Douglass v. Water Conservation Co.

114 P.2d 288, 108 Colo. 230, 1941 Colo. LEXIS 195
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 2, 1941
DocketNo. 14,551.
StatusPublished

This text of 114 P.2d 288 (Douglass v. Water Conservation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Douglass v. Water Conservation Co., 114 P.2d 288, 108 Colo. 230, 1941 Colo. LEXIS 195 (Colo. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Francis E. Bouck

delivered the opinion of the court.

We are asked to review a judgment of dismissal entered in the district court of Larimer county against the plaintiffs in error upon the latter’s standing on a complaint to which general demurrers had been interposed and sustained.

The complaint is voluminous and sets forth a complex situation alleged to have been brought about by the defendants in error, some of whom were associated with the plaintiffs in error in certain corporations and others of whom are alleged to have actively aided and abetted the former. The ultimate question is whether the actions charged have unlawfully deprived the plaintiffs in error of property, entitling them to an accounting.

In order that the controversy may be presented exactly as it came before the lower court, the complaint is quoted verbatim as follows:

“I.
“That the defendants, The Water Supply and Storage Company and The Water .Conservation Company and The West Side Construction Company, are all corporations organized and existing under the laws of the State of Colorado.
“II.
“That in the spring of 1929, to get money subscribed to complete the West Side Collection Ditch from Rawah Creek on the Laramie River, and to give each subscriber security for repayment thereon, the defendant L. C. Moore and others incorporated The West Side Construction Company under the laws of Colorado, as an instrumentality to take the construction contract and to give *232 all subscribers equal security for repayment thereof, share for share, by stock in said company on a basis of one (1) share for each One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) subscribed toward said construction cost. That all of the plaintiffs’ stock was subscribed in that year, and cash was paid therefor by the plaintiffs at One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) per share of contribution, through The West Side Construction Company, to accomplish such construction and to participate in said security of said second mortgage.
“That said stock has been continuously held by plaintiffs since the said subscription of said moneys except that the shares' of the plaintiff Atwell were originally issued to her husband, D. E. Atwell, since deceased; the shares of the plaintiff Pullis were originally issued to her husband, Augustus Pullis, since deceased; the shares of the plaintiff McArthur were originally issued to D. R. McArthur, since deceased; and the shares of the plaintiffs May Mullen Dower, The J. K. Mullen Corporation, John M. O’Connor, Ellen Mullen Weckbaugh, and Katherine M. Neelands were originally issued to J. K. Mullen, since deceased; through which several decedents’ estates said plaintiffs, by purchase, legacy, and inheritance, have derived their holdings.
“That the shares in said company so held by the plaintiffs are as follows:
“P. K. Alexander........................................................ 2%
“F. J. Allnutt....................... 1
“Mrs. D. E. Atwell......................................................10
“L. M. Blacker............................................................10
“Bollinger & Robinson.............................................. 5
“George W. Bond & Son............................................ 2%
“B. F. Clark.................................................................. 5
“Earl Douglass ............................................................10
“May Mullen Dower..................................................12
“The Greeley Laundry Company............................ 1
“Charles Hansen ...................................•..................... 1
“L. P. McArthur.......................................................... 2%
*233 “A. M. Macy................................................................ 2
“The J. K. Mullen Corporation................................ 2
“E. F. Munroe..............................................................20
“Katherine M. Neelands............................................ 6
“John M. O’Connor.................................................... 6
“J. M. B. Petrikin........................................................ 4
“Inez M. Pullis.............. 2
“John E. Shafer.......................................................... 2
“L. L. Stimson................................................... 50
“Carl C. Tams.............................................................. 1
“Ellen Mullen Weckbaugh........................................12
“Frank M. Weller........................................................ 1
“Total................................170%
“That the total shares of. said company outstanding are six hundred eighty-four and one-half (684%).
“That the plaintiffs, The Greeley Laundry Company and The J. K. Mullen Corporation, are both corporations organized and existing under the laws of the State of Colorado.
“HI.
“That R. C. Wykert is president and, for many years, has been a director of The Water Supply and Storage Company, and the defendant J. I. Wykert is his son and, plaintiffs are informed and believe and so allege, has been acting for himself, his father, and said company in the matters hereinafter set forth.
“That at all times hereinafter mentioned, subsequent to January 1, 1937, the defendant, L. C. Moore, was president of The West Side Construction Company, and that the defendant, Rodney Hughes, was secretary of said company, and said two and the defendant, A. J. Whistleman, constituted the sole directors of said company. That for many years, the said Rodney Hughes has been private secretary to said Moore, and the said Whistleman was, on June 1, 1937, and for several years just previous has been the employee and business associate of said Moore.
*234 “That the defendants, A. P. Fischer and A. E. March, are lawyers, and with defendant, J. I. Wykert, are the sole directors of The Water Conservation Company.
“IV.
“That the defendant, L. R.

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Bluebook (online)
114 P.2d 288, 108 Colo. 230, 1941 Colo. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglass-v-water-conservation-co-colo-1941.