Frick v. Howard

23 Wis. 2d 86
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 23 Wis. 2d 86 (Frick v. Howard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frick v. Howard, 23 Wis. 2d 86 (Wis. 1964).

Opinion

Beilfuss, J.

The issues are:

1. Did Preston, as a promoter, breach a fiduciary duty to the corporation ?

2. Can the defense of want of consideration of the original note securing the assigned mortgage be asserted in an action to foreclose the mortgage where the replacement note was nonnegotiable upon its face ?

*91 3. Does a receiver of a corporation under an assignment for benefit of creditors have the right to assert a defense in an action to foreclose a mortgage given by the corporation?

Did Preston, as a promoter, breach a fiduciary duty to the corporation? It appears without dispute that Preston was the organizer and promoter of the Pan American Motel, Inc.

He entered into the contract to purchase land for $240,000 on January 24, 1958. The terms were, — $5,000 down payment, $65,000 at the closing of the sale and purchase-money mortgage back in the amount of $170,000. He borrowed the $5,000 down payment from one Marohl. He organized the corporation April 1, 1958, and was its sole stockholder until September 3, 1958. After successfully bringing an action on the contract to purchase, he obtained title to the land on August 29, 1958. To pay for the land he withdrew at least $61,000 of the $65,000 closing payment from the corporation and gave the mortgage for $170,000. Three days later, September 1, 1958, the corporation offered him $350,000 for the land. The offer was accepted and the corporation paid Preston $70,000 by cancellation of his debt of $35,000 to the corporation, issuing 35 shares of its stock to him, assuming the $170,000 mortgage, and giving him a note and mortgage for $110,000. The offer was signed by Preston as seller and Frank J. Mack for the corporation. At the time the offer to purchase was made by the corporation Preston was, as far as the record reveals, the sole stockholder and completely dominated the affairs of the corporation. There was a board of directors consisting of Preston and two others but the record does not show they owned any stock or that they were in any way independent of Preston. On April 1, 1959, the note of $110,000 and mortgage were signed by Preston as president of the corporation and by Frank J. Mack as secretary payable to Preston and his wife.

*92 The trial court found that Preston committed a fraud upon the corporation but that the transaction was not secret.

The fact that the transaction was not secret does not in all instances relieve a promoter of his fiduciary obligation to the corporation.

“The promoters may deal with the corporation, but they must deal fairly, the burden of proof of fairness being on them. When they deal with the corporation, it must have independent directors; and the promoters cannot also be directors or dominate them as representatives of the other adversely interested parties.
“Perfect candor, full disclosure, good faith, in fact, the utmost good faith, and the strictest honesty are required of promoters, and their dealings must be open and fair, or without undue advantage taken.
“It is the duty of the promoters to retain in their hands the property which is to constitute corporate assets until the corporation is formed, to cause it to be formed within a reasonable time, and then to turn over to it the assets so held. . . .
“As a result of the fiduciary relation or relation of trust and confidence sustained by a promoter, an unfair advantage taken or secret profit gained thereby is a fraud.” 1 Fletcher, Cyc. Corp. (perm, ed.), pp. 730-733, secs. 192, 193.
“Conditions requisite to valid sale. — A promoter cannot act as both seller and buyer. Hence, where he seeks to sell property to the corporation, he must, if he wishes to retain his profit, provide the corporation with an independent board of directors in no wise under his control and make a full disclosure to the corporation through them, or make a full disclosure of all material facts to each original subscriber for stock in the corporation, or procure a ratification of the sale, after disclosure of its circumstances, by the completely established corporation.” 13 Am. Jur., Corporations, p. 257, sec. 118.
“From the foregoing we deduce this: If one or more persons acquire property, intending to promote the organization of a corporation to purchase it from them at a profit *93 to themselves and effect such purpose, limiting the membership to interested parties till the transaction is completed between them and the corporation, intending thereafter to cause the balance of the capital stock to be sold to outsiders, they being kept in ignorance of the true nature of such transaction, and effecting such intent, they are guilty of actionable fraud upon the corporation and responsible to it for the gains made. In such circumstances, in the making of the contract between the corporation and its agents, it is mere fiction as to its prospective members by original subscription. Since it has no one to stand for it as an adverse party in the transaction, no meeting of adverse minds, essential to a binding contract, occurs. The corporation is deceived, in that advantage is taken of its incapacity to protect itself, as to the interests of prospective memberships by the original taking of its stock.
“Applying the foregoing to the situation found to exist all who were concerned in the transaction of buying the land at one price to turn it over to the corporation to be formed at a much greater one, and to induce others to come into the corporation in ignorance of the facts, contributing the actual capital necessary to enable them to fully accomplish their purpose, became liable to refund their profits to the corporation, which liability was enforcible in this action, unless prior to its commencement it was extinguished by the six-year statute of limitations.” Pietsch v. Milbrath (1905), 123 Wis. 647, 658, 101 N. W. 388, 102 N. W. 342.

It is clear that at the time of the sale of the land to the corporation, and the execution of the note and mortgage, that the corporation had no independent board of directors. The actions of the corporation were completely dominated by Preston. The transaction to sell the land held for a very short period of time was controlled by Preston both as buyer and seller. This was not an agreement between an independent buyer and seller dealing at arm’s length. Preston, as an individual selling ‘ the property, had a personal financial interest to obtain the highest price available; Preston as the alter ego of Pan American Motel, Inc., had a financial *94 interest to purchase the property at the lowest price available. There could be no meeting of the minds.

The fact that the land may or may not have been worth more than $240,000 cannot override Preston’s fiduciary obligation as a promoter of the corporation. In this instance where he completely dominated the corporation at the time of the transaction it was his fiduciary obligation to give the corporation the benefit of his bargain, if it was one.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Wis. 2d 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frick-v-howard-wis-1964.