Hansen v. Granite Holding Co.

218 P.2d 274, 117 Utah 530, 1950 Utah LEXIS 132
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1950
Docket7339
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 218 P.2d 274 (Hansen v. Granite Holding Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansen v. Granite Holding Co., 218 P.2d 274, 117 Utah 530, 1950 Utah LEXIS 132 (Utah 1950).

Opinion

WADE, Justice.

This is an action by Ralph Cutler, Hettie May Bates and William S. Young, plaintiffs and respondents here, as stockholders of the Granite Holding Company, a corporation, on behalf of the corporation, to set aside as fraudulent and made in bad faith a purported sale and conveyance by the corporation of all of its assets to William L. Hansen, and for an account by him of the rents and profits received by him while in possession. The trial court entered judgment in favor of the corporation setting the conveyance aside and for $29,246.05, from which the defendants appeal claiming *534 (1) that there is no evidence to sustain the trial court’s findings of fact; (2) that the findings do not justify the judgment; and (3) that in the accounting he was entitled to credits which the trial court denied.

The Granite Holding Company, known as the Granite Lumber Company prior to 1927, has for many years been ■principally owned and completely operated by Nephi J. Hansen. He is the father of William L. Hansen to whom the corporate assets were conveyed by deed dated July 16, 1945. William and Nephi and the corporation were named defendants. The judgment runs in favor of the corporation and against William. All three defendants join in the appeal.

Since 1919, Nephi has been the president, a director and the general manager of the corporation and has completely dominated its operation as if its property were his own. No stockholder’s meetings have been held since 1927. During that time all the directors, except a few personal friends and business associates of Nephi, have been members of his immediate family. Director’s meetings have been held only when he felt it legally necessary to have his actions ratified and the directors have followed his wishes without exercising any individual judgment thereon. Other than to sufficiently have his wishes approved in the director’s meetings and privately to the members of his own family, he has made no reports to the stockholders of the conditions of the corporation’s finances and although some of the outside stockholders inquired of him about its affairs both immediately before and after this conveyance, he made no mention that such sale had been made or was contemplated, but completely withheld from them all information in regard thereto and they finally learned thereof from other sources.

This action was commenced December 21, 1946, by Lewis F. and Clyde Hansen, both of whom are sons of Nephi and brothers of William, and both of them were directors of the *535 corporation and signed the minutes of the director’s meeting authorizing the sale. Clyde was the secretary and drew those minutes up. They recite that the meeting was held July 18, 1945, two days after the date of the deed; that three new members of the board were, at the meeting, appointed and qualified; that the sale of all the remaining assets of the corporation was authorized for not less than $10,000.00, and that, $5,000.00 thereof be paid to Nephi in full for back salary previously authorized. No records were produced which showed that back salary was owing. All of the directors, including Lewis F. and Clyde and the newly appointed directors, signed these minutes and although at that time everyone knew that the purported sale to William had been completely arranged, no mention that he was to be the purchaser was made in the minutes.

Shortly after the complaint was filed, Clyde withdrew as a plaintiff and later an amended complaint was filed in which the names of W. V. Jensen, Mrs. J. E. Jensen, Ralph Cutler, Hettie May Bates and Robert H. Young were added as plaintiffs. The Jensens are a son and the widow of J. E. Jensen who was a director and signed the minutes which authorized the conveyance. He died before the action was commenced. Robert H. Young passed away in 1930 and his stock was owned by his son, William S. Young, when the action was instituted. During the trial the action was on their own motion dismissed as to Lewis L. Hansen and the Jensens, and William S. Young substituted for his father Robert H. Young, leaving only the three plaintiffs mentioned at the beginning of this opinion. Each of them were stockholders of the corporation and none of them nor their predecessors participated in or approved the purported sale or knew anything about the fact that it was contemplated or had occurred, until long after it was closed.

There was $74,000.00 worth of subscribed and outstanding preferred stock, which the articles required should pay 8 per cent annual dividends with the right to vote in case *536 the dividends were more than three years delinquent. Most of plaintiffs’ stock was preferred and no dividends had been paid since the early 1920’s. There was $350,000.00 worth of shares at par of common stock subscribed and outstanding.

The property which was conveyed consisted of a strip of ground covered by several two story buildings on the southwest corner of 21st South Street and Highland Drive. This is in the center of Sugar House business district in Salt Lake City. It is separate and some distance from the main business center of Salt Lake City. The buildings adjoin each other and cover the lot clear to the sidewalk with an 85 foot frontage on 21st South and 207.5 foot frontage on Highland Drive. The ground floor is rented for stores and business establishments and the upstairs rented as apartments. For many years the corporate business has been the management of this and other similar property which it previously owned in that neighborhood.

The corporation’s real property has all been mortgaged for many years and during the depression it was in financial difficulties. The mortgage was as much as $200,000.00 in 1927; since that time various pieces of its real property has been sold, the proceeds applied as payment on the mortgage and then a renewal note and mortgage has been made for the balance against the remaining real property which it owned. On May 15, 1939, after several sales had been made, the board of directors authorized the sale of all or any part of the corporation’s real property on the best terms obtainable and directed that the proceeds of such sales be paid on the mortgage. Under that authority it sold its remaining property, except that involved in this action, and after paying the proceeds on the mortgage on November 1, 1941, a renewal note and mortgage was executed against the remaining real property for $82,528.13 with 4 per cent interest payable in monthly installments of $275.00, plus an estimated prorata of the taxes and insurance premiums until January 1, 1943, and from then on an additional monthly payment of $500.00 principal was *537 required. The deed was delivered to William before July 28, 1945, and was recorded by him on that date. He took possession August 1st, at which time the interest, insurance and taxes were all paid up to date and $8,028.13 had been paid on the principal, reducing the balance owing thereon to $74,500.00 but there was some deliquency in the payments on principal which had become due.

In negotiating this sale, Nephi furnished William a statement of the business of the corporation for 1943, 1944 and the first four months of 1945.

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Bluebook (online)
218 P.2d 274, 117 Utah 530, 1950 Utah LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-granite-holding-co-utah-1950.