Green v. Missouri Public Service Co.

86 F.2d 474, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3766
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 21, 1936
DocketNo. 5976
StatusPublished

This text of 86 F.2d 474 (Green v. Missouri Public Service Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Missouri Public Service Co., 86 F.2d 474, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3766 (7th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

SPARKS, Circuit Judge.

The Missouri Public Service Company filed a petition for reorganization under section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act (11 U.S.C.A. § 207). The appellants, Green et al., filed a claim against the debtor for $102,214.69 and for the enforcement of a vendor’s lien for that amount and interest, against certain electrical properties owned by the debtor, known and hereinafter referred to as the Liberal properties. Both the lien and claim were denied, and from that order of the court this appeal is prosecuted.

The controversy here presented arises out of the following facts, concerning which there is no material dispute.

Ozark Utilities Company, a Missouri corporation, was engaged, at the times herein referred to, as a general electric utility in ten counties of that state. It owned and operated electric power plants, transmission lines and distribution systems. Its total authorized capitalization consisted of 1500 issued shares of common, and 2500 shares of preferred stock, each having a par value of one hundred dollars.

[475]*475In 1930 appellants owned, either in their own right or as beneficiaries, all the common stock of the Ozark Company, and more than two-thirds of the issued stock of the West Missouri Power Company, a Missouri corporation, which, in turn, on January 13, 1931, owned all of the issued preferred stock of the Ozark Company, amounting to 1404 shares, and also owned outstanding short term notes of the Ozark Company in the aggregate sum of $900,-000.

The debtor, the Missouri Public Service Company, is also a Missouri corporation, and at the times herein referred to was engaged in -the electric power and light business in western Missouri. In 1930 its properties were north of and contiguous to those of the Ozark Company, and its stock was then owned, through intermediaries, by the Middle West Utilities Company, a holding corporation, which did not own any physical properties and was not authorized to do business in Missouri.

F. E. Kruesi was vice-president of both companies last referred to. Henry L. Doherty & Company, at the times referred to, owned and operated a group of utilities among which was the Empire District Electric Company, a Missouri corporation, which in 1930 owned properties adjacent to and south of those of the Ozark Company.

The transactions out of which this controversy arose began with negotiations between Kruesi and appellants for the purchase of the stock of the Ozark Company. Kruesi intended to let the Middle West Company acquire any interest he might obtain. Afterwards, he learned that the Doherty Company was anxious to obtain an interest in the Ozark Company. In September, 1930, he wrote to the attorney for the Ozark Company: “We have agreed to let the Empire * * * Company * * * buy from us a large part of the Ozark Utilities Company.” This was the first information that appellants had of that fact, and they were displeased, as they felt apprehensive about going into any transaction with the Doherty Company. In October, 1930, the attorney for the Ozark Company prepared for Kruesi a legal opinion with respect to the corporate powers and properties of the Ozark Company. This was submitted to the general counsel of the Middle West Company.

The principal contract herein involved was entered into by appellants and Kruesi on January 13, 1931. It provided for the sale and delivery by appellants to Kruesi of all the outstanding shares of common and preferred stock of the Ozark Company, and certain notes outstanding against that Company owned by the West Missouri Power Company, upon the terms and conditions therein set forth.

Appellants agreed:

(1) To deposit in escrow with the Commerce Trust Company of Kansas City, Missouri, 1500 shares of the common and 1404 shares of the preferred stock of the Ozark Company, which were all of the then outstanding shares, together with the notes of that company above referred to then owned by the West Missouri Power Company.

(2) To apply the payments received from Kruesi, first, to the payment to the West Missouri Company of the notes and the preferred stock so held in escrow, and then to the payment to appellants of the purchase price of the common stock.

(3) To deliver to Kruesi on January 15, 1931, the date set for closing the contract, proxies authorizing him, or his nominee, to vote all of the stock of the Ozark Company, during the time it remained in escrow, on questions of corporate business and procedure, and to deliver to Kruesi, on the closing date, the written resignations of the officers and directors of the Company.

(4) To furnish Kruesi with abstracts of title to all real estate owned by the Ozark Company, and its corporate books and records, leases, franchises, contracts and properties of every kind and character.

In consideration therefor, Kruesi agreed:

(1) To pay or cause to be paid to the escrowee for the account of appellants, the sum of $2,089,402 as the purchase price of the stocks and notes in escrow. An initial payment of $419,402 was to be made on the closing date, and the balance was to be paid in five equal annual payments which should bear six per cent interest per annum, payable semi-annually, until paid.

(2) Not to authorize or allow the Ozark Company, during the escrow, to incur any bonded or other form of funded [476]*476debt, not to substantially alter its capital structure, nor to transfer or convey any substantial part of its corporate properties, except the so-called Liberal properties (which constitutes the basis of this controversy).

(3) To deliver to appellants the written guarantee of the Middle West Utilities Company, for the full performance by Kruesi of his obligations under the contract.

The contract provided that in the event of a transfer or conveyance of the Liberal properties to Kruesi or his nominee, the escrow agent, at Kruesi’s request, was to deliver to the Ozark Company that company’s notes in escrow owned by the West Missouri Power Company equal in principal amount to the amount of the agreed purchase price to be paid by Kruesi, or his nominee, for the property transferred, and their notes to that amount were to be released from escrow.

The contract further provided that, upon full payment by Kruesi of the principal and interest therein stated, the escrowee was to deliver to him all of the preferred and common stock held in escrow, and also the notes likewise held, except such notes as might have been released from escrow to the Ozark Company in connection with the transfer of the Liberal properties, and Kruesi was to be vested with the title to such stocks and notes and all rights of ownership thereto. After the closing date, all accruing dividends on the preferred stock were to be paid to Kruesi.

Upon any default in payment by Kruesi as provided in the contract, all remaining amounts owed thereunder were to become immediately due and payable at the option of appellants; the escrow was to terminate; the proxies given to Kruesi were to become null and void; and the then officers and directors of the Ozark Company were to tender their resignations to appellants.

Kruesi and the Doherty Company entered into a contract on January 13, 1931, which was drafted by counsel for the Middle West Company. Neither appellants nor the attorney for the Ozark Company saw this contract before January 15, 1931.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 F.2d 474, 1936 U.S. App. LEXIS 3766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-missouri-public-service-co-ca7-1936.