Flint v. Codman

142 N.E. 256, 247 Mass. 463, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 853
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 142 N.E. 256 (Flint v. Codman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flint v. Codman, 142 N.E. 256, 247 Mass. 463, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 853 (Mass. 1924).

Opinion

Rugg, C.J.

This is a suit in equity. The plaintiffs, a small minority of the shareholders in the Lovejoy’s Wharf Trust, so called, seek to enjoin a sale of the corpus of the trust by the trustees, who are the individual defendants acting pursuant to a vote of the majority of the shareholders, to the three corporate defendants who collectively hold a majority of the shares, and to enjoin the termination of the trust. After a hearing, findings of fact and rulings of law were made and the entry of a decree ordered dismissing the bill. The plaintiffs’ exceptions bring the case here.

Of the facts thus found, only those relevant to the controlling principles of law need to .be stated. The individual [466]*466defendants are trustees under a declaration of trust dated in 1902, to continue for a period of twenty years after the death of the last survivor of numerous named individuals unless sooner terminated. The purposes of the trust were to acquire real estate and wharf property within a designated area in Boston, to erect upon it buildings, to lease the same and to pay dividends to the shareholders. The trust was organized by the sale and issuance of eighteen thousand shares represented by transferable certificates, each share being of the par value of $100.

The real estate was purchased in the name of the trustees and was held by them under the terms of the declaration of trust. The trustees caused to be constructed expensive buildings on the real estate and have leased them or parts of them from time to time. Each of the three corporate defendants at the time of the events here in issue was a tenant of part of the real estate of the trust. Together they occupied the greater part of it. At some time prior to April, 1923, the three corporate defendants by arrangement with each other and acting through a common agent purchased in the open market without fraud or deception nine thousand and eighty-three shares, being a majority of all the shares of the trust. There was no evidence that the trustees conspired or combined with the corporate defendants in making these purchases of shares, or that there was anything wrong about these purchases if the corporate defendants were authorized by law to become shareholders in such an enterprise. The corporate defendants then requested the resignation of one of the trustees and the substitution of a nominee of their own in his place. This request was denied by the trustees. Then it was proposed that the three corporate defendants purchase all the real estate of the trust and that the trust be terminated. Negotiations were had between the trustees and the three corporate defendants looking to that end. Finally a tentative agreement was reached, that the property should be sold to the three corporate defendants for $2,748,837, payment to be in cash. This agreement was reduced to writing and signed by the trustees and the three corporate defendants, but it was made subject to the condi[467]*467tian that the trustees should first receive from the shareholders under the declaration of trust authority necessary to make the conveyance, meeting for that purpose to be called forthwith.

The trustees Jiave managed the property for about twenty years, are men of large experience in knowing the values of such properties and were as familiar with its real worth as any one. In making this agreement the trustees acted in good faith throughout. They have not been influenced in any degree by appraisals of the property made at the instigation of the corporate defendants. Their conduct has been based entirely upon their independent and honest judgment, unaffected in any particular by improper inducements and controlled solely by a desire to obtain as large a price for the property as possible. They have not either consciously or unconsciously been moved by any other considerations. The price agreed upon was not less than the fair market value of the property. To quote from the findings, “While a higher price possibly might be obtained, it did not appear that more could have been realized. If it was put up for sale at auction a higher or a lower bid might be obtained .... When the great value of this property is considered, it may fairly be assumed that a purchaser for cash could not readily be found; it did not appear at the hearing that any one is ready and willing to buy the property other than the corporate defendants, or that the trustees can obtain a higher price.”

A meeting of the shareholders of the trust was held on April 13, 1923, at which a vote was passed authorizing and directing the trustees to sell the entire real estate held by them as such trustees to the three corporate defendants in accordance with the terms of the agreement between them and the trustees. The total number of shares represented by shareholders present in person and by proxies and voting on this proposition was sixteen thousand nine hundred and seventy, of which fifteen thousand nine hundred seventy-six were in favor of and nine hundred ninety-four against the sale. The nine thousand and eighty-three shares held by the corporate defendants were voted in favor of the sale. The [468]*468defendant Codman voted by proxies running to himself and his cotrustee on six thousand and twenty-seven shares in favor of the sale. The plaintiffs were present at the meeting and voted on their shares in opposition to the sale and took other steps to indicate their opposition to the sale.

These facts have been found by the single justice who heard the case. They are all which are material to the grounds of this decision.

The case comes before us on a bill of exceptions and not by appeal. Hence only questions of law are presented. Dorr v. Tremont National Bank, 128 Mass. 349, 357. When a suit in equity comes to this court by a bill of exceptions and not by appeal, the only question of law as to findings of fact is whether there is evidence to support them. Such findings stand if they are warranted by the evidence. Requests for findings of fact, if proper under any circumstances, cannot successfully be made the basis for exceptions in such a case as the one at bar. The equity practice in this respect conforms to the practice in actions at law. Bills of exceptions in equity, as frequently has been pointed out, are not known in general chancery practice, and are a peculiarity of our practice. Pigeon’s Case, 216 Mass. 51. See in this connection Davis v. Boston Elevated Railway, 235 Mass. 482, 494. Moss v. Old Colony Trust Co. 246 Mass. 139.

It is not necessary to narrate the evidence. It is too plain to require extended discussion that all the findings of fact which have been recited find support in the evidence. The finding that the trustees in agreeing to the sale were uninfluenced by any considerations except to obtain a fair price for the property cannot be said to be unwarranted. The testimony of the defendant Codman with the reasonable inferences which might have been drawn from it support the findings upon this point.

The testimony of the same witness was sufficient to support the finding that the trustees in the discharge of their duties exercised the skill and judgment due from them in their fiduciary relation.

. Even if the rule applicable to appeals in equity with report of the evidence were followed, no error is disclosed because [469]*469the findings of the single justice based upon the hearing of oral testimony could not be set aside as plainly wrong. Lindsey v. Bird, 193 Mass. 200.

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Bluebook (online)
142 N.E. 256, 247 Mass. 463, 1924 Mass. LEXIS 853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flint-v-codman-mass-1924.