Greene v. Stevenson

175 S.W.2d 519, 295 Ky. 832, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 348
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 16, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 175 S.W.2d 519 (Greene v. Stevenson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greene v. Stevenson, 175 S.W.2d 519, 295 Ky. 832, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 348 (Ky. 1943).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Van Sant, Commissioner

Affirming.

Rex Oil & Gas Company was incorporated May 19, 1917, with a capital stock of $20,000, which, was later in *834 creased to $100,000, $79,665 of which was paid in. Since its organization it has paid to stockholders in dividends over $1,000,000. The life of the corporation' was 20 years; wherefore, the charter expired midnight, May 18, 1937. Apparently the expiration date slipped the minds of the directors and stockholders, and the corporation continued to do business until April, 1941, when the directors discovered that they were operating without a charter. Upon this discovery, several of the stockholders, who had been directors in the company, prepared an agreement, which recites:

“Agreement by Stockholders of Rex Oil & Gras Company
and
Subscription to Stock of the Rex Oil & Gras Company
“Whereas, under the terms of its original charter Rex Oil and Gras Company, a Kentucky corporation, for many years engaged in oil and gas business, cannot continue to conduct its general business under said charter because of the limitation of time provided therein, and whereas, its stockholders desire that said business which has been successfully conducted for many years be continued, and for that purpose desire that a charter be procured for a new Kentucky corporation to be known as-The Rex Oil & Gras Company, with power to continue in business for fifty (50) years, and which new corporation shall have in general the same powers as to the nature-of business, control and management thereof as were had by said original corporation, and which new corporation is being formed by J. M. Stevenson, L. C. Young, S. T. Davis, Y. W. Bush, Joe S. Lindsay, R. M. Scobee and' Thomas J. Stevenson, the persons constituting the present Directors of said original corporation, and the authorized stock of which new corporation shall be the-same One Hundred Thousand Dollars ($100,000.00), as-that of said original corporation, the par value of said shares of said new corporation being Ten Dollars ($10.00) each, the same as the par value of the shares of said original corporation, and it being contemplated that the stock to be issued of said new corporation to the subscribers, shall be to each in the same number of shares as each holds in said original corporation.
“Said stock so subscribed in said new corporation to be fully paid up by the transfer by the original corpora *835 tion by its Officers and Directors to the new corporation on behalf of each of the signers hereto of his or her proportionate share of all assets and liabilities of said original corporation, so that upon this agreement being signed by all of the stockholders of the original corporation, the new corporation will hold all assets and assume-all liabilities of said original corporation, and the stock of said new corporation will be held share for share in the same amounts as was the stock of said original corporation.
“The signers hereof therefore now subscribe each for the number of shares set opposite his or her name in the stock of said The Rex Oil & Gas Company, and authorize the above named persons now constituting the existing Board of Directors of said original corporation to-consummate the incorporation of said new company. The stock so subscribed shall be paid in full by said original corporation by its Officers and Directors transferring to said new corporation the share of each of the signers in the assets and liabilities of said original corporation.
“We waive holding of organization meeting of stockholders of said new corporation, and direct that in the articles of incorporation of said new corporation, the first Board of Directors shall set out as the same persons who are now Directors as above named, who shall hold office until the next regular annual meeting to be held in January of each'year as provided in said articles.
“Witness our signatures this April -, 1941.”
It appears that all of the stockholders signed the agreement except appellant, Mrs. W. B. Lindsay, who allegedly was the owner of five shares of the corporate-stock. Among those who signed the agreement was Mrs. Elizabeth Lindsay Greene, whose name was affixed July 29, 1941. On August 8, 1941, she dispatched the following letter:
‘ ‘ To Rex Oil & Gas Company
“John M. Stephenson, President and its Board of Directors
‘ ‘ Gentlemen:
“On or about the last of July or first of August, just past, at the instance of my brother, J. S. Lindsay, Winchester, Kentucky, a member of your Board of Directors,. *836 I signed, as a stockholder in said company, a writing presented to me by him, the purpose of which, as represented to me by said brother, being to extend the charter of the Rex Oil & Gas Company, in which I hold 132 shares of capital stock, subject to my assignment of same as collateral for a loan from the Kentucky State Bank of Carrollton, Kentucky, of which assignment you had notice as shown by a letter addressed to the Kentucky State Bank of Carrollton, Kentucky, by your president, John M. Stephenson, acknowledging said assignment.
“I find that the writing I signed was evidently a writing signifying the intention of the stockholders who signed same to go along in an effort to form a new company to take over all the assets of the Rex Oil & Gas Company. I signed said writing relying upon the statement of my brother, J. S. Lindsay, that its purpose was to extend the charter, subsequently, I found that under the law the Rex Oil & Gas Company does not now exist save for liquidation purposes, its charter having expired .some four years ago. I am also informed that all moneys paid by the Rex Oil & Gas Company and all acts done not in furtherance of liquidation are void acts and such moneys so expended are recoverable for the benefit of the stockholders. Had I known that the purpose of having me sign the paper was organize a new company, I would have refused, for I do not want to prolong the life of the ■company. I have long been dissatisfied with the manner in which the company was conducted, that is practically .as a closed concern, precluding the stock having any real market value as it should have. As it is, the only value the stock has is the $152.00 per year, whereas my brother informed me some years ago the company could liquidate and pay $60.00 per share to each stockholder. Therefore, I am heartily in favor of liquidating and positively opposed to organizing a new company, and permitting my interest in the old company to be merged into the new, and I now repudiate my signature to said writing. I am sending a copy of this repudiation to my brother, J. S. Lindsay, and one to the Secretary of State, noting of record with him my objection to the formation of a new company and my refusal to permit my interest to be used for purchase of stock in such new company. The law seems to be very plain and no number of stockholders 'Can defeat the rights of any individual stockholder.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.W.2d 519, 295 Ky. 832, 1943 Ky. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greene-v-stevenson-kyctapphigh-1943.