Haverland v. Lane

154 P. 1118, 89 Wash. 557, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 844
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1916
DocketNo. 12828
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 154 P. 1118 (Haverland v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haverland v. Lane, 154 P. 1118, 89 Wash. 557, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 844 (Wash. 1916).

Opinion

Chadwick, J.

The plaintiff and his assignors, whom we shall hereafter refer to as the plaintiffs, were stockholders in a telephone company having lines in northern Idaho and running into Spokane, Washington. We shall call it the Limited Company.

The defendant T. S. Lane, whom we shall hereafter refer to as the defendant, was interested as an officer and stockholder in several independent telephone companies in the state of Montana, and in the Home Telephone Company in the city of Spokane, Washington. These were known locally as the “Independents.”

In order to secure a line into the city of Spokane, the Independents negotiated for the purchase of the Limited Company. At the time, there was a certain holding company organized under the laws of the state of Montana, known as the Interstate Consolidated Telephone Company. We shall call it the Consolidated Company. This company held the stock of all the independent companies. After negotiating for some time, the Limited Company was sold to the Consolidated Company. In consideration of the transfer of the stock of the Limited Company, the Consolidated Company issued shares in the Consolidated Company to plaintiffs at the rate of one and one-half to one. As a matter of special inducement to those in authority, plaintiff, Haverland, was given a bonus amounting to 550 shares of a par value of $55,000.

The Limited Company was transferred to the Consolidated Company in 1910. In 1911, the independent companies were not prospering. Not more than one or two of them were paying expenses or interest upon their bonds. There were no [559]*559earnings for distribution or to pay dividends on the stock. In the fall of 1911, the Consolidated Company had outstanding obligations amounting to approximately $1,200,000. It is likely that its assets, liberally considered, did not exceed $400,000. However that may be, there can be no doubt that, in the fall of 1911, the Consolidated Company was in a state of no more than tolerant solvency. It was borrowing money to meet expenses and interest charges. Its stock had no tangible or market value. It may have had some speculative value, but there was not even a hope of a fixed fair value on the market.

At this time defendant and another by the name of MacGinniss, who was interested in the independent telephone companies in the state of Montana, went to New York and sought to finance the Consolidated Company. They secured a loan which met temporary needs, but it was apparent that the relief was at best for a short time only, and some further relief would have to be found. Returning from New York, defendant and MacGinniss went to Denver, where they undertook to interest other parties. Nothing definite was decided at the time. In February, 1912, they returned to Denver and the matter was again taken up with Mr. Smith, who was general counsel for the Mountain States Telephone Company, Mr. Hamlin, assistant to the president, and Mr. Field, first vice president of the same company and its active manager. Credit to the Consolidated Company was refused, but it was agreed that a company to be known as the Corporation Securities and Investment Company should be created. It was organized by Mr. Smith through the instrumentality of clerks and employees in his office. We shall refer to it as the Securities Company. After some further negotiations, the Securities Company made and delivered to MacGinnis a writing, wherein it agreed to take 17,555 shares, which would carry a control of the company, at $80 per share, and it was further agreed that MacGinniss would undertake to deliver within ninety days 6,143 shares of the stock, for which the [560]*560Securities Company agreed to pay seventy per cent of its par value. The 17,555 shares were delivered promptly. Some of the stock was held in the city of Spokane, the plaintiffs being residents of that city.

The book value of the Consolidated stock at the time, and for a long time thereafter, and possibly at the present time, so far as the record shows, was about $13 a share. It was occasionally sold on the market in Spokane through the brokers who were members of the stock exchange, an institution which has been maintained for many years, for prices ranging from $12 to $20.

Defendant, who was president of the Consolidated Company, caused a letter to be written to plaintiffs on the 16th day of August, 1912, demanding that they return to the Consolidated Company certain stock and preferred certificates which they had caused to be issued to themselves when in control of the Limited Company and which seem to have been issued without any consideration moving to the company. Plaintiff and Phelps referred the matter to Mr. Williams, one of the plaintiffs’ assignors, who had a slight holding of stock and who had been their counsel in another matter, and it was his judgment, as well as their own, that defendant had caused the letter to be written in order to coerce a sale of their consolidated stock. Defendant disclaims this motive, but however that may be, the fact is that, through the instrumentality of these letters, the parties were brought in personal contact. They could not agree on the price for the stock, defendant insisting that it was worth $20, which was the prevailing price among brokers, and plaintiffs insisting that it ought to be worth more money. It was finally agreed that defendant would pay, not for the stock but as a bonus, enough to make a net return of $25 per share. Mr. Williams, by demurring longer than the rest, received $31 per share. Defendant claims to have paid this price, as he paid $70 for certain stock held by the officers of the Fidelity National Bank, for the reason that it was his intention to make every [561]*561stockholder whole, that is, to pay them all that they had put into the stock. Plaintiffs knew, or had heard enough to lead them to the information, that the Fidelity people had received $70 for their stock. The stock was indorsed in blank and sent with a draft attached for the purchase price to MacGinniss at Butte, Montana, who paid the drafts and cancelled the stock.

In some suit brought in 1914 by the government against the Bell Telephone Company, of which the Mountain States Company and the Securities Company were subsidiary, it was developed that the stock which defendant had purchased had been turned over to the Securities Company by MacGinnis at $70 and $80 a share. This being published in the newspaper report of the proceedings, Mr. Phelps and Mr. Williams assigned their right of action to Mr. Haverland, who began this suit to recover from the defendant the difference between the price paid to them and the price which the Securities Company paid to MacGinniss for the stock. They claimed, first, that, although the stock had no tangible or market value above $20 a share, or no book value beyond $12 or $13 a share, there was a value, in virtue of the contract, of $80 a share; and second, because of defendant’s relation to the Consolidated Company and to its stockholders, he was under a legal duty to disclose the fact that he was selling the stock at $80 per share to the parties in interest that they might participate in the sale to the Securities Company.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Barnes v. Eastern & Western Lumber Co.
287 P.2d 929 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1955)
Llewellyn v. Queen City Dairy, Inc.
48 A.2d 322 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1946)
Wootten v. Wootten
151 F.2d 147 (Tenth Circuit, 1945)
Moore v. Steinman Hardware Co.
179 A. 565 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
McCurdy v. Spokane Western Power & Traction Co.
24 P.2d 1075 (Washington Supreme Court, 1933)
Stout v. Cunningham
196 P. 208 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1921)
Dawson v. National Life Insurance Co. of America
176 Iowa 362 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 P. 1118, 89 Wash. 557, 1916 Wash. LEXIS 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haverland-v-lane-wash-1916.