Fleming v. Reinhardt

280 P. 9, 153 Wash. 526, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 942
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 26, 1929
DocketNo. 21934. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 280 P. 9 (Fleming v. Reinhardt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fleming v. Reinhardt, 280 P. 9, 153 Wash. 526, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 942 (Wash. 1929).

Opinions

Holcomb, J.

About 1912, a number of non-residents of Washington purchased farm lands in Yakima county, within what is known as the Tieton reclamation project of the United States reclamation service. Because the government would not accept applications for a water right from a nonresident of this state, domestic corporations were organized for the purpose of taking title to such lands and applying for the water rights which would be granted therefor by the reclamation service. Among others, James L. Parson, a resident of New York, owned a forty-acre tract of land which came under the Tieton project. Accordingly, he and other nonresident owners living in New York and New Jersey organized the Sage Brush Inn Orchard Company under the laws of Washington. Its articles of incorporation provided that its principal object was to acquire by purchase, or otherwise, lands within the *528 northeast quarter of Section 33, Township 13 North, Range 17 E. W. M., situate in Yakima county, Washington ; to secure water rights therefor and to develop and farm the same. A large part of the above described quarter section of land was afterwards conveyed to the corporation, by various owners, and such owners received, in exchange for such conveyances, one share of the capital stock of the corporation for each'acre so conveyed.

Parson conveyed to the corporation forty acres of land in the above quarter section described in his deed as the north half of the north half of the northeast quarter of Section 33, Township 13, North, Range 17 E. W. M., situate in Yakima county, Washington.

Each certificate received by the stockholders in the corporation so organized recited on its fáce that the same represented a specified fractional part of the right, title and interest in and to a certain tract of land conveyed to the corporation by a certain deed, giving its record, page and number as recorded in the office of the county auditor of Yakima county, Washington. The by-laws of the corporation contained the following provisions:

“Article IX
“ (1) Each and every share of stock in this corporation represents one (1) acre of land in the Northeast Quarter (NE%) of Section Thirty-three (33) Township Thirteen (13) North of Range Seventeen (17) East of the Willamette Meridian, situate in Yakima county, Washington. The capital stock in this corporation shall be paid for in full by each subscriber conveying to the corporation as many acres of the above described land as he holds shares of stock in the company, such conveyance, however, to be subject to reservations and contracts now in force and affecting said land, including payments of all water charges and assessments. When the capital stock has been paid for in full, in accordance with the above terms, cer *529 tificates of stock fully paid shall be issued, of the par value of Two Hundred Fifty (250) dollars, each share.
“ (2) Whenever any stockholder in this corporation shall desire to surrender his stock to the corporation and to receive therefor title in fee simple to the tract of land originally deeded to the corporation, he may do so and the land shall be sold to him by the corporation at a price not to exceed Two Hundred Fifty (250) Dollars, an acre, payable in stock of the corporation at its par value; it being understood, however, that the stock so to be received, in payment for the said land must be fully paid and the stockholder so delivering his stock shall first be clear on the books of the corporation, and the land shall be conveyed to him by the corporation, subject to all reservations and contracts then in force and affecting said land, including all water charges, assessments, etc.
“(4) Transfer of the capital stock shall be made either in person or by attorney only on the books of the company, on a transfer book kept for that purpose and upon surrender of the old certificate.
“Article X.
“These By-Laws, excepting sections one (1) and two (2) of Article IX, may be altered by amendment or by repeal at any stockholders’ meeting, either special or regular, by a three-quarters ’ vote of the entire capital stock of the corporation, upon notice given as elsewhere herein provided.”

The corporation made the applications for water rights for the lands in the quarter section acquired by it to the reclamation service, and collected from each stockholder the necessary moneys to be paid to the United States for water service and other assessments and for taxes. The corporation did not, in any other respect, exercise any dominion over the lands acquired by it. The lands were planted to orchards and farmed and developed under separate contracts by the individual stockholders as to the respective tracts each such stockholder had originally conveyed to the cor *530 poration. The treasurer of the corporation merely collected the necessary funds and disbursed the same, but each stockholder paid only the expenses connected with his separate tract of land. Having complied with all the objects of its incorporation, all of the lands so transferred to the corporation were reconveyed by it to the various stockholders between the years 1917 and 1920.

When the corporation was organized, one share of stock, which really belonged to Parson, was issued to A. J. Balliet, a resident of this state, so that he could act as an incorporator and trustee. Balliet assigned this certificate to Parson. The other thirty-nine shares were issued to Parson, apparently in two certificates, one for nine shares and the other for thirty shares. The nine-shares certificate and the one-share certificate that had originally been issued to Balliet, were assigned by Parson to Hubert F. John as collateral security for a loan made by him to Parson. Parson also made a deal with a friend of his, defendant Beinhardt, also of New York, whereby Parson purported to sell to Beinhardt ten acres of the land he had deeded to the corporation.

The evidence in the record is uncontradicted that ten shares of stock were transferred from Parson to Beinhardt. They were never transferred on the corporate books, and never surrendered to the company. On May 12, 1920, the corporation, acting by James L. Parson, as president, and Bobert B. Beinhardt, as secretary, executed a deed to ten acres of land, which had been conveyed by Parson to the corporation, to Beinhardt. The balance of the forty-acre tract which had been conveyed by Parson was reconveyed to Parson by a deed likewise executed in behalf, of the corporation by himself, as its president, and Beinhardt, as its secretary.

After the reconveyance of the thirty-acre tract to *531 Parson, lie and Ms wife executed a mortgage thereon in favor of one Fanny E. Lane, securing promissory notes in the sum of $5,000, which mortgage has never been paid and which is now held by appellant Barbara Johnson, and upon which there remains due and unpaid the sum of $5,000 and interest at eight per cent from October 20, 1925. Later, Parson died, and Ms estate being probated in YaMma county, Washington, the thirty-acre tract of land was sold on administrator’s sale to Fechter and Mead, subject to the Johnson mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
280 P. 9, 153 Wash. 526, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 942, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-v-reinhardt-wash-1929.