Guay v. Holland System Hull Co.

244 Mass. 240
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 244 Mass. 240 (Guay v. Holland System Hull Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guay v. Holland System Hull Co., 244 Mass. 240 (Mass. 1923).

Opinion

Crosby, J.

The plaintiff, a minority stockholder in the Holland System Hull Company (hereafter referred to as the Hull Company), brings this bill to compel the individual defendants and the Holland-System, Inc., to pay over to the Hull Company the sum of $15,000 [242]*242and interest, and to pay counsel fees and costs incurred by the plaintiff in the prosecution of this suit. The case was heard by a judge of the Superior Court who made certain findings, and a final decree has been entered in favor of the plaintiff from which the defendants have appealed.

The Holland-System, Inc., was organized and the individual defendants, Daniel E. and John F. Holland, have been respectively its president and treasurer; they have constituted a majority of its board of directors, and have owned ninety-eight per cent of its capital stock, the remaining shares being held by their nephew. The corporation was organized for the purpose of engaging in the liquor business and in real estate.

In 1913, as the result of a conversation between the plaintiff and Daniel E. Holland, the latter wrote to the plaintiff and offered to form a corporation with a capital of $15,000 for the purpose, among other things, of carrying on the liquor business at the Grand View Hotel, at Nantasket Beach in the town of Hull; the plaintiff and the defendants Daniel E. and John F. Holland should each own one third of the capital stock, and the plaintiff should manage the business at a salary of $30 a week. This offer was accepted in a letter written by the plaintiff dated March 25, 1913. On April 14, 1913, the plaintiff went to work at the hotel. Soon afterwards he gave the defendant Daniel E. Holland a check for $5,000 in payment for fifty shares of stock, and on July 2, 1913, received a certificate therefor issued by the Hull Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Massachusetts for the general purpose of carrying on the liquor business, its charter being dated June 30, 1913. The individual defendants each subscribed for and received a certificate for fifty shares of stock which, with the fifty shares issued to the plaintiff, made a total of one hundred and fifty shares and constituted the entire outstanding capital of the company. Daniel E. Holland was president and a director; John F. Holland was treasurer and a director; and the plaintiff was the clerk and a director. There was evidence that the corporate records were prepared and kept by an accountant named Lewis, who was in the employ of the Hollands, and that when they were required to be signed by the clerk were so signed by the plaintiff, generally without reading them.

[243]*243The articles of organization of the Hull Company, sworn to on June 27, 1913, recited that one hundred and fifty shares of stock of the corporation, par value $100 each, were to be issued and paid for in cash in full; and by a vote of the directors on July 2, 1913, the president and treasurer were authorized to issue the stock on receipt of the par value. No part of the $15,000 in cash was ever paid to the Hull Company; the $5,000 paid by the plaintiff to Daniel E. Holland was turned over by him to the Holland-System, Inc. The plaintiff testified that this payment was so made without his knowledge. Neither of the individual defendants ever paid any actual cash to the Hull Company for their stock. There appeared, however, a ledger account on the books of the Holland-System, Inc., which purported to show the receipt of $15,000 from the Hull Company and its application on account of the purchase price of the hotel property at Nantasket. The personal accounts of Daniel E. and John F. Holland were charged with $10,000 on the books of the Holland-System, Inc., and these two defendants and the accountant Lewis testified that said bookkeeping entries were equivalent to a cash payment of $15,000 to the Hull Company, and to a payment of the same amount from that company to the Holland-System, Inc. These entries were made upon the personal knowledge of John F. Holland, treasurer of both corporations, who testified that the result of these entries was the same as if he and his brother and the plaintiff had each paid $5,000 to the Hull Company, the $15,000 had been deposited in a bank in the name of the Holland System, Inc., and then he had drawn a check of the Hull Company for $15,000 and paid it to the Holland-System, Inc. The hotel property including the fixtures, stock and furniture, was purchased for $28,000 in accordance with an agreement between the owner, one Baxter, and Daniel E. and John F. Holland, but the title, was taken in the name of the Holland-System, Inc., on July 1, 1913. The defendants contend that the personal property so purchased was turned over to the Hull Company together with the good will, furniture, and right to obtain a liquor license (called a “franchise”), and were worth at that time $15,000. No bill of sale of this property was ever executed and delivered to the Hull Company, but it was thereafter assessed as the property of the Holland-System, Inc. No corporate action was taken by [244]*244either corporation by vote or otherwise authorizing or ratifying either the purchase or sale of this personal property.

The plaintiff managed the business from April, 1913, until July 14, 1917, when he resigned. During his management the business was profitable, and the plaintiff testified that he understood that the $15,000 capital had been paid in in cash and was on deposit in the bank to the credit of the Hull Company; that he did not examine the books but trusted Daniel E. and John F. Holland and the accountant Lewis; that his first knowledge that the amount of the capital stock had been paid to the Holland-System, Inc., was in 1919, when he learned that fact from his counsel in this case. The Hull Company, during the period the plaintiff acted as manager, paid to the Holland-System, Inc., a rental of $20 a week, which, the plaintiff testified, he understood was for the use of both the real estate and personal property; he further testified, that he did not learn the defendants claimed that the personal property had been purchased by the Hull Company until long after he ceased to be employed as manager; and the trial judge so found.

If, in view of the circumstance that the two individual defendants, who controlled both corporations, and are the only parties in interest except the plaintiff, application was required to be made to the corporation to take action with reference to the matters complained of in the bill, and refusal or neglect to take such action was necessary before this suit could be maintained by a minority stockholder, it appears that such application in writing was so made by the plaintiff on May 5, 1919, and no action having thereafter been taken by the corporation, this bill was filed on February 21, 1920. Peabody v. Flint, 6 Allen, 52. Almy v. Almy, Bigelow & Washburn, Inc. 235 Mass. 227. O’Brien v. O’Brien, 238 Mass. 403, 410. The trial judge made certain findings of fact and ordered a decree to be entered for the plaintiff in accordance with such findings.

The evidence was taken by a commissioner and is before us. We have examined it carefully and are of opinion that the findings cannot be said to be without evidence to support them. Undoubtedly subscriptions to the capital stock of a corporation may be paid for in cash or in property. If any part of such property is personal, G. L. c. 156, § 10, cl. (c) provides that it shall [245]*245be described in such detail as the commissioner of corporations may require and the amount of stock to be issued therefor stated.

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Bluebook (online)
244 Mass. 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guay-v-holland-system-hull-co-mass-1923.