Glenn v. J. C. Trees Oil Co.

109 A. 793, 266 Pa. 74, 1920 Pa. LEXIS 503
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 5, 1920
DocketAppeal, No. 86
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 109 A. 793 (Glenn v. J. C. Trees Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenn v. J. C. Trees Oil Co., 109 A. 793, 266 Pa. 74, 1920 Pa. LEXIS 503 (Pa. 1920).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Moschzisker,

Coulter E. Glenn, plaintiff, sued in' equity the J. C. Trees Oil Company and the following persons, naming them as officers of that corporation and individually: J. C. Trees, director and president; H. S. Grayson, [78]*78director, general manager and treasurer, and M. L. Benedum, director; after hearing, the hill was dismissed, and this appeal followed.

The hill avers plaintiff and his brother, H. S. Glenn, together with the three individual defendants, constituted all the stockholders and board of directors of defendant corporation; that the company either owned, or there was held by the individual defendants for “the use and benefit of said company,” oil and gas leases upon 114,000 acres of land in Louisiana and Texas; that in 1910 defendant company, represented chiefly by its president, sold its leases, wells and other assets to A. O. Bed-ford, representing the Standard Oil Company, for $6,-000,000, but the three individual defendants gave the corporation only $4,150,000 thereof, retaining and converting to their own use $1,850,000; which last mentioned amount plaintiff prayed be accounted for and paid back to the company.

The answer denies the J. C. Trees Oil Company either owned or had held for its use leases on 114,000 acres of land; it avers the corporation owned such leases on only about 14,000 acres, and that the three individual defendants possessed in their own right the balance of the. leases referred to in the bill; that these leases adjoined the property of defendant company and were included in the Bedford sale with the knowledge and consent of plaintiff, and, furthermore, plaintiff was fully informed, at and before the conveyance, that the corporation was to receive only $4,150,000 for its property, the balance to go to the individual defendants in payment for their holdings.

When the case came to trial, it was conceded the purchase price of $6,000,000 was entire, covering all the properties included in the sale to Bedford, without, so far as the contract showéd, any apportionment whatsoever. Plaintiff did not undertake to prove the Trees Oil Company either owned or had held for its use leases on the large acreage claimed by' the individual defendants [79]*79as belonging to them, but assumed the position that the latter, “having sold the property of the corporation, together with the property which they now claim to have owned individually, as one property, for one undivided consideration, must show, by the clearest evidence, that the property they now claim to have owned did actually belong to them, and they must also show that they have retained no more of the consideration price than represents the fair value of the property privately owned by them.”

When plaintiff rested, defendants made no motion to dismiss the bill for want of proofs, because, — as stated by their counsel, “owing to the fact that sérious charges had been made in the bill of misconduct on the part of the individual defendants in converting to their own use property belonging to the corporation — they had decided to proceed to disprove any wrongdoing”; and, so far as we can judge from the printed record, defendants assumed the position, and undertook to prove that plaintiff was not only fully informed of the fact the oil company was to receive no more than $4,150,000 of the $6,-000,000 paid by Bedford, the balance to go to the individual defendants, but also that plaintiff impliedly agreed to such an apportionment.

There was, however, no effort on the part of defendants to show that plaintiff expressly agreed to any particular apportionment of the consideration money; the undertaking was to prove by circumstantial evidence that plaintiff was fully informed of all the facts and, by acquiescence, must be taken to have agreed to the ap-' portionment as made. In this connection, the chancellor states: “It developed that, under an agreement between A. C. Bedford, on the one part, and the J. C. Trees Oil Company, J. C. Trees, M. L. Benedum, and H. S. Gray-son, on the other part, the leases on the 114,000 acres of land, belonging to the J. C. Trees Oil Company and the three individuals, were sold as one property to A. C. Bed-ford for the sum of $6,000,000; and therefore we con[80]*80sidered it incumbent upon defendants, they being the majority of the stockholders and the majority of the board of directors and the officers who had negotiated the contract with Bedford, to show that their dealing with this plaintiff was fair and open. Accordingly, we proceeded to take testimony on the question as to whether the plaintiff, C. E. Glenn, and his brother, H. S. Glenn, knew the facts concerning the ownership of the leases held by Trees, Benedum, and Grayson and of the terms of the contract with A. C. Bedford, before they joined with the other stockholders in ratifying the sale of the property of the J. O. Trees Oil Company to A. C. Bedford for $4,000,000 [evidently meaning $4,150,-000]. That is the important controverted question; and, as I view the law, it is the only serious question in this case. The Glenns both testified they did not know anything about the leases alleged to have been held by Grayson and subsequently joined in by Trees and Benedum; that they did not know the contract with A. C. Bedford purporting to convey the individual property of the three defendants; that they had asked for the terms of the contract, and the information had been refused; and that they had asked to see the contract and had been refused permission to see it. On the other hand, the defendants claim the Glenns knew all about the situation, that they were told the conditions of the contract, that the contract itself was lying on the table at the meeting of December 3d, and that Coulter E. Glenn, the plaintiff, picked it up and examined it. Of course, they could not say whether he had read it or not — nobody could say that.”

While the written contract of sale names $6,000,000, as the consideration, yet, as before indicated, no mention of an apportionment of that sum, between the corporation and the individual defendants, is in any manner referred to therein, hence, as said by the court below, the case turned largely upon the credibility of witnesses, who gave conflicting testimony as to circumstances from [81]*81which the consent of plaintiff to the apportionment had to he determined. Of course, this made the credibility of these witnesses a matter of importance; nevertheless, when plaintiff offered in evidence, “an office copy” of a certain return made to the United States government, “for the purpose of contradicting the defendants’ statement that it was agreed to sell the property of the company for $4,150,000, the return showing $4,380,000,” this, upon objection, was refused.

The ruling in question (complained of in assignment of error 44) and others of a similar character, represent clear and material error. It is true the offer was of an office copy, and not the original return; but the objection thereto was simply that the evidence was irrelevant and immaterial, not that the proof offered was incompetent. If the objection had been placed on the latter ground, it may be plaintiff would have either secured the original or shown, as a matter of law, that the copy was sufficient.

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Bluebook (online)
109 A. 793, 266 Pa. 74, 1920 Pa. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-v-j-c-trees-oil-co-pa-1920.