Grand Amusement Co. v. Palladium Amusement Co.

287 S.W. 438, 315 Mo. 907, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 884
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 11, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 438 (Grand Amusement Co. v. Palladium Amusement 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
Grand Amusement Co. v. Palladium Amusement Co., 287 S.W. 438, 315 Mo. 907, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 884 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

RAGLAND, P. J.

This is an action to set aside a sale under deed of trust of a leasehold, and for an accounting.

Plaintiff corporation was organized June 8, 1913, with a nominal capital stock of $50,000, divided into 5,000 shares of the par value of $10 each. The original stockholders were C. N. Lund, George Peters and Terrell Peters. The first two each subscribed for 2495 shares and the third for 10. They constituted the board of directors for the first year. Lund was president and George Peters was treasurer and general manager. No cash was paid in by the subscribing stockholders. The corporation’s entire capital stock consisted of a lease, running for a term of twenty-five years from August 18, 1913, on a vacant tract of ground in the city of St. Louis on Morgan Street near Grand Avenue. The terms of the lease required the lessee to pay a rental of $2500 a year in equal monthly installments, and all taxes of every kind as and when they became due, and to erect on the demised premises a building of the value of at least $35,000..

*910 For the purpose of obtaining funds to commence the construction of a building plaintiff executed, on August 26, 1913, a deed of trust on its leasehold to secure four principal notes aggregating the sum of $15,000, and nine coupon notes representing the semi-annual interest thereon at six per cent per annum. The first of the principal notes, in the sum of $3,000, was payable July 1, 1915; the interest fell due on January 1st and July 1st, of each year until the principal sum was paid. It was provided in the deed of trust that upon the grantor’s failure to pay when due any installment of principal or interest, or any ground rent or taxes, the entire indebtedness should become due and foreclosure might be had. With the proceeds of the loan just referred to any money realized in part from sales effected from time to time of the corporate stock and in part from advancements made by Lund and George Peters the construction of a brick building was begun. The front part of the building was designed for stores and the rear portion for a roller-skating rink. In the early part of December, 1913, the skating rink was completed and fully equipped for operation, but the stores were never finished and gotten ready for occupancy until after the property was sold under the deed of trust. The building, to the extent that it was completed, cost approximately $66,000, and an indebtedness of $20,000 was incurred in advertising and in equipping the skating rink and getting it ready for use. The equipment included roller skates, linoleum, seats, tables, chairs, draperies, electric signs and a soda fountain.

Plaintiff’s cash receipts from all sources from the date of its organization to June 1, 1914, were as follows: Proceeds of mortgage loan, $15,000; proceeds of sales of stock, $10,150; advancements made by Peters, $6,000; advancements made by Lund, $3,000; proceeds of loan obtained from Grand Avenue bank, $2,000; and total gross receipts for skating privleges for the season which began December 9, 1913, and ended May 10, 1914, $31,933.25. The exact figures from which could be determined the cost of operating the rink for the period just mentioned were not shown by the evidence. However, Lund who was then president testified that out of the gross receipts they paid, according to his recollection, as much as $14,000 on the corporation’s indebtedness for building and equipment. This estimate was liberal in view of other evidence which discloses that plaintiff had to meet a weekly pay-roll of $500, in addition to paying rent, interest and taxes as they fell due. But if Lund’s figures be accepted, the total amount of cash received by plaintiff from the time of its organization to June 1, 1914, which it could apply to the payment of the $88,000 indebtedness it had incurred for building and equipment was $50,150. In other words, there was outstanding against it on the date last mentioned matured demands to the extent of $37,850, in *911 addition to its mortgage indebtedness of $15,000 and that to the Grand Avenue bank of $2,000.

Those who purchased shares in the plaintiff corporation prior to June 1,1914, were Ruth E. Lund, Yida Elston, M. D. Culver, William F. C. ¿tensón, Charles G. Knueppel, Ben Schrand, Mrs. H. M. Baker and Hummelscheim Lumber Company. Some of these made further purchases of the stock during the year 1914, and in addition to them one W. W. Menges purchased 130 shares during the latter part of that year. Knueppel had had the sub-contract for the brick work of plaintiff’s building, and Schrand that for the painting. Some of the stock that each took was paid for by applying the purchase price as a credit on the amount due him under his contract. Ruth E. Lund was the wife of C. N. Lund. She, Knueppel and Schrand were made parties defendant to this suit.

At a stockholders’ meeting held about June 1, 1914, Schrand, C. N. Lund and George Peters were elected directors. Following the stockholders’ meeting, a director’s meeting was held and Schrand was elected president, Lund vice-president and Peters secretary and treasurer. At the same meeting a resolution was adopted, over Peters’ protest, making Knueppel general manager and the custodian of all the property and funds of the corporation. This action was taken because the majority of the board were of the opinion that to enable the corporation to tide over the difficulties which were then threatening its existence, it was necessary that its affairs be put in the hands of someone who had sufficient financial standing or bank connection to borrow money for its use. This, Knueppel did. He obtained an additional loan of $2,000 from the Grand Avenue Bank and one from the Tower Grove Bank of $7,500. In each instance he, and possibly other stockholders, endorsed the note.

Kneuppel was plaintiff’s general manager and the sole custodian of its funds from about June 1, 1914, to August 10, 1915. During that time he received for and on behalf of plaintiff funds aggregating $37,177.61, as follows: Proceeds of sales of stock, $3,500; gross receipts from skating-rink patronage, $24,177.61; and the proceeds of the two bank loans just mentioned, $9,500. In order to account for these funds he offered in evidence at the trial of this cause a number of plaintiff’s paid notes amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $2,759.71; plaintiff’s pay-roll from September 18, 1914, to April 29, 1915, showing a gross total paid by check of $11,528.20; receipts for the ground rent from July, 1915, to May, 1915, inclusive, amounting to $2,291.67; and 'the testimony of the cashier of the Grand Avenue Bank that $1,000 had beempaid on one of the notes held by that bank. In addition to the above he put in evidence checks which had been drawn by plaintiff, “By Chas. G. Knueppel, Manager,’’ on the Grand Avenue Bank and paid by the bank aggregating $24,872.32. The evi *912 dence did not disclose what these checks were given for. It was plaintiff’s contention that as evidence they were for the most part but duplicates of that previously offered, in that they related to the same items. According to an analysis of the evidence made by plaintiff’s counsel in its (appellant’s) brief here, Knueppel failed to account foi $16,745.29 of plaintiff’s funds which came into his hands as general manager. Plaintiff’s books of account kept during the time that its affairs were managed first by Peters and then by Kneuppel were not produced at the trial.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Telesport, Inc. v. Vestal (In re Telesport, Inc.)
22 B.R. 527 (E.D. Arkansas, 1982)
Palmer v. Chamberlin
191 F.2d 532 (Fifth Circuit, 1951)
Yellow Manufacturing Acceptance Corp. v. American Taxicabs, Inc.
130 S.W.2d 601 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1939)
Irving Trust Co. v. Deutsch
73 F.2d 121 (Second Circuit, 1934)
Irving Trust Co. v. Deutsch
2 F. Supp. 971 (S.D. New York, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 438, 315 Mo. 907, 1926 Mo. LEXIS 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-amusement-co-v-palladium-amusement-co-mo-1926.