Dragoon Marble & Mining Co. v. McNeish

235 P. 401, 28 Ariz. 96, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 235
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1925
DocketCivil No. 2313.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 235 P. 401 (Dragoon Marble & Mining Co. v. McNeish) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dragoon Marble & Mining Co. v. McNeish, 235 P. 401, 28 Ariz. 96, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 235 (Ark. 1925).

Opinion

JONES, Superior Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment for the defendant in an action brought *98 by the Dragoon Marble & Alining Company, a corporation, against J. S. McNeish (No. 5029) to set aside a judgment in an action theretofore brought by McNeish against the company in the same court for moneys advanced and services rendered.

It appeared from the evidence that the appellant company was organized under the laws of Arizona in 1917, with an authorized capital stock of 1,000,000 shares of the par value of $1 each for the purpose of taking over and developing a group of unpatented claims constituting a marble quarry in the Dragoon mountains of Cochise county, Arizona. One A. T. Kolb and appellee, J. S. McNeish owned the marble quarry mentioned in different interests, and were the chief promoters of the corporation. At the organization meeting the former was elected director and president, and the latter director and secretary, and they continued such thereafter. Of the remaining three directors, two resided in California, and the fifth one during the period here important was one George Taylor, an attorney of Bisbee, who represented McNeish in the original action and throughout the transactions later to be noted.

The company purchased the marble claims from Kolb and McNeish, paying the former 400,000 shares for his interest and the latter 50,000 shares for his interest. They thus became and continued at all times the largest stockholders of the company. In 1917 the Arizona Corporation Commission issued a permit to the company to sell stock to the public, and pursuant thereto there were sold some 56,000 shares.

For reasons unnecessary to relate, the affairs of the' company did not flourish, and McNeish, claiming that the company was indebted to him for moneys advanced and services rendered, filed an action against the company (No. 4618) in the superior court of Cochise county, on June 10, 1922, asking *99 judgment in the sum of $2,363.94. Summons was served on that or the following day upon Kolb as president. On June 12, 1922, a conversation occurred between Kolb and McNeish, at which the former requested the latter to hold his action in abeyance pending the outcome of certain efforts he said he was making to finance the corporation, and it was then agreed that the company should employ an attorney to file a general denial to the complaint in order to suspend further proceedings. The full extent of the understanding was a matter of dispute which will later be stated in the opinion. A general denial for the company was filed by an attorney, and the case stood in that manner until September 11, 1922, when McNeish’s attorney served notice on the company’s attorney that a request would be made to have the case set for trial, to which the company’s attorney replied that he had appeared merely for the purpose of filing a general denial to stay proceedings, and that he had no authority to try the case but would send to Mr. Kolb by mail (Kolb being in California) a copy of the notice. This, he testified, he did. In this connection it should be added that Kolb testified that he never received any notice of the setting of the case for trial. On September 17, 1922, pursuant to the notice given the court set the case down to be tried on September 23, 1922, and on that day it was tried to the court. No one appeared for the company, and judgment was rendered for McNeish in the full amount claimed— $2,363.94.

Kolb returned from California October 16, 1922, and, as a result of several conversations he had with McNeish and Taylor (all being directors), McNeish agreed to withhold execution on his judgment for the period of one year from and after the date on which the California authorities should issue to the *100 company a permit to sell stock in California, an application for which it was then arranged to make. In December McNeish wrote a letter to the California commissioner to the effect just mentioned. That this much is true is undisputed, but the exact extent of the agreement was disputed, as will be later shown. Also at this time it was agreed that an application should be made to the Arizona Corporation Commission for a similar permit, the one previously secured presumably having expired, and that McNeish should go to Phoenix in that behalf; and this he did. Expense money was delivered to Mc-Neish for the purpose. Late in 1922 permits were issued by both the California and Arizona authorities.

On January 10, 1923, a month or so after the permits were issued, Kolb came to Bisbee and undertook to hold a stockholders’ meeting and elect directors other than McNeish and Taylor. A controversy arose between Kolb and McNeish, and the latter testified that Kolb repudiated McNeish’s judgment and declared that the company would not pay it. The following day McNeish addressed a long letter to the president and directors of the company, a copy of which he sent to the California Commission, complaining of Kolb’s actions and giving notice that he would, among other things, take execution on his judgment against the company’s property. These proceedings and the notice will be mentioned more in detail later in the opinion.

On January 20, 1923, McNeish caused execution to issue, and, pursuant to notice given by the sheriff on February 17, 1923, all the company’s property- was sold to McNeish in payment of his judgment in full, with interest. Prior to the expiration of the six months’ redemption period, and consequently before a deed had been issued by the sheriff, the company *101 brought this action to set aside the judgment and for general relief.

It might be added that the evidence clearly shows that Kolb was practically in control of the company at all times. At director’s meetings he voted by proxy for the two absent directors, and thus had a majority of the board. This method of voting does not appear to have been contested.

It might also be added that it does not appear positively that any stock was sold under the permits secured in 1922.

In this action (No. 5029) the company attacks the judgment in case 4618 and sale thereunder on three general grounds:

First. That a part of the understanding above mentioned between Kolb and McNeish, entered into on or about June 12, 1922, was that, upon the company filing a general denial, the case would be held in abeyance indefinitely, and that McNeish violated that agreement in pressing it for trial in September, 1922, without notice to the company;

Second. That McNeish imposed on the court in Case No. 4618 by putting forth false claims as to the account due him, thereby inducing the court to render judgment against the company in an amount greatly in excess of what was really due him; and

Third. That the sale was improper at all events, because McNeish had agreed not to issue execution within one year after the California Commission had issued its permit and in violation thereof had done so within a month or two of that time.

To the complaint in this case (5029) McNeish answered under oath, generally denying all of plaintiff’s material allegations, but admitting formal matters and the fact that he had recovered the judgment attacked.

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Bluebook (online)
235 P. 401, 28 Ariz. 96, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dragoon-marble-mining-co-v-mcneish-ariz-1925.