Goddard v. General Reduction & Chemical Co.

193 P. 1103, 57 Utah 180, 1920 Utah LEXIS 89
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1920
DocketNo. 3482
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 193 P. 1103 (Goddard v. General Reduction & Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goddard v. General Reduction & Chemical Co., 193 P. 1103, 57 Utah 180, 1920 Utah LEXIS 89 (Utah 1920).

Opinion

THURMAN, J.

Plaintiff, instituted proceedings in the district court of Salt Lake county for a writ of mandate to compel the defendants to permit plaintiff to inspect the books and records of the defendant company, and for other relief. The trial court granted the relief demanded by plaintiff, and defendants appeal.

The complaint, in substance, alleges that defendant company is a corporation having its place of business in Salt Lake City; that said company is required to keep books and "does” keep books showing its original stockholders, their respective interests, the amount paid by them on their shares of stock, and also transfers of stock; that, in addition to said boobs, said company has minute and record books showing the proceedings of all meetings of the stockholders and directors, and also ledgers, daybooks, and journals, showing the business conducted by the corporation, its assets and liabilities, and the purposes for which the money belonged to the corporation has been disbursed. It is further alleged in the complaint that, by virtue of certain- statutes referred to in the complaint, plaintiff as a stockholder has the absolute and unqualified right of access to the boobs of the corporation at any reasonable hour for the purpose of inspection. The complaint further shows that plaintiff made repeated applications on different occasions and at reasonable hours for permission to inspect the books of said compare, and that said permission was refused.

[183]*183Defendants interposed a general demurrer to tbe complaint, which was overruled by the court and permission given to answer. The answer was duly filed.

As plaintiff moved- to strike certain paragraphs of the answer, as numbered, which motion was in part granted, we deem it expedient, after stating the admissions and denials in the answer, to set out the affirmative matter in full. Paragraph 1 of the answer admits the corporate capacity of the defendant company. Paragraph 2 denies that plaintiff is a bona fide stockholder of the company. Paragraph 3 admits that the corporation is required to keep books. Paragraph 4 denies that plaintiff is entitled to the absolute and unqualified access to the books and denies that plaintiff has been refused access to the books for the purpose of inspection. Paragraph 5 denies that plaintiff was denied access on the particular day mentioned in the complaint. The remaining paragraphs, as numbered, so far as material here, are as follows:

“(6) Further answering the said complaint, these defendants allege: That the plaintiff, C. S. Goddard, is and has been for a number of years engaged in Salt Lake City, Utah, in the business of operating a cut-rate stock brokerage business, and that the said plaintiff as such cut-rate stock broker obtained possession of a certificate for 2,000 shares or more of defendant corporation, which had been assigned to a certain person unknown to the defendants, and the name of the assignee erased by acid by the plaintiff. The plaintiff presented the stock certificate so mutilated to the defendants for transfer, and the defendants on advice of counsel refused such transfer, and thereupon the said plaintiff, and at various times since, threatened that unless and until the defendant made such transfer that he would blackmail the defendants through the mails and newspapers and force them to make such transfer by such methods. Said plaintiff thereupon demanded to see the books of the corporation and was permitted so to do and proceeded to and made a list of the stockholders.
“(7) The said plaintiff has never requested and has been refused access to the books of the corporation. Plaintiff’s sole request is to make a list of the stockholders of the defendant corporation for the purpose of the said blackmail scheme and device, and also for the purpose of using such list as a mailing list and to sell to the said stockholders of the defendant corporation stocks in a certain other company called the Congressional Oil Company.
[184]*184“(8) By the laws of Utah, chapter If of the Special Session of 1919, no company may sell its stock in the state of Utah, or offer same for sale in the state of Utah, without having complied with the provisions of such law and received a license to offer its stoch for sale in the state of Utah.,
“(9) The said Congressional Oil Company has not complied with the provisions of such law.
“(10) The said plaintiff, in order to evade such law and for the said blackmailing purposes as aforesaid, has already made a partial list of the stockholders of the defendant corporation and is engaged in the business of sending through the mails to the said stockholders literature signed with his name urging the said stockholders to buy the said Congressional Oil stock, and these defendants allege that it is the purpose and intention of the said plaintiff to make a further list of the stockholders of the defendant corporation and to further circularize them and offer them for sale the said stock in the said Congerssional Oil Company and in defiance of the law of the state of Utah as aforesaid.
“(11) Defendants further allege that the defendants are engaged in the business of equipping and operating their plant for the general chemical reduction of ore at Salt Lake City and the manufacture of paint, and to raise funds for such purpose has sold a large amount of treasury stock of the said corporation on contracts and part payments, and the plaintiff, actuated with malice as aforesaid and for his own benefit, has and is sending through the mails representations to the said stockholders to induce’ them to breach their contracts with the defendant corporation and to buy such stock from the plaintiff to his gain.
“(12) That by virtue of the provisions of the statute of the state of Utah made and provided and particularly section 8351 and of 8352 of the Compiled Laws of Utah, 1917., it is unlawful for any person to print or publish misleading or fraudulent advertisements, and defendants allege that the said plaintiff in violation of such law is using the said list of stockholders of the defendant corporation to print and send through the mails to the said stockholders misleading and f7-audulent advertisements.
“(13) Defendants allege that such purposes on the part of the plaintiff are unlawful, and that the sole purposes of the plaintiff in seeking a writ of mandate herein is to enable him to obtain a further list of stockholders of defendant corporation for the three aforesaid purposes, and defendants allege that the plaintiff’s purposes are unlawful as aforesaid, and the plaintiff is not entitled to be permitted to make such list of stockholders of the defendant corporation or to have access to the stock ledger of said defendant corporation for such purposes.”

Plaintiff moved to strike from the answer all of paragraph [185]*1856, all of paragraph 7, beginning with the word “plaintiff’s/’ in line three thereof, and all of the succeeding paragraphs of the answer. The court granted the motion as to paragraphs, 8, 9, 10, and 12, and denied it as to the remainder.

The matter italicized in our statement of the answer indicates the paragraphs stricken by the court. As to the remaining paragraphs the court rendered judgment on the pleadings.

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Bluebook (online)
193 P. 1103, 57 Utah 180, 1920 Utah LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goddard-v-general-reduction-chemical-co-utah-1920.