Hill Syrup Co. v. Frederick & Nelson

233 P. 663, 133 Wash. 155, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1180
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1925
DocketNo. 18616. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 233 P. 663 (Hill Syrup Co. v. Frederick & Nelson) 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
Hill Syrup Co. v. Frederick & Nelson, 233 P. 663, 133 Wash. 155, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1180 (Wash. 1925).

Opinions

Tolman, C. J.

Appellant was the plaintiff below and appeals from a judgment denying it recovery.

The general history of the Hill Syrup Company is sufficiently set forth in Hill Syrup Co. v. Marine Na *156 tional Bank, 128 Wash. 509, 223 Pac. 595; and Hill Syrup Co. v. National City Bank of Seattle, 129 Wash. 171, 224 Pac. 578, in both of which cases rehearings have been granted, and they are therefore now referred to only for the purpose of avoiding a restatement of the general situation.

In this case appellant sued to recover upon a number of checks signed “Hill Syrup Company, By W. E. Sander, President,” payable to the respondent and delivered to it by Sander in payment of his personal obligations to it. The trial court, among other things, found:

“That during the year 1916, W. E. Sander and his family acquired the controlling stock of plaintiff, and thereafter held such controlling stock until about September 13, 1921; that during said period plaintiff corporation had no other trustees than W. E. Sander, V. W. Sander and F. T. Kenyon; that said V. W. Sander, the father of W. E. Sander, died during April, 1921; that all of said trustees were during all of said period actively engaged in the business of the company; that said W. E. Sander was president; that said F. T. Kenyon was vice-president and sales manager; that said V. W. Sander was secretary until January 3, 1921, on which date one J. Charles Kerr was elected secretary; that said Kenyon had charge of the sales department, and while he was away from the city at times on business of the company, he was in close touch with the affairs of the company and spent a portion, of his time in and about the office of the company while he was in Seattle; that the office of the company was maintained in the same building where it had its factory; that its books were kept in this office under the immediate supervision of W. E. Sander; that the work of keeping said books was performed in most instances by one Miss McConnell, who on January 3, 1921, was elected assistant secretary.
“That, from the time said W. E. Sander first became connected with plaintiff company, he maintained for the company and himself a single bank account in the *157 name of the company, and paid all his personal bills with checks drawn in the company name, said checks being in some instances payable to his order, and in others payable to the order of his creditors; that in each and every instance when said checks were issued, proper notations thereof were duly entered on the check register, in which the names of the drawer of the check and the payee and the amount thereof were distinctly shown, and all checks so drawn to the order of Sander or for his personal benefit were posted in the company ledger on pages devoted to the personal account of said W. E. Sander, each entry in the ledger having appropriate reference to the check register from which the entry was posted; that said books of account were part of the company’s regular books of account; there is no testimony showing authorization by minute entries of these transactions at the time they were had.
“That at various times the personal account of W. E. Sander as shown by said books was overdrawn; that from time to time to meet such overdrafts he paid to the company cash, and conveyed and delivered to the company real and personal property, for which he was given credit in the books of account of the company; that these various items were entered as credits to Sander’s personal account in the company ledger, and were also entered in the company’s books and are carried and shown as assets of the company; that the ledger entries of such credits referred to the pages in the company journal where the original entries of such transactions were made and therefrom posted in the ledger. Eventually the real and personal assets referred to proved to be of much less value than the amounts for which the said William E. Sander received credit for them on the books of the plaintiff, and specifically one note for $8,800 for which Sander took credit, the company received no corresponding benefit at the time it was given.
‘ ‘ That plaintiff had its books examined by expert accountants at the end of each year; that the examination for the year 1920 was made by E. G. Shorrock & Co., certified public accountants, who submitted to the com *158 pany early in January, 1921, their written report of such examination, which report shows large sums carried as assets of the corporation in mortgages and real estate other than the real estate used by the company in its business; that such real estate and mortgages were the identical properties conveyed by Sander to the corporation in reduction of his overdrafts.
“That on January 6, 1920, William E. Sander, then president of plaintiff corporation, executed and delivered to defendant a check for the sum of $300, signed ‘Hill Syrup Company, by W. E. Sander, Pres. & Treas.’ and made payable to Frederick & Nelson, which check was drawn upon the National Bank of Commerce, which was then the depository of the plaintiff. Thereafter Sander executed and delivered similar checks for the following sums, on the following dates:
June 28, 1920..................$400.00
Oct. 26, 1920.................. 200.00
Dec. 11, 1920.................. 100.00
Jan. 20, 1921.................. 200.00
Feb. 28, 1921.................. 200.00
July 27, 1921.................. 100.00
All of these checks bore notations ‘ Acct. W. E. Sander’ or similar statements, and were paid in the regular course of business and applied to the personal account of William E. Sander with the defendant.
“That the custom of Sander in drawing company checks for his own bills was known to the trustees and was followed for such length of time as to charge all the then stockholders with knowledge of this practice, and the new stockholders now controlling said company purchased their stock with knowledge of the fact that Sander had followed this practice.
“That during the time Sander was connected with plaintiff company, the account of said company was carried in the National Bank of Commerce of Seattle, and that during said time all checks issued by said company (including the checks herein mentioned in Finding of Fact VIII) were drawn on said bank and were promptly paid, and were thereafter by said bank returned to plaintiff company and became a part of its records.
“That the books of account of plaintiff company *159 were at all times open to the inspection of its officers and stockholders and were frequently examined hy the members of its board of trustees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 P. 663, 133 Wash. 155, 1925 Wash. LEXIS 1180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-syrup-co-v-frederick-nelson-wash-1925.