Flint River Pecan Co. v. Fry

29 F.2d 457, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2710
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 30, 1928
DocketNos. 5403, 5413
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 29 F.2d 457 (Flint River Pecan Co. v. Fry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flint River Pecan Co. v. Fry, 29 F.2d 457, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2710 (5th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

DAWKINS, District Judge.'

These two cases involve appeals from a judgment in which the court below sustained in part and otherwise overruled exceptions to the master’s report upon an accounting of the affairs of the Flint River Pecan Company.

The record presents a great volume of pleading and evidence, but the matter was thoroughly covered by the master in his findings of fact and conclusions of law, so that the really important issues have been greatly narrowed. The suit was originally brought by W. W. Fry, a citizen of California, who alleged the ownership of 40 shares of stock in the Flint River Peean Company, a Georgia corporation, on behalf of himself and such other stockholders as might desire to join therein. He made the Peean Company, the officers thereof,, and certain other individuals parties defendant, as well as the Title & Trust Company of Florida, trustee, under a bond mortgage executed by the defendant corporation. Petitioner alleged numerous acts of mismanagement, fraud, ete., on the part of the defendants, prayed for the appointment of a receiver; that the defendants be required to account for and surrender to said receiver all moneys and property of the Peean Company which they had improperly received, or that a decree be entered against them for the value thereof; that the deed of trust to the Title & Trust Company be canceled as a cloud upon the title of the defendant company’s property; that certain stock alleged to have been fraudulently and fictitiously issued, be ordered surrendered and canceled; and that, if the deed of trust were found to be valid, the holders of the bonds be ordered to intervene and set up their respective rights to the proceeds arising from the sale of the mortgaged property. Afterwards some 41 other stockholders intervened and joined, petitioner in his demands against the defendants.

Defendants denied the allegations of fraud and mismanagement, but pleaded lach-es and ratification by the directors and a majority of the stockholders to many of the matters complained of. Defendant Trust Company by cross-bill alleged a proper execution of the mortgage, the issuance of the bonds, the default of the Pecan Company, and asked for .foreclosure, as well as other appropriate relief.

As before stated, the master made a report embracing elaborate findings of fact and conclusions of law, as to which exceptions were filed by both sides, but the lower court approved the whole, except as to two points, to wit: (1) The amount of salaries allowed the officers and managers of the company during the period of their administration; and (2) as to the disallowance of profit to Foy & Shemwell upon the sale of certain property to the Pecan Company, both of which claims were allowed in full. All other exceptions by each side were overruled.

We shall dispose of the appeal No. 5403 first. ■ This record presents only two specifications of error, to wit: (1) The sustaining by the court of the master’s finding that the property turned into the corporation for its stock by Foy & Shemwell and Dermott S. Shemwell was overvalued^ to the amount of $124,866.61; and (2) the holding that plaintiffs were entitled to a decree for the value of the stock or that it should be surrendered for cancellation, notwithstanding the delays, estoppel, and ratification pleaded by defendants.

We are convinced that the proof amply sustains the finding that the property exchanged for stock by defendants was not worth the sum claimed for it by the amount mentioned, and that the decree ordering them to pay therefor, unless it was surrendered for cancellation within the delays allowed by the judgment, was properly entered. The circumstances shown by this record do not warrant the conclusion that the present petitioners were sufficiently conversant with the value of the property or other facts which would amount to a ratification of the transaction, or justify the conclusion that they should now be precluded from attacking the same. The management of the company, including the fixation of values upon the property put into the corporation by the defendants, was entirely in their hands while many of the petitioners were persons residing in distant sections of the country, and without reasonable opportunity to know anything about the value of the property exchanged for the stock.

What has been said likewise disposes of the second contention that there was error [459]*459in the decree for the par value of the stock, but with the right to surrender it for cancellation. The latter privilege was quite favorable to defendants, in view of the fact that for several years they had controlled the corporation by virtue of this excessive issue of stoek, but in the prayer of the plaintiffs this identical relief was asked; i. e., that the stoek be surrendered or defendants pay therefor, hence we think the master and the court below were correct in granting relief in that form.

The record in No. 5413 covers the appeal of plaintiffs, who have grouped their assignments of error to the rulings of the court below under some seven different headings, which will be disposed of in consecutive order. Under heading No. I, embracing assignments Nos. 1 and 2, they complain of the ruling which allowed the defendants to surrender for cancellation, instead of paying for, the excess stoek of $124,866.61 issued to themselves in the formation of the defendant company. As above stated, this was in accordance with plaintiff’s prayer, and the circumstances disclosed by the record we do not think show an abuse of discretion in allowing the stock to be surrendered, instead of giving an unconditional money judgment for its value. Plaintiffs owed themselves the duty to exercise some measure of vigilance, and they were from time to time furnished information in a general way as to the affairs of the company, which they allowed to go ahead under the management of defendants for some five or six years without complaint, and to now require the latter to pay for the stock in cash, with the present financial condition of the company and in the light of all the circumstances, we think would be a harsher remedy than the record justifies. See Davis v. Las Ovas, 227 U. S. 80, 33 S. Ct. 197, 57 L. Ed. 426; Yeiser v. U. S. Board & Paper Co. (C. C. A.) 107 F. 340, 52 L. R. A. 724; Cook on Corporations (6th Ed.) § 35 et seq.

Heading No. II embraces assignments Nos. 3, 4, and 5, directed to the allowance by the court below of the full amount claimed by defendants Foy & Shemwell, as salaries or compensation for services, overhead, etc., in the management of the company. A careful examination of the record convinces us there was error in the allowance of these items. The defendants to a large extent used the property and credit of the Flint River Pecan Company for their own purposes, acted as “bankers,” using large deposits or credits due it, without interest or any equivalent return to the corporation, pledged its bonds and notes for their own account, issued approximately $150,000 of additional stoek, to be given purchasers of its mortgage bonds in the nature of a bonus, for which the court below, on the recommendation of the master, also ordered them to pay or surrender the stock for cancellation within a fixed period, and altogether they dealt with the property and affairs of the company in such manner as in our opinion to forfeit the right to salaries or pay for their services. Backus v. Finkelstein (D. C.) 23 F.(2d) 357. For these reasons, the entire claim of $42,009 for salaries and services will be disallowed and rejected.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F.2d 457, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 2710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flint-river-pecan-co-v-fry-ca5-1928.