Hall v. McLuckey

65 S.E.2d 494, 135 W. Va. 864, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 102
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1951
DocketC. C. No. 779
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 S.E.2d 494 (Hall v. McLuckey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. McLuckey, 65 S.E.2d 494, 135 W. Va. 864, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 102 (W. Va. 1951).

Opinion

Lovins, Judge:

The Circuit Court of Raleigh County, West Virginia, sustained demurrers to plaintiff’s amended bill of complaint, and certified the rulings made thereon to this Court.

The original bill of complaint in this suit by Hall, plaintiff, against McLuckey and Beckley Music & Electric Co., a corporation, hereinafter designated “McLuckey” *866 and “company”, respectively, prayed for an injunction restraining McLuckey from managing the business of the company and from applying the funds of the company to his own use, the appointment of a special receiver to operate the business, an audit of the business of the company, certain items of discovery, a decretal judgment against McLuckey for any sum due from him, dissolution of the company, and sale of its assets.

A final decree entered by the Raleigh County Circuit Court granting the greater portion of the relief sought in the original bill of complaint has heretofore been before this Court upon appeal. The decree of the trial chancellor was reversed, and the case was remanded with directions to sustain the demurrer to the bill of complaint with leave to plaintiff to amend the bill. This Court held that although plaintiff had a right to maintain a suit for the appointment of a receiver of the assets of the company and its ultimate dissolution under Code, 31-1-81, 82, the allegations of the original bill of complaint were insufficient to warrant the drastic relief prayed for in the bill; that Cecil W. Lovell and Edith Gamble Basham, hereinafter designated “Lovell” and “Basham”, respectively, allegedly holding shares of stock in the company, issued to them without authority, were necessary parties to the suit; and that there was a fatal omission on the part of plaintiff to aver that he had applied to the stockholders or the board of directors of the company for relief prior to the commencement of suit, or to show that such prior application would have been useless. Hall v. McLuckey, et al., 134 W. Va. 595, 60 S.E. 2d 280.

Upon remand to the trial court, plaintiff filed an amended bill of complaint. It is unnecessary for the purposes of this opinion to restate in detail the proceedings formerly reviewed. Accordingly, our attention and discussion are principally concerned with the record as developed since the filing of the amended bill.

The original bill of complaint is made a part of the amended bill by reference. In addition to the relief orig *867 inally sought, for which there is a renewed prayer, the amended bill prays that Lovell and Basham be made defendants to the amended bill; that Lovell and Basham be permitted to assign their stock to the company and the company be required to reimburse them to the extent of their investments therein; and that McLuckey be required to assign to the company sixty shares of stock allegedly issued to him without proper authority and contrary to the parol agreement as to ownership.

Plaintiff bases his claim for relief upon allegations of the violation by McLuckey of an oral agreement entered into between them prior to incorporation of the company, providing for equal and exclusive stock ownership, a $300.00 monthly sálary for McLuckey as manager of the business, an equal sharing of the net profits of the business; and upon acts of mismanagement consisting of the application of the property and funds of the company to the personal use of McLuckey, and in his failure to provide for the holding of meetings of the stockholders and directors at the times and in the manner required by the by-laws of the company and- the laws of the State of West Virginia.

Plaintiff alleges that although the by-laws, the pertinent provisions of which he sets forth in his bill, require annual meetings of the stockholders and directors on the second Wednesday of September in each year, none have been held since the first stockholders’ meeting on October 19, 1944, an organizational meeting at which the plaintiff, defendant and L. L. Scherer were elected directors; that-although notice of the regular monthly meetings of the board of directors is not required, notice is not dispensed with in regard to special meetings of the directors. Plaintiff alleges that he has not been notified of any meetings of the directors or the stockholders; that he had no actual knowledge of the holding of such meetings; that he had not waived notice thereof; and that he had not given anyone his proxy.

Plaintiff avers that the minutes of pretended meetings, which he was permitted to inspect, show that several of *868 such meetings of the stockholders and directors have taken place. The minutes of such a meeting of stockholders held on July 6, 1945, attended only by McLuckey and Lovell, recited that L. L. Scherer had defaulted in the payment of Stock Certificate No. 4, and that he would not fulfill the duties of secretary. C. W. Lovell was asked to assume the duties of secretary and treasurer at a salary commensurate with the work. McLuckey’s salary as manager was set at $416.67 until an increase in salary was warranted by increased business. There is no allegation as to whether McLuckey and Lovell abstained from voting on the matters in which they had a personal interest. Minutes of one allegedly spurious meeting of the board of directors on July 8, 1946, do not show who was in attendance, but they are signed by McLuckey as president and Lovell as secretary and treasurer. At a similar meeting of the board on July 8, 1947, the minutes being signed by Lovell and McLuckey, Mc-Luckey was commended for his service and his annual salary was increased to $6200. Attendance at the last mentioned meeting was not shown and plaintiff does not allege whether McLuckey abstained from voting on the action taken by the directors. At a pretended meeting on July 5, 1948, the board of directors purportedly increased defendant McLuckey’s annual salary to $10,000, contingent on an anticipated gross business of $200,000 for the ensuing year. A minimum annual salary of $300.00 was voted for the acting secretary and treasurer. It is not alleged whether McLuckey and Lovell participated in this action.

Plaintiff charges that all of the meetings, hereinabove referred to, were improperly held because of lack of notice to him, and that the actions of the Board of Directors were invalid for the further reason that Lovell participated therein as a director when he had not been properly elected to that office, the plaintiff not having been legally notified of the stockholders’ meeting at which such election occurred, and that there was an insufficient number of directors for legitimate action by the board, *869 the by-laws requiring a minimum of three directors. In this connection, plaintiff alleges that L. L. Scherer had not paid for the stock certificate which was issued to him, the certificate had not been delivered to him, and that therefore he had never been a stockholder in the company, which is a qualification set by the by-laws for membership on the board of directors. Thus plaintiff contends that he and McLuckey are the only lawful directors of the company.

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.E.2d 494, 135 W. Va. 864, 1951 W. Va. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-mcluckey-wva-1951.