Elliott v. Sullivan

137 S.W. 287, 156 Mo. App. 496, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 336
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 8, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 137 S.W. 287 (Elliott v. Sullivan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. Sullivan, 137 S.W. 287, 156 Mo. App. 496, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 336 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

GRAY, J.

Plaintiff’s petition contains five counts, in which he asks judgment for goods sold and delivered to the Kansas City-Aurora Mining Company. The counts -are substantially alike, except the first is for goods sold and delivered by the plaintiff, and the others are for goods sold and delivered by assignors. In each count there is a general allegation that the goods were sold and delivered to the Kansas City-Aurora Mining [501]*501Company, a partnership composed of the defendants. After said general allegations, it is alleged in each count, that the defendants claim to be engaged in business as a corporation, and that as such corporation, they claim they bought the goods sued for herein, and the petition then proceeds in the following language:

“Plaintiff further says that the defendants, each and every of them, are liable to him for the reasonable value of the goods aforesaid so sold, as individuals, jointly and severally, and not in law authorized to have the amount here sued for charged against The Kansas City-Aurora Mining Company as a corporation, for reasons hereinafter pleaded, as follows, to-wit: Many years prior to the association of the defendants together for mining purposes, which association occurred in 1909, there was incorporated under the laws of Missouri, a corporation known as The Kansas City-Aurora Mining Company, and at the time of the incorporation of said Company, its capital stock of $5000 was fully subscribed for, and fully paid up, and it had engaged in the mining business thereafter until all of its capital stock was exhausted, and it had become a worthless and insolvent corporation; and thereafter during the year 1909, the defendants herein, desiring to engage in the business, of mining, and conspiring together for the purpose of cheating, wronging and defrauding this claimant and others to whom they might become indebted in the prosecution of said mining business, should said business not prove a success, by attempting to escape the personal liability that would result to them, and each of them, should they engage in business as co-partners, and further conspiring together to avoid the responsibilities they would assume should they incorporate a company under the laws of the State of Missouri, undertook, without authority from said corporation, to engage in business under the name of the said Kansas City-Aurora Mining Company, thus connecting their individual business with the said corporate name, and having thus assumed the said cor[502]*502porate name, defendants falsely and fraudulently represented that they had a capital stock of $5000 which was fully paid up, and constituted a. basis for credit to which this claimant and all others would have recourse for the payment of their debts, when in fact and indeed they had no capital stock at all which would serve as a basis of credit, and to which, recourse could be had for the payment of debts, but further conspiring together for the purpose of effectuating the contemplated fraud as aforesaid, the defendants conspired with an officer or agent of the said insolvent corporation, and fraudulently induced him to issue to these defendants $5000 of the capital stock of the said corporation, without paying anything therefor, and after having issued to .them the said capital stock, the said defendants undertook and did carry on said mining enterprise in the name of the said corporation, and for the purpose of securing credit from this claim and others, represented that they had organized a corporation with $5000 capital stock fully paid up, and which would serve as a basis of credit, when in fact they had no corporate organization at all, or any capital stock. That for the reasons aforesaid, said corporation cannot be held liable for the payment of the plaintiff’s debt, and being insolvent, the same could not be collected front it if judgment Avere secured.”

There was a demurrer filed to the petition, and the same was overruled, and defendants answered, denying that they were members of the co-partnership, and alleging that the plaintiff and one of the assignors had instituted proceeding's against the corporation in its corporate name in the circuit court of Lawrence county, and had obtained judgments against the corporation on the identical demands sued for, and had levied execution upon the corporation’s property under said judgment, and disposed of the same.

The trial court found the issues in favor of the plaintiff and rendered judgment on each count' for the amount sued for.

[503]*503The facts of the case may be stated as follows: In 1899, a Mr. Miller and his associates, procured from the State of Missouri, a charter for a company known as the Kansas City-Aurora Mining Company, with a capital stock of $5000 divided into two hundred shares of $25 each, and fully paid. The corporate life, as evidenced by the certificate, was fifty years. The company engaged in mining in Lawrence county, and in the course of a couple of years, had expended its $5000 and quit active business, and did nothing further save making some, reports when called upon by the Secretary of State. About the time the company ceased business, Mr. Miller acquired from the other stockholders all the shares of stock of the corporation. No proceedings of any kind were taken or threatened to revoke the charter of the corporation upon its quitting business in 1901.

In March 1909, the United Zinc Company, another corporation, and owner of ninety acres of land at Aurora, proposed to one Mr. Stratton that if he would associate some persons with him who were willing to advance about $500, which it was deemed would be neces-. sary to drain the land of water, the United Zinc Company would give him and his associate a lease on the ninety acres of land, including the right to use a certain mining plant and mill and other machinery. Mr. Slratton, believing that the offer was a good one, and with others desiring to advance the mining interests in and about Aurora, called a public' meeting at the Elks Club Room at Aurora, on the 9th day of March, 1909, to discuss the proposition of the United Zinc Cimpany, and with a view of interesting the business men of Aurora in the proposition. At this meeting an effort was made to get twenty men to take an interest of twenty-five dollars each, and thereby raise the $500. Mr. Miller was present at this meeting and was solicited to go into the company. Whereupon-he stated that he had quit mining and did not want to mine any more, but he had a charter and was the owner of all the stock of the Kansas City-[504]*504Aurora Mining Company, and to help the matter along he would transfer to each of the persons who advanced twenty-five dollars, ten shares of the stock owned by him, and would retain ten shares for himself. The proposition was agreed to, whereupon, Mr. Miller surrendered the certificates of stock for the purpose of having them cancelled and new stock was issued to the new stockholders to whom the shares had been given by him.

An effort was made to reorganize the .corporation, but on account of some irregularities, it was abandoned and another meeting held, at which all the shareholders were present, and agreed in writing to the holding of the meeting. In the meantime, the shares transferred by Mr.. Miller had been transferred by three of the persons to the others interested, so that only seventeen shareholders remained.

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W. 287, 156 Mo. App. 496, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-sullivan-moctapp-1911.