Horbach v. Coyle

2 F.2d 702, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2151
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 12, 1924
Docket6222
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 2 F.2d 702 (Horbach v. Coyle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horbach v. Coyle, 2 F.2d 702, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2151 (8th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

PHILLIPS, District Judge.

Ed J. Coyle, Harry Jones, M. E. Shreeve, and J. G. Taylor brought this action against Paul W. Horbaeh upon a written contract to recover the sum of $15,766 and accrued interest. The parties will be referred to as plaintiffs and' defendant, respectively, a,s they appeared in the lower court.

The plaintiffs Coyle, Jones, and Shreeve, and three associates, at the time of the making of the contract sued on, were officers and directors of the Oklamade Oil & Gas Company, an Oklahoma corporation, hereinafter called Oklamade Company. Plaintiff Taylor was manager of the Oklamade Company’s refinery. Defendant and eight associates were the officers and directors of the Mid-State Producing & Refining Company, an Oklahoma corporation, hereinafter called Mid-State Company.

On October 18, 1918, defendant and his associates and the plaintiffs executed the contract sued upon.

This contract, after naming the parties and reciting the consideration, in part read as follows:

“That the parties of the first part [defendant and his associates] do hereby sell, transfer and assign unto Harry Jones 5,903 shares of stock in the Mid-State Producing & Refining Company, unto E. J. Coyle 6,825 shares of stock in the Mid-State Producing & Refining Company, and unto J. C. Taylor 150 and M. E. Shreeve 2,888 shares of stock in the Mid-State Producing & Refining Company, and to pay to each of the parties of the second part in addition to such transfer of stock the sum of $1 per share for the respective number of shares so transferred and assigned to each of the parties of the second part.

“The parties of the second part [plaintiffs] in consideration of the above promises and agreement have sold, transferred and assigned unto the parties of the first part 15,766 shares of stock in the Okla-made Oil & Gas Company, which said stock so issued by the Oklamade Oil & Gas Company, a corporation, individually to the *704 various parties of the first part has been assigned by the respective parties of the first part in blank and in ease of fulfillment of this contract as hereinafter provided the parties of the first part or either of them or any person designated by them shall have full power and authority to either cancel such assignment in blank or to fill out such blank assignment as they see fit and necessary.

“The above described stock in the Mid-State Producing So Refining Company is assigned in blank by the parties of the first part and in ease of a failure to fulfill this contract as is hereinafter contemplated the parties of the first part or either of them shall have full power and authority to'cancel such assignment and in case of the fulfillment of this contract as hereinafter provided the parties of the second part shall have full power and authority to fill in such blank assignment.”

It further provided that the shares of stock above mentioned in each of the two companies should be deposited! with the National Bank of Claremore, Claremore, Oklahoma, as escrow agent; that defendant and his associates would on or before December 15, 1918, pay to the bank $5,254, and thereupon the bank would deliver to them 5,254 shares of the Oklamade Company stock; that the defendant and his associates would on or before February 15, 1919, pay to the bank $5,254, and thereupon the bank would deliver to them $5,254 shares of the Oklamade Company stock; and that the defendant and his associates would on or before April 15, 1919, pay to the bank $5,258, and thereupon the bank would deliver to them 5,258 shares of the Oklamade Company stock.

The defendant in his answer set up substantially the following as a defense: That in the fall of 1918 the Mid-State Company was desirous of acquiring the property and assets and particularly the refinery of the Oklamade Company; that the directors of the two companies entered into a verbal contract whereby it was agreed that the total number of shares of stock in the Oklamade Company issued and outstanding was 250,000; that the plaintiffs and their associates would induce the stockholders of the Oklamade Company to transfer 126,000 shares of Oklamade Company stock to defendant and his associates; that in the Oklamade Company stock so to be transferred there should be included 36,032 shares belonging to the plaintiffs and their associates; that the defendant and his associates would pay the plaintiffs and their associates for their shares of stock a bonus of $1 per share; that the plaintiffs and their associates would keep secret from the general stockholders of the Oklamade Company the payment of stieh bonus and would induce such stockholders to believe that plaintiffs and their associates were exchanging their shares on the same basis as the general stockholders; that the Mid-State Company would issue to such stockholders in lieu of the Oklamade Company stock an equal number of shares of the Mid-State Company stock; that when a majority of the stock in the Oklamade Company had been transferred to defendant and his associates the plaintiffs and their associates would resign, one at a time, as officers and directors of the Oklamade Company, and assist in electing the defendant and his associates as the officers and directors of the Oklamade Company; that thereupon the property and assets of the Oklamade Company should be transferred to the Mid-State Company without further consideration except that the Mid-State Company would assume and pay the debts of the Oklamade Company; that after this general scheme had been agreed upon 5,266 shares of the Oklamade Company’s stock belonging to the plaintiffs and their associates were exchanged with the defendant and his associates for an equal number of shares of Mid-State Company stock and defendant and his associates paid plaintiffs and their associates $1 per share for each share of Oklamade Company stock so exchanged, and two written contracts were entered into, one between defendant and his associates and the three associates of plaintiffs, and one between defendant and his associates and the plaintiffs, for the transfer of 30,766 shares of stock belonging to the plaintiffs and their associates to the defendant and his associates and the transfer of an equivalent number of shares of the Mid-State Company stock to the plaintiffs and their associates and the payment to plaintiffs and their associates in addition thereto the sum of $1 per share for each share of stock in the Mid-State Company so to be transferred; that one of the written contracts is the contract here sued upon; and that said written contracts only evidenced a part and parcel of the general scheme and agreement and were entered into for the purpose of carrying out the same.

The answer further alleged false and fraudulent representations upon the part *705 of the plaintiffs and their associates as an inducement to the contract.

The theory of the defense was threefold: First, that the transfer of the shares of the Oklamade Company to the defendant and his associates violated section 41 of article 9 of the Oklahoma Constitution, and sections 11030, 11025, 11036, Comp. St. Okl.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 F.2d 702, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horbach-v-coyle-ca8-1924.