Flint v. Le Heup

165 N.W. 626, 199 Mich. 41, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 944
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1917
DocketDocket No. 6
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 165 N.W. 626 (Flint v. Le Heup) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flint v. Le Heup, 165 N.W. 626, 199 Mich. 41, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 944 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Steere, J.

The Bar Point Land Company, Limited, defendant, is a foreign corporation organized for the purpose of establishing and maintaining a Masonic summer resort at Bar Point, Ontario, and incorporated in January or February, 1913, under the laws of the province of Ontario. The other defendants are, or were when this suit was begun, its officers and directors, nine of whom were residents of Detroit.

Bar Point is on the north shore of Lake Erie about four miles below the city of Amherstburg in the province of Ontario near the mouth of the Detroit river. A tract of land consisting of about 620 acres known as the McBride farm is located at this point. Defendant Le Heup, a jeweler of Detroit, bought this farm in 1912 from the McBrides on a land contract for $20,-000, assisted by his wife, as he states, and defendant [44]*44Burrows. He, or they, conceived the idea of promoting and organizing a corporation to take over, or purchase, this property and develop upon it a Masonic summer resort. To that end they enlisted the services of defendant Pitts, an attorney of Detroit, who was to do the legal business of the company, aid in the promotion, and be chosen as secretary; he receiving stock for “legal and other services.” He prepared a glowing prospectus of the project for a Masonic park summer resort, emphasizing that subscriptions to capital stock would only be accepted from members of the order in good standing, etc., assurance being given that “the promoters are all Free Masons and have much confidence in the craft.” This was followed by other attractive literature, amongst which was an alluring booklet, or pamphlet, distributed generally amongst the fraternity in Detroit and elsewhere, issued by the Bar Point Company, Limited, giving notice of its incorporation with a capital stock of $75,000; “W. L. Updyke, Fiscal Agent, Free Press Bldg., Detroit,” stating amongst other things:

“This little book lets you into the secret of Masonic Park, at Bar Point, Lake Erie, as it is a secret among the few who for months have been planning and scheming to make this very thing possible.”

The secret it revealed was to a guarded degree largely promissory in its most attractive features, as were many other of the persuading assurances which plaintiff charges as fraud, overlooking the general rule that fraud must be predicated on statement of existing facts rather than promises.

Attracted by sdme of the company’s literature which he read in the “Palestine Bulletin,” plaintiff visited defendant Pitts at his office in Detroit and “asked him the details of this thing,” which was followed by an interview with the fiscal agent at the office of the Bar Point Land Company in the Free Press building in [45]*45Detroit. He was present at a meeting of the directors in that office and talked with different members of the company a number of times. He testified at length as to many and extravagant representations made to him both by'the fiscal agent and members of the directorate, amongst which were that the company bought the property of the McBrides for $75,000; that aside from the summer resort project of extensive proportions the tract had other great values (for tobacco growing, fisheries, washed building sand, which alone would pay for the property in time, and they would realize from the whole investment upwards of $2,000,000); that if he took stock and subscribed for lots at that time he could make his selection when they were staked, etc. He thereupon purchased ten shares of the capital stock of the corporation, paying $500 therefor, and took an application contract for two lots, countersigned by the fiscal agent, described as on “Erie Drive, front; block 18, to be selected when staked,” paying $100 thereon. These he selected from what Pitts stated was a “preliminary plat,” which afterwards had to be changed to comply with the Canadian law.

Plaintiff visited the property before the lots were staked and made preliminary selection where there were some large trees which he fancied, and, when notified the lots had been staked, he went down again with his wife and made his selection accordingly, but found that these lots and two adjoining lots had been assigned to other persons, whom he ascertained were members of the board of directors, which he testified displeased and made him suspicious, following which he ascertained this tract had been bought of the McBrides for $20,000 by Le Heup, who promoted and helped organize the Bar Point Land Company so that it would purchase the tract from him for $75,000— with other secrets of the Masonic Park at Bar Point which the little book did not let him into.

[46]*46His bill contains 12 allegations of fraud in those particulars, the majority of which are, however, largely of a promissory character. Failing to get the lots which he had selected, plaintiff wrote defendants’ fiscal agent that he was at liberty to sell any lots set aside for him to select from, giving as a reason his wife’s health, which he testified was* introductory to getting out of the concern without controversy if possible, following which he made unsuccessful efforts for some adjustment, and ultimately tendered back his certificates of stock, receipts for payments, etc., demanding return of his money, which was refused. He then filed this bill asking the appointment of a trustee for the corporation to take charge of its affairs, for an accounting with it and its officers and directors, for an injunction, and finally that the contracts for sale of stock and lots to him be declared void and he be granted a decree for return of the amount, found by the court his due. Defendants filed answers, and the case when at issue was heard upon pleadings and proofs taken in open court. After argument the trial court found that the defendant foreign corporation was unlawfully carrying on its business in this State in contravention of Act No. 206, Pub. Acts 1901, as amended (2 Comp. Laws 1915, § 906.3 et seq.), and rendered a decree determining that the contracts plaintiff sought to have set aside were wholly void and should be canceled, directing that upon surrender by plaintiff to it of certificates and receipts relating to the same the land company return to him the $600 which he had paid on such void contracts, with 5 per cent, interest from date of payment. While the decree recites that it satisfactorily appears to the court “complainant is entitled to a decree as prayed for in said bill of complaint,” no reference is made therein to the defendant officers and directors, and no other relief is granted except as above stated. From this decree plaintiff has [47]*47appealed, because his prayer for relief was only granted in the one particular, and the Bar Point Land Company has appealed because decree was rendered against it for the $600.

It is conceded that the Bar Point Land Company had not complied with the law authorizing foreign corporations to carry on business in this State at the time these contracts were made and the money paid its secretary in Detroit. It had established an office and agency in that city, with its fiscal agent and secretary transacting its business. Its executive officers and nearly all its directors were residents of Detroit, meetings of stockholders were held there, and the directors met there as a rule. Its stock book was kept there, and certificates were issued from there by its secretary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 N.W. 626, 199 Mich. 41, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flint-v-le-heup-mich-1917.