Foster v. Belcher's Sugar Refining Co.

24 S.W. 63, 118 Mo. 238, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 149
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 21, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 24 S.W. 63 (Foster v. Belcher's Sugar Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Belcher's Sugar Refining Co., 24 S.W. 63, 118 Mo. 238, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 149 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

GIantt, P. J.

The plaintiffs in error, two of the •stockholders of the Belcher’s Sugar Eefining Company, bring this action against said corporation, its board of directors, and certain of its stockholders. The general scope of the bill is to restrain the sale of the new sugar refinery of said company, in St. Louis, under a deed of trust executed by said corporation to secure the payment of its bonds to the amount of $750,000, with interest coupons attached, default in the payment of which having been made, the trustees had advertised '■the property for sale August 18, 1885.' The bill also [244]*244prayed the appointment of a receiver, the cancellation of the bonds, etc.

The original petition charged many acts of misconduct, irregularity and fraud, on the part of said company, by its directors, officers and other defendants ^ that said bonds were unlawfully taken and held by persons composing the board of directors of said company that consent of a portion of the stockholders to the issue of said bonds had been obtained upon false and fraudulent representations and inducements made by said directors and officers, and that said bonds had been unlawfully appropriated by defendants without sufficient consideration, and in an unlawful manner j. that the affairs of said company had been mismanaged and its funds unlawfully diverted from proper channels in furtherance of a design on the part of defendants to unlawfully secure for themselves the entire property and assets of said company, to the great injury of its stockholders; that in violation of their duty and lawful authority and powers, the persons composing the said board of directors, acting as such board, had sold said bonds to themselves for pretended obligations of said company to them, and had in the same manner disposed of other valuable assets of said company -r that the pretended owners and holders of said bonds,, and all the said defendants, had notice of the unlawful and wrongful acts and things complained of, at and long before the time of the pretended sale of said bonds.

The application for injunction was denied, the-plaintiffs having been granted leave to amend their bill, the sale under the deed of trust was proceeded with as-advertised on the said eighteenth day of August, and the property thereby conveyed was knocked down and sold on that day to Charles Hodgman, Esq., as trustee for said bondholders, who purchased under written authority from them constituting him such trustee.

[245]*245Plaintiff’s subsequently filed tbeir amended petition, the substantial averments of which are as follows:

That by an act of the general assembly of the state of Missouri, entitled “An act to incorporate Belcher’s Sugar Refining Company,” approved January 25, 1855, William ,H. Belcher, Rufus J. Lackland, Greo. D. Humphreys, Chas. W. Horn and eight others, their successors and associates, were constituted a body corporate and politic for a period of fifty years, by the name of “Belcher’s Sugar Refining Company,” that the business of said company was the buying, selling and refining of sugars and syrups; that by said act it was provided that the capital stock should be $1,000,000; that the board of directors should not be less than five, but might be increased to seven by vote of the stockholders ; that as soon as stock to the amount of $600,-000 should be subscribed an election should be held for directors, and that on the first Monday in December in each year an election of directors should be held to serve the ensuing year and until their successors should be duly elected; that in the year 1855 William H. Belcher and Charles Belcher, composing the firm of Belcher & Bro., were involved and insolvent, and in pursuance of a compromise with their creditors they subscribed the entire capital stock and purported to pay it up by conveyance to the company of a refinery and other property by them owned at a false valuation of $1, 000,000, but of the actual valueof only $500,000, and that stock was falsely issued as full paid up, and that the same had never been paid up;' that plaintiffs without notice that the stock was not paid up, purchased the stock owned by them for persons holding certificates for paid up stock.

The petition sets out the names of the persons composing the board of directors of the company during the years 1881, 1882, 1883 and 1884, showing that [246]*246during those years the persons named as defendants in? this suit composed a majority of said board and at the-time of the filing of said suit were still managing and controlling said company as its board of directors, and alleges that said officers and directors were inimical to-plaintiffs and not proper persons to have charge of any suit in the name of the corporation, and that plaintiffs, were without remedy otherwise than by this suit.

That in the year 1881, the board of directors of' said corporation entered upon the work of causing a. new refinery to be erected for said company and without authority to contract debts in excess of its paid up-capital stock contracted pretended debts far in excess thereof. That said corporation had no available means-for the erection of said refinery, and said directors-knew that the erection of said refinery would imperil all of the property and assets of the corporation, and that they do not act in good faith for the benefit of the corporation; that the building of the new refinery was-carried on in a reckless, negligent and extravagant manner and that the business of said company was,, finally, in 1884, closed and its works shut down in consequence of the mismanagement and bad faith of' said directors. The petition then sets out the meeting of the stockholders on December 20, 1883, called for the purpose of securing an issue of bonds to the amount of $750,000, and the deed of trust on the property of' the company; the subsequent issue by the board of the bonds and deed of trust in January 1884, and a description of the property conveyed by George S. Drake and Hugh McKittrick, trustees in said deed of trust, with the recitals and conditions in said deed contained. That long before the time of the execution of said bonds and said deed of trust the said directors had illegally contracted pretended debts, largely in excess of the amount for which said corporation was authorized by [247]*247law to become at any one time indebted, and, by mismanagement of the affairs of said corporation and appropriating its means to the building of said new refinery while they at the same time conducted the ordinary business of said corporation upon a large scale, as the same was conducted before its means were so tied up, said directors had, long before the time of the execution of said bonds, rendered said corporation unable to continue its usual business, notwithstanding all which . said directors until November 1884, and afterward, did continue said business and continued to add to the appurtenances of said new refinery and to make improvements and additions thereto at the cost and charge of said corporation.

That after the execution of said bonds and coupons and deed of trust, defendants, Rufus J. Lackland, Carlos S. Greeley, Robt. A. Barnes, William A. Hargadine, George E. Leighton, William L. Scott, and William E.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W. 63, 118 Mo. 238, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-belchers-sugar-refining-co-mo-1893.