Gray Construction Co. v. Hyde

244 N.W. 320, 60 S.D. 265, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 50
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1932
DocketFile No. 7189.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 244 N.W. 320 (Gray Construction Co. v. Hyde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray Construction Co. v. Hyde, 244 N.W. 320, 60 S.D. 265, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 50 (S.D. 1932).

Opinion

*266 ROBERTS, J.

This is an action by a creditor of the South Dakota Central Railway Company, a corporation, against certain of its stockholders seeking to recover from, them upon the unpaid balance of the stock held by them, in sufficient amounts to satisfy the claim of the plaintiff. The plaintiff had judgment which was affirmed by this court in an opinion reported in 49 S. D. 543, 207 N. W. 536. On rehearing, the original opinion was modified and the case was remanded to' the circuit court with directions to ascertain the necessary facts and proceed further in conformity with the second opinion. 54 S. D. 122, 222 N. W. 675.

It is admitted by the defendants that at the commencement of this action the railway company was indebted to the plaintiff in the amount for which the action was brought, and that the company was insolvent, having no property and unable to' pay its indebtedness to the plaintiff. The question here involved .is whether the defendants are liable for the amount of such claim by reason of any difference that may exist 'between amount paid upon the shares held by them and the par value.

The case was originally tried upon the theory that it was immaterial whether the defendants were holders of stock acquired from the corporation or were transferees of stock previously issued; that the facts that the defendants were stockholders and that the par value thereof had not been paid to the corporation were sufficient to warrant the rendering of judgment against them. In the second opinion referred to this court held that in so far as the defendants are original holders of stock they are within the provisions of section 8779, Rev. Code 1919, but that they are not liable for the unpaid balance upon shares which were purchased in the open market for a valuable consideration and without notice that the corporation had not been paid in full for the stock at the time of its issuance.

The trial court upon the second hearing made a supplemental finding to the effect that the defendants purchased their stock with knowledge and under circumstances and conditions affirming knowledge in them of the fact that the -full par value of shares of stock held by them had not been paid to the South Dakota Central Railway Company and that the company had not in fact received money or value in excess of $25 per share. The defendants assign *267 as error the insufficiency of the evidence to support this supplemental finding of fact.

The undissputed evidence is that the company never received money or value in excess of $25 for each share of stock issued. The controlling question therefore is 'whether the defendants acquired the shares of stock with knowledge or notice that the full par value had not been paid. We will examine the evidence with the view of applying the rule announced in the former appeal. The South Dakota Central Railway Company was incorporated in 1903. P. F. Sherman was the principal promoter of this railroad, which extends from .Sioux Falls to Watertown, and was the president of the company from the time of its organization to' 1910. Pie was also during this time president of the Minnehaha National Bank of Sioux Falls, and defendant Baker was the cashier. Each of the ten incorporators of the railroad company agreed to invest $10,000 and to receive eight times that amount in stock. Other stock was offered and sold to the public by the company at $25 per share. A resolution of the 'board of directors dated June 9, 1905, recites that P. F. Sherman and four others named, had' rendered good and sufficient service in behalf of the company and each had a claim for $47,600, and directed that shares for that amount fully paid and nonassessable issue to each. It further directed that stock in the sum of $95,200 fully paid and non assessable issue to F. E. Maytag. No services, except attendance upon board meeting's and inspection trips, were in fact rendered by the recipients of this stock.

Defendant Baker was not an incorporator or subscriber to an original issue of stock. The records of the corporation disclose that one hundred shares issued to O. W. McArthur were transferred on February 2, 1911, and two hundred and twenty shares issued to P. F. Sherman were transferred on March 4, 1911, to defendant Baker. It is the undisputed evidence that he was the owner of two hundred and twenty shares at the time of the commencement of this action. Immediately prior to the acquisition of this stock, he had been a business associate of Sherman for more than eight years, and the latter testified with respect to- Baker’s knowledge of the transactions of the company as follows:

“Q. Now, then, from the time you were president of the *268 bank, president and in charge of the construction of the South Dakota Central Railway Company, did you at Sioux Falls have conversation with Mr. Baker relative to the South Dakota Central Railway Company? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. During that time did you have conversation with him as to how the company was financed, what it was selling its stock for? A. W'hy, I told him what I was doing. We had incorporated this company. There wasn’t anything about the company I did not tell him. I did not know anything about the company, I did not tell him.

“Q. Did you and Mr. Baker discuss the fact that these different men whose names you have given had all bought stock of the company upon a ratio of eight to one? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Tell the discussion. How did you discuss it? Where did you discuss it?. A. I can only tell it in substance.

“Q. Tell it in substance. A. I can only repeat what we did and then say I told it to Mr. Baker. What we did do was to incorporate a company composed of ten men, a railroad company, and we each put in $10,000 and took eight times as much stock for our money; for instance, I put in $10,000 and got $80,000 worth of stock, and Mr. Maytag took a like amount.

“Q. Did you tell him about that. A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Did .you have any discussion with Mr. Baker about the block at $25 a share during the time that you were president of the bank and he was cashier? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. What did you tell him you had done? A. We had decided to sell a certain block of stock at 25 cents upon the dollar. If I may explain, understand this stock was not offered to the public first. The objection of Mr. Maytag and others was to shares at $25 because they were worth more, and they wanted to put the price at fifty instead of twenty-five, and I said I know we can sell it at twenty-five, what we don’t want, and. I don’t think we can at fifty, so I think it was put at twenty-five.

“Q. That is what you did do, put it at $25 a share? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. Did you tell Mr. Baker that? A. Yes, sir.

“Q. That was while you were president of the hank and he was cashier? You were also president of the road and building the road? A. Yes, sir.”

*269 We are of the view that the evidence is sufficient to sustain the supplemental finding as to defendant Baker.

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Related

Gray Construction Co. v. Fantle
253 N.W. 464 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
244 N.W. 320, 60 S.D. 265, 1932 S.D. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-construction-co-v-hyde-sd-1932.