Ellett v. Morefield

105 So. 348, 159 La. 295, 1925 La. LEXIS 2230
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 13, 1925
DocketNo. 27148.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 105 So. 348 (Ellett v. Morefield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellett v. Morefield, 105 So. 348, 159 La. 295, 1925 La. LEXIS 2230 (La. 1925).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

Plaintiffs, eight in number, were formerly stockholders of the Peerless Oil Company, Inc., which was organized in the year 1917. This corporation was a small concern, composed of only a few stockholders. Practically all the stock was owned by four men, namely, W. G. Strange, J. T. Tanner, W. H. Morefield, and Wade Hampton. Morefield was president, Strange was vice president and Tanner was secretary. Hampton was also connected with the company for a short time but this connection ceased when, on September 4, 1917, he sold his stock, consisting of 30 shares, to- Strange.

The company was successful from, the start, and in a very short time it accumulated some valuable oil-properties. In January, 1919, in pursuance of a resolution of its stockholders, the properties of the corporation, together with certain properties owned by W. G. Strange and others, were sold to the Globe Oil Company for $750,000, on the basis of 60 per cent, of the purchase price to the Peerless Company and 40 per cent, of the purchase price to Strange and his co-owners. This sale was made partly for cash and partly on terms of credit.

*297 The Globe Oil Company having failed to pay the two notes maturing last, the Peerless Oil Company, Inc., foreclosed its mortgage, and the properties were sold by the sheriff, under date of May 12, 1920, to W. G. Strange. The adjudicatee at this sale made a bid of an amount-sufficient to discharge the entire debt due to the foreclosing creditor, principal, interest, and costs, and to cover also the claims of certain furnishers of supplies against the leases.

Subsequently, all the outstanding stock of the Peerless Oil Company, consisting of 179.25 shares of the par value of $100 each, was called in, and, from the funds on hand, a dividend was declared and apportioned among the stockholders, whereby each stockholder received $4,665 for every, dollar of the par value of the stock held by him. All the stockholders, except Strange, Morefield, and Tanner, received their dividends in .cash, and surrendered their certificates of stock which were duly canceled. At this date, Strange, Morefield, and Tanner together owned 144 shares of the stock;, Strange owning 80 shares, and Morefield and Tanner owning each 32 shares. After the sheriff’s sale, Morefield and Tanner approached Strange with a proposition to. be allowed to share in his purchase. Strange agreed, and accordingly he paid over to the sheriff an amount sufficient only to liquidate the-claims of the creditors and of the other stockholders and costs, taking over the properties in consideration thereof and in payment of the amounts due to Morefield, Tanner, and himself.

On August 12, 1920, Strange, Morefield, and Tanner, as the sole stockholders of the Peerless Oil Company, Inc., adopted a resolution consenting to the dissolution of the said corporation. This resolution was forwarded to the secretary of state, who thereafter issued a certificate of dissolution as provided in the last paragraph of section 28 of Act 267 of 1914,

This suit was filed on August 14, 1923. With the exception of Wade E. Hampton, plaintiffs had been the holders, in the aggregate, of 16% shares of the capital stock of the Peerless Oil Company, Inc. As heretofore stated, the 30 shares of stock owned by Hampton had been transferred to Strange. The suit is against Strange, Tanner, More-field, and R. R. Sutherland, who owned one share of stock, and who had been a director in the corporation.

Plaintiffs’ petition consists of 32 paragraphs, and they also filed a supplemental petition, consisting of 8 paragraphs, in which numerous allegations and charges are made against the defendant.

The suit, however, involves, in the main, only three demands, with an alternative prayer, viz.

First, that the purchase at the sheriff’s sale by W. G. Strange be decreed to have been made for the benefit of the Peerless Oil Company, Inc.

Secondly, that, inasmuch as the liquidation of the corporation was improperly made, the court appoint liquidators to wind up its affairs.

Thirdly, that defendants furnish a full accounting of the affairs of the said company.

In the alternative, plaintiffs pray for a judgment for their pro rata shares in any moneys of the Peerless Oil Company held by the defendants.

The court below rejected plaintiffs’ demands and dismissed their suit, and from this judgment plaintiffs are prosecuting this appeal.

We will discuss these demands in the order in which we have stated them.

1. In support of their prayer that the properties purchased at the foreclosure sale be decreed to be properties of the Peerless Oil Company, plaintiffs rely upon the legal principle that officers and directors of a corporation are, in a sense, trustees, without right to participate in any agreement or com *299 bination to divest the corporation of its property, or to seek their own profit at the expense of the company.

The argument might have some force if the adjudicatee at the sale was the president- of, or director in, the Globe Oil Company, whose property was sold; but certainly it can have no application in the present case. Mr. Strange, so far as the record discloses, had no, connection whatever with the Globe Oil Company. He was an officer of the Peerless Oil Company, whose properties had been sold to the Globe Oil Company, under a resolution of its stockholders, among whom, with the exception of Hampton whose stock had been previously disposed of, were the plaintiffs. Mr. Strange attended the sale, which was public and open, and which was made after the usual advertisements, in the interest of the Peerless Oil Company, in which he was an officer and large stockholder, to protect the interests of said company and its stockholders. He made only one bid, which was in an amount sufficient to discharge the debt due the Peerless Company, with costs, and certain additional claims by furnishers of supplies. Plaintiffs certainly could not require more than this. The fact that no other bidder appeared, and that no other bid was made, is a strong indication that Mr. Strange paid the full price for the property. There was nothing to prevent the plaintiffs from participating in the bidding if they had so desired, but they did not do so. In fact, they never even attended the sale. The effect of Mr. Strange’s bid was to -protect in full the interest of every stockholder in his company. If he was seeking to profit at their expense, it would have been a very easy matter for him to have started his bidding at a low figure. Non 'constat, in that event, he would not have been able to purchase the properties at a price much less than that at which they were adjudicated to him.

We do not find any basis for affording plaintiffs any relief under this demand of their action.

2. Nor do we find any ground for holding that the corporation was improperly liquidated. Each stockholder received his proportionate share of the assets. Upon the surrender and cancellation of the certificates of stock held by them, plaintiffs and the othqr stockholders ceased to have any interest in the company. At the time of the liquidation, there were only three directors and stockholders remaining, and they joined in the resolution to dissolve, and in the request to the secretary of state to isshe the necessary certificate of dissolution.

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Bluebook (online)
105 So. 348, 159 La. 295, 1925 La. LEXIS 2230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellett-v-morefield-la-1925.