Guilbert v. Kessinger

160 S.W. 17, 173 Mo. App. 680, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 721
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 16, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 17 (Guilbert v. Kessinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guilbert v. Kessinger, 160 S.W. 17, 173 Mo. App. 680, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 721 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

.TRIMBLE, J.

—The Buckeye Land and Town Company was a Kansas corporation organized in 1887, with a capital stock of $50,000 divided into 1000 shares of $50 each. It was, and is now, claimed by .the plaintiff that the defendant (who is appellant here) was one of its directors and stockholders, but paid into the corporate treasury on his stock less than 20 per cent of its face or par value.

On January 6, 1899, the corporation executed a note to Houston Hay for $1046 due 90 days after date. On January 11, 1902, the corporation became, and thereafter remained, insolvent. On that day the administrator of • the estate of Houston Hay, brought suit in the district court of Logan county, Kansas, to recover judgment on said note, and for the purpose of having a receiver appointed for said corporation. •The petition in that suit alleged the execution and ownership of the note in sufficient terms to entitle [683]*683plaintiff to a judgment thereon, and then alleged that said corporation was insolvent, had wholly suspended business for more than one year prior to the commencement of the action, that it owed debts amounting to more than $7500, that suits were pending against it in other states, that it owned certain lands worth about $1500 as its only assets, that it was necessary for the protection of the assets and the creditors that a receiver be appointed. Three days later, January 14, 1902, the corporation entered its appearance, and E. J. Guilbert was' appointed receiver and qualified, and has ever since been acting as such. On April 10, 1902, judgment was rendered on said note for $1244.74 with 6 per cent interest from date of judgment and for costs. Afterwards, on the same day, the court ordered the receiver to give the notice by publication to all creditors of said corporation to present their claims to said receiver on or before June 25, 1902, and to send to all known creditors a notice thereof by registered mail. The court further ordered the receiver to advertise and sell at public auction to the highest bidder all land and real estate belonging to said corporation and make report on or before June 30, 1902. This the receiver did, and the sale made by him of all the assets of the corporation was duly approved by said district court. Afterwards, on November 11, 1903, a further order and decree was made in said cause, in which it was found that the corporation owed seven creditors, naming them, in various amounts aggregating $14,660,15, one of which was the estate of Houston Hay deceased holding the judgment for $1244.74. Said decree also found and stated the names and addresses of the stockholders of said corporation at that time, the number of shares of each, and ordered, the receiver to proceed by suit or suits or otherwise to collect all amounts due from said stockholders for unpaid subscriptions on stock and also an amount in addition thereto equal to the par value of the stock [684]*684owned by each of them for the benefit of all the creditors of the corporation until the receiver had collected a sufficient sum to liquidate all debts of the corporation and the expenses of the receivership.

In the list of stockholders so found by the court was the name of appellant as holding 100 shares of the par value of $50 each. All of the stockholders, not insolvent and dead, paid the respective amounts due from them under the above order, except appellant herein. And this is a suit begun July 27, 1905, by the receiver against him in the circuit court of Jackson county, Missouri, to recover the balance of his unpaid subscription due on the one hundred shares alleged to be held by him and the double liability thereon imposed by the laws of Kansas. The case was tried by the court on May 25, 1912, and judgment was rendered in favor of the receiver for $5,710. Defendant appealed.

Before disposing of the points involved in the case, attention must be given to the objection offered by respondent that appellant’s abstract is insufficient because it fails to show by recital of record entries that the bill of exceptions was ever signed or ordered filed, or that any exception was taken to the order overruling the motion for. new trial, or rather, and to be more nearly exact, that the exception appears in the record proper but not in the bill of exceptions. A careful examination of the record, however, discloses that this exception appears both in the record and in the bill of exceptions. And, while the abstract may not show all the record entries sufficient to perfect the appeal, yet there are statements showing that all the required steps were duly taken. Under rule 26 adopted by this court January 6, 1913, “if the abstract states the appeal was duly taken, then, absent a record showing to the contrary, by respondent, it will be presumed the proper steps were taken at the proper time and term,” And “It shall be sufficient if his [685]*685abstract state the bill of exceptions was duly filed.” The appeal was properly taken and the case will be considered on its merits.

Appellant’s first point is that there is no evidence that appellant ever subscribed for stock or at any time became a stockholder of the Buckeye Land and Town Company. As the judgment of the trial court against appellant necessarily includes a finding that he was a stockholder, slight evidence will be sufficient to prevent appellant’s point on this question from being successful. In fact, if there is any evidence whatever to show that appellant was a stockholder, we are required; to give it effect, since we must give respondent’s evidence its fullest probative force in view of the finding of the trial court.

It is true, as appellant claims, that, in a case like this, where it is sought to charge with liability as a stockholder a person who denies being such, the books and records of the corporation, which do not contain his signature or other similar act to which he is a party, if unsupported by other evidence, are not admissible to prove his membership in the corporation. [Hinsdale Sav. Bank v. New Hampshire Banking Co., 54 Pac. 1051.] While the records of the corporation are evidence of all corporate proceedings therein recorded they cannot be used against a stranger to connect him with the corporation, and until defendant has been shown to be a stockholder by other evidence, he is a stranger,, and the records of the corporation would be binding on it but not on him. The question of membership in the corporation is the principal fact in dispute and that must be shown by evidence binding on the party sought to be charged. [2 Thompson on Corporations, secs. 1919, 1924.]

But in this case there is more than the mere records of the corporation to establish defendant’s membership therein. It was shown in evidence that the stock book and other records of the corporation, [686]*686showing its orginal organization, and which would contain the signatures of those taking stock, were lost and could not be found. No receipt of defendant for a certificate or certificates of stock could be introduced because no certificates of stock were issued to anyone as none of the stock was fully paid up. Hence the absence of such binding and primary evidence was fully accounted for, and this lets in secondary evidence as to defendants’ connection with the corporation. The evidence necessary to show that defendant was a stockholder does not have to be in writing. It may be shown by proof of his conduct. [3 Thompson on Corp., sec.

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Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 17, 173 Mo. App. 680, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guilbert-v-kessinger-moctapp-1913.