Gruetzmacher v. Quevli

226 N.W. 5, 208 Iowa 537
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 24, 1929
DocketNo. 39390.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 226 N.W. 5 (Gruetzmacher v. Quevli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gruetzmacher v. Quevli, 226 N.W. 5, 208 Iowa 537 (iowa 1929).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

The theory of the proceedings brought by the plaintiff-appellant against the defendant-appellee is that, under the laws of Minnesota, a court of that state, having jurisdiction, adjudged an assessment of 50 per cent as part of a double liability against the stockholders of the Farmers’ Grain & Supply Company, a Minnesota corporation. Appellant is the receiver of that corporation, who was appointed in May, 1927, to succeed Frank L. Costin, previously acting as such trust officer. Appellee resides at Mason City, Iowa. She is the second wife of Neis Quevli. Anthony S. Quevli is the son of Neis Quevli by a former marriage. This father and son apparently were the owners and operators of said corporation, which did business at Lakefield, Minnesota, until its insolvency.

Thereafter, under the receivership proceedings, an order for *539 the 50 per cent assessment by authority of the Minnesota laws was made, as aforesaid, October 29, 1926. Such judgment of the Minnesota court, together with the laws of that state, is the basis for the present suit. It is contended by appellant that the appellee is the owner of 400 shares of that stock, either absolutely or for the purpose of collateral security. Therefore it is argued that she is liable for the assessment. That ownership, both absolute and conditional, is denied by appellee. So she maintains that under no circumstances is she bound to pay any assessment on stock in the aforesaid corporation.

Consideration will now be given to the various assignments of error.

I. Indefiniteness appears in appellant’s pleading at places concerning the laws of Minnesota giving rise to the stockholders ’ liability. Yet such averments were not attacked by appellee through a motion for more specific statement, or otherwise, and such uncertainty and- omissions as may appear are supplemented by an adjudication in the case of McCabe Bros. Co. v. Farmers Grain <& Supply Co., 172 Minn. 33 (214 N. W. 764) (pleaded and proven here), wherein appellee became a party in response to statutory notice, and took an appeal from the judgment there rendered against her to the Supreme Court of that state. Without that appearance and decision, it may be that appellant could not recover in the case at bar without more definite and extensive pleading and proof relating to the basic laws of that state giving rise to such stockholders’ responsibility. However, the appellee, as before stated, appeared in the McCabe case, where it was determined that a legal burden existed which the stockholders -of the Farmers’ Grain & Supply Company must bear.

Under the laws of Minnesota (as pleaded and proven), it is the duty of said receiver to enforce the added statutory liability against stockholders. Moreover, the order of court above described, based upon an enabling statute, directed and empowered the appellant to so collect the assessment therefor, either within or without the state of Minnesota. Hence, as a matter of comity, the cause of action being contractual, the appellant will be permitted to sue the appellee in this state if, in fact, she was a stockholder of the Farmers’ Grain & Supply Company, supra. Baird v. Cole, 207 Iowa 664.

*540 II. In the proceeding bad before the Minnesota district court, as above stated, appellee was a party. Important conclusions reached by the Minnesota court in McCabe Bros. Co. v. Farmers Grain & Supply Co. are essential here. First, in that opinion, announcing the conclusion of the court, it is said:

“Upon the hearing in such proceeding, the [Minnesota trial] court is required to receive and consider such evidence, by affidavit or otherwise, as may be presented upon the following points: * # *
. ‘1. The nature and probable extent of the indebtedness of the corporation;
‘2. The probable expense of the receivership ;
‘3. The probable amount of available assets;
• ■ ‘4.- The parties liable as stockholders, the nature and extent of the liability of each, and their probable solvency or responsibility.’ * * * ‘Such order shall be conclusive as to all matters'relating to the amount, propriety, and necessity of the assessment ?■, * *. ’. ’ ’

Those matters thus declared are statutory in Minnesota.1 Further, the Minnesota court, in the McCabe Bros. Co. case, made the following reservation:

“As to these matters [those contained in. the above designated. Minnesota statutes] only, the order is conclusive. * * # A finding as to who the stockholders actually are is beyond the scope of the proceedings [to fix the amount of the assessment]. That question is to. be determined in the action’ brought against the individual to collect the assessment, and not in the summary and informal proceedings which may rest upon affidavits wherein the court deals with probabilities. In such action to recover the assessment, the alleged shareholder may show that he is not a shareholder, or owns less shares than is claimed, or has discharged his liability, or has an offset, or any other defense which is personal to himself. ’ ’

Manifestly,- the appellee is free, under the Minnesota decision, to insist in the present Iowa suit that she is not a stockholder at all. Taking advantage of that permission thus expressed in the McCabe Bros. Co. case, the appellee places her en *541 tire defense upon the allegation in her answer that she is not now, and never has been, a stockholder in said institution.

III. During the trial, appellant tacitly, if not actually, admitted that appellee was not an absolute owner of this stock, but rather, the holder thereof for the purpose of securing a $3,400 loan. Nevertheless appellant contends that the stock records and books of the aforesaid corporaBon listed and carried appellee as a stockholder. For this reason, appellant asserts, the appellee is liable to creditors of the insolvent corporation under the Minnesota laws, not because she was in fact a stockholder, b.ut because she permitted the books and records of the corporation to designate her as such:

By way of answer to that claim, appellee insists that she at no time knew anything about the corporation, had no transactions with it, never held the stock as collateral security or otherwise, did not know that the corporate books indicated differently, and when the certificate was finally presented to her, she refused the same, and indorsed her name upon it' only for the purpose of rejecting the offered security. Corroboration was furnished appellee on this proposition by her stepson.

To prove appellee was a stockholder'of the Farmers’ Grain & Supply Company, appellant offered in evidence the stock book and a stub thereof. The stub in words and figures is to this effect :

■.‘‘Certificate-No. 6.
For 400 shares, Issued to Anna M. Quevli [appellee],
Mason City, Iowa. Dated December 22nd, 1921.”

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Related

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236 N.W. 750 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1931)

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226 N.W. 5, 208 Iowa 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gruetzmacher-v-quevli-iowa-1929.