_________r....... “ .. 500 shares.

A. Levy........... “ .. 5 shares.
M. L. Belser.............. “ .. 10 shares.

Thomas J. Rice, trustee......... “ ..1,673 shares.

Complainant claims the statement that there was $7,000 of the stock actually paid it was not true. He asks that [419]*419•the following original incorporators be held for the several amounts mentioned:

Wm. G. Henñe....................................$300 00

"Wm. J. Aprill_________________________________ 125 00

H. O. Exinger.................................... 75 00
O. L. Miller....................................... 50 00
L. W. Schnierle__________________________________ 37 50
F. J. Schleede__________________________________80 00

Geo. Spathelf, Jr................................. 125 00

L. G. Weinmann................................. 150 00

,M. L. Belser...................................... 37 50

—upon the theory that none of this money came to the treasury of the Ann Arbor Paint & Enamel Company. He also claims that Koch Bros, should be held for $60, Mr. Lansky for $20, and Dr. Breakey for $600, upon unpaid portions of their subscriptions made for stock after it was incorporated.

The original stockholders defend upon two grounds:

First. That this company is the Magic Manufacturing Company reorganized or merged in the defendant company, that the stock the stockholders received in the new company was the equivalent of the stock they owned in the old company, and they were entitled to have credi ted thereon all the money that they had paid for stock in the old company.

Second. (We quote from brief of counsel.) “The persons who organized the Ann Arbor Paint & Enamel company were the directors and stockholders of the Magic Manufacturing Company, and were creditors of that company to the amount they had paid for their stock or paid toward their stock, and, when the reorganization was decided upon, these were claims against the new company which it could not repudiate, but which it had assumed and agreed to pay. In consideration of the agree-' ment all the property of the Magic Manufacturing Company, including the balances due upon the subscriptions for stock in that company, and the advertising matter and the pretended formulas were transferred to the new company. Therefore, the credits by the reorganized company to each stockholder in the old company for the amount he had paid on his stock in the old company as a payment pro tanto for an equal amount of stock in value in the [420]*420new company, was a liquidation and satisfaction of a debt of the new company, and it is the universal rule that the satisfaction of debts from the corporation is an equivalent for the issue of stock except where the payment in cash is made necessary by the statute under which the corporation is organized. * * *

“We submit therefore, in the light of these authorities that the stockholders of the Ann Arbor Paint & Enamel Company who were subscribers for stock in the Magic Manufacturing Company and who had fully paid for their stock and received in lieu thereof the stock of the reorganized company of the same amount in value as the stock they held in the original company, and the subscribers for stock in the Magic Manufacturing Company who received credit in the new company for the amount they had paid upon their stock subscriptions in the old company, and paid the balance of the face value of their stock in full in the new company, are not indebted to the Ann Arbor Paint & Enamel Company, and the creditors of either company have no claim as against them for any unpaid balance upon their stock.”

It becomes necessary, to pass intelligently upon these several claims, to inquire about the Magic Manufacturing Company. This company was organized under the laws of West Virgina in November, 1901. It ostensibly had a capital of $250,000. It never paid any franchise fee in this State, and had as stockholders all of the original stockholders in the defendant company against whom any relief is asked here. It was promoted by one Maloney to manufacture a product according to an alleged secret formula of one Rice who lived at Ann Arbor, and to whom $50,000 in stock was to be issued for the formulas. Nearly all the money which was paid in found its way to Mr. Maloney and not to the treasury of the Magic Manufacturing Company. Its assets when the defendant’ company was organized, out&'ide of the formula of Mr. Rice, was estimated, and that was probably their full worth, at $565. Its liabilities were upwards of $1,000. Mr. Malonéy, the promoter of the old company, received the following sums: Prom—

[421]*421William G. Hemte $250 00

L. C. Weinmann ... 150 00
H. O. Exinger..... 75 00
W. j: Aprill_______ 125 00

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 N.W. 79, 143 Mich. 416, 1906 Mich. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dieterle-v-ann-arbor-paint-enamel-co-mich-1906.