Fagerberg v. Phoenix Flour Mills Co.

71 P.2d 1022, 50 Ariz. 227, 1937 Ariz. LEXIS 176
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1937
DocketCivil No. 3829.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 71 P.2d 1022 (Fagerberg v. Phoenix Flour Mills Co.) 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
Fagerberg v. Phoenix Flour Mills Co., 71 P.2d 1022, 50 Ariz. 227, 1937 Ariz. LEXIS 176 (Ark. 1937).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, J.

Phoenix Flour Mills Company, a corporation, hereinafter called plaintiff, brought suit against Dixon Fagerberg, hereinafter called defendant, for the sum of $55,090.28. The action was based upon the theory that defendant, J. T. Melczer, and R. C. Blair were at the times- mentioned in the complaint directors of plaintiff corporation, and that they, conspiring and confederating together, used certain funds belonging to it, without its authority, to speculate in wheat on the stock market, and that by reason of such diversion and unauthorized use of these funds the plaintiff has lost $110,180.57, for which it was claimed defendant, Melczer, and Blair were jointly and severally liable to plaintiff. It was further alleged that Melczer had already paid to plaintiff on account of said liability $55,090.28, which had been credited thereon, and judgment was asked against defendant Fagerberg for the balance of the money which it was alleged had thus been illegally converted, together with interest. Shortly thereafter defendant moved that Melczer and Blair be brought in as parties defendant, on the ground that the complaint showed they were jointly involved with defendant in the transactions above described, and that if there was any liability it was a joint and several one. The court granted the motion, and they were duly made parties defendant. Thereafter there were many motions to strike and to make more definite and certain, demurrers and requests for bills of particulars, and other voluminous pleadings, which we refer to more specifically as necessity requires, and the case finally came to trial on the second amended complaint before the court sitting with a jury.

*231 The parties took practically a week to introduce the evidence found in the record, and, when all had rested, plaintiff moved that the jury be discharged, and the court render judgment in favor of plaintiff and against all of the defendants as prayed for in the complaint. Counsel for defendants Blair and Fagerberg moved separately for a directed verdict in favor of their particular defendant. The motion for the last-named defendant, however, was later withdrawn, whereupon the court stated that it was willing- to consider the case as an equity action, and upon such assertion counsel for defendant Fagerberg- renewed their motion for judgment in favor of the latter, whereupon the jury was discharged from further consideration of the case, none of the parties objecting to such action upon the part of the court. It was then ordered that the case be submitted to the court upon briefs, and, this being-done, judgment was finally rendered in favor of plaintiff and against defendants in the sum of $55,090.28, and, defendant Fagerberg’s motion for new trial being duly overruled, the latter has appealed to this court.

There are some twenty-two assignments of error, some raising procedural questions and others going to the merits of the controversy. We will consider the procedural questions in their logical, rather than their numerical, order and then, if necessary, discuss those going- to the merits. The first assignment is that the court erred in overruling defendant’s motion to make more definite and certain, and his demurrer to the complaint and the amended complaint. This is in reality a triple-barreled assignment, going to three separate and distinct rulings, and for this reason, technically speaking, it is insufficient. However, the assignment does, in effect, question the sufficiency of the complaint, and we will therefore consider it. The gist of the complaint is that Fagerberg, Melczer, and Blair, being directors of plaintiff corporation, con *232 spired together for the purpose of using funds belonging to the plaintiff, without its authority and outside the ordinary and usual course of its business, to speculate in the wheat market, and that they did so use them and lost over $100,000 of plaintiff’s money, and that their actions aforesaid were concealed from the plaintiff, its stockholders, and the other directors by making false and fictitious entries in the books of the plaintiff, and- making false financial reports to the stockholders. Does this state a cause of action against defendants ?

It is the general rule that officers and directors of a corporation are authorized to handle the ordinary business affairs of the corporation according to their best judgments, and, if, acting in good faith within the scope of the corporation’s ordinary business, they commit errors of judgment, they are not liable therefor, but it is equally true that, if they go outside of the ordinary and usual business of the corporation and engage in transactions unauthorized by its articles of incorporation and not within the ordinary scope of its business, without the consent or ratification of the stockholders, then good faith will not excuse them from responsibility to the corporation for any losses which they may have incurred by reason of their unauthorized and illegal conduct. These two propositions are so elementary that we think it a waste of space to cite authorities to support them.

The complaint alleged that defendants used the funds of the corporation for speculation on the wheat market and that this was outside of the ordinary and usual course of the business of the corporation. The bill of particulars given by plaintiff sets up each specific transaction wherein the money of the corporation was used for the purpose alleged, and the amount of loss in detail. We think this stated a cause of action *233 and that the bill of particulars furnished was sufficient. The first assignment of error is not well taken.

We consider next the second and fifth assignments of error, which are that the court erred in refusing to make all of the directors of the corporation party defendants, and in striking defendant Fagerberg’s first plea in abatement, based upon the fact that all of the directors were not so joined in the action. We think there was no error in this respect. The allegation of the complaint was that the wrongful conversion of the corporate funds was carried out by Fagerberg, Melczer, and Blair alone, and such being the case the other directors who, so far as the complaint shows, had nothing whatever to do with the conversion would not be either necessary or proper parties to the proceeding. The plea in abatement for failure to join them was very properly stricken.

The next question is covered by the third and sixth assignments of error. Defendant Fagerberg pleaded in bar to the action that the complaint set up a joint tort on the part of himself, Melczer, and Blair, and that the plaintiff had released Melczer from liability for the tort which, as a matter of law, also released Fagerberg and Blair. The plea alleges that defendant Melczer paid to plaintiff some $73,000, and in consideration therefor the plaintiff executed and delivered to Melczer the following document:

“Covenant Not To Sue
“Know all men by these presents:
‘ ‘ That, Whereas, Dixon Fagerberg of Prescott, Arizona, and J. T. Melczer, of Phoenix, Arizona, are justly indebted to the undersigned, Phoenix Flour Mills Company, a corporation, in the sum of One Hundred TAventy-eight Thousand, Five Hundred and 75/100 Dollars ($128,500.75);

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 P.2d 1022, 50 Ariz. 227, 1937 Ariz. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fagerberg-v-phoenix-flour-mills-co-ariz-1937.