Hedley v. Lake View Land & Improvement Co.

13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 523, 30 Ohio Dec. 632, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 131
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 523 (Hedley v. Lake View Land & Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hedley v. Lake View Land & Improvement Co., 13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 523, 30 Ohio Dec. 632, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 131 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Estep, J.

This action is brought by Alice Hedley, who claims to be the owner of twenty shares of stock of the Lake View Land & Im[524]*524provement Company, a New York corporation. In her petition she sets up, at some length, her complaint against defendant, all to the effect that the transfer on September 16, 1907, of the property of the Lake View Land & Improvement Company, a corporation of the state of New York, to the Lake View Land & Improvement Company, an Ohio corporation, is illegal, being contrary to the laws of the state of New York; and she prays that the directors of the Ohio corporation be decreed to hold the property, so conveyed, in trust for the benefit of the plaintiff and other stockholders of the said New York corporation, and for an accounting, the’ appointment of a receiver, etc.

To this complaint, answers have been filed by the defendant corporations, in which several defenses have been asserted. Among other defenses are those of laches, a cancellation of the stock back in 1896, and several other defenses, which I will not take the time to fully set out. Reply has been filed taking issue with these defenses.

The Lake Shore Land & Improvement Company, the New York corporation, was organized March 3d, 1893. The corporation was formed for the purchase and sale of real estate, laying out and subdividing the same into building lots and villa plots, maintaining, selling and improving the same. The location of its business was in the city of Buffalo, New York, and in the city of Cleveland, Ohio, and vicinity. The capital stock consisted of 1,120 shares of the par value of $100 each. The location of its principal business office was in Buffalo. The corporation was the owner of about thirty-five acres of land located on Lake View avenue, partly in the city of Cleveland and partly in the village of East Cleveland. This corporation continued in existence up to December 26, 1907. The Ohio corporation had been previously organized to carry on the same business as had formerly been conducted by the New York corporation; and, as I have stated above, the property of the New York corporation was conveyed to the Ohio corporation on the 16th day of September, 1907, and the business had been carried on by the Ohio corporation up to the present time.

One C. J. Wheelock, since deceased, was the promoter of this enterprise. He originally owned a part of the land included in [525]*525the thirty-five acres acquired by the company. He obtained a large amount of the stock of the company, as a part consideration for his transfer of his land to the company, and was one of the directors of said New York corporation, and was active in its affairs for a few years.

W. E. Hedley, the husband of the plaintiff, had some deal with Wheelock in 1895, whereby he held forty-one shares of stock in the New York corporation, owned by Wheelock. Hedley testified that he held this stock as collateral to a small indebtedness owing to him by Wheelock. These forty-one shares of stock were in three certificates, one for one, one for twenty, and another for twenty shares. Two certificates had written in red ink on the face of the stock the word “assessable”; the remaining certificate, and the one claimed by the plaintiff, had nothing marked upon it. Hedley says that in 1896, he had his wife purchase the certificate No. 4, calling for twenty shares, and not marked assessable; that she paid $100 for said twenty shares, and that in all subsequent matters relating to said stock he acted as agent for the plaintiff.

It is admitted that Hedley never presented said stock to the corporation for transfer upon its books, and that he never paid or offered to pay any unpaid assessments upon said stock.

As early as October 29, 1895, Mr. Hedley wrote or sent a letter to E. L. Brown, 224 Bank street, Cleveland, Ohio, the secretary of the New York corporation, in which he states that Mr. Wheelock informed him that Mr. Brown had charge of the affairs of the corporation, and that Mr. Wheelock had placed in his hands forty-one shares of stock of the company. In this letter he asks if there are any unpaid assessments against the stock. He also asks for a statement of the condition of the company. This letter was followed by another, of date of February 13, 1896. This was answered by Mr. Brown on February 14, 1896. It was written on paper containing the letter-head of the corporation, and the names of all the officers. It conveyed the information that there were two unpaid assessments upon this stock, and the letter was signed by E. L. Brown, secretary Lake Yiew Land & I. Co. As late as November 21, 1896, Hedley wrote to E. L. Brown, at 224 Bank street, Cleveland, Ohio, ask-[526]*526mg for ‘ ‘ the record numbers .of the certificates of stock belonging to C. J. Wheeloek, which were canceled as I heard by the Lake View Land & Imp. Co.” This letter was never answered, in so far as the record shows. It appears, however, that the forty-one shares — certificate No. 4 being a part thereof — were all the stock standing in Wheeloek’s name at this time. It is clear that, as early as 1895, Hedley knew that the principal business affairs of the Lake View Land & Improvement Company of New York were conducted in the city of Cleveland, the place where its property was located. He knew the location of its office, and had correspondence with its secretary at Cleveland. It further appears from the testimony that, as early as February 14, 1896, he knew that there were unpaid assessments upon this stock; and from his letter of November 21, 1896, it appears that he had been informed that the stock had been canceled for non-payment of assessments. From November 21, 1896, to December 12, 1905,.nothing further was heard from Hedley. Upon the latter date he wrote John Mitchell, president of the New York corporation, stating for the first time that he held the 41 shares of stock in the company as owner thereof, giving the number of shares, and asked for information as to the condition of the company.. On December 15, 1895, President Mitchell enclosed Hedley a letter from B. F. Whitman, treasurer of the company, in which Mr. Whitman states that the stock in question was originally issued to C. J. Wheeloek, and by a vote of the board of directors at a meeting held November 14, 1899, was canceled, on account of non-payment of assessments.

In the years 1895, 1896 and 1897, W. E. Hedley was interested in a real estate investment in Cleveland, the property being located on Lorain street. He says he was in Cleveland fifteen or twenty times during this period of time; that he never went near the office of the company, and made no attempt to see or consult the officers of the company; that he never went to see the land owned by the company, and, in short, made no effort, while here, to get any information in regard to the condition and status of the forty-one shares of stock, or to obtain any information in regard to the company. He displayed no interest- in the company or its affairs. It further appears that, [527]*527after he received the definite notice in regard to the claimed forfeiture of the stock in question, contained in the letter of B. F. Whitman, treasurer, dated December 14, 1905, Mr. Hedley remained silent again for nearly six years, and then for the first time undertook to assert a claim against the defendants. An action was commenced by the plaintiff at Buffalo against defendants later in 1911, but this action was discontinued, and the present action was filed in this court on April 27, 1912.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 523, 30 Ohio Dec. 632, 1912 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hedley-v-lake-view-land-improvement-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1912.