Horejs v. American Plumbing & Steam Supply Co.

297 P. 759, 161 Wash. 586, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 678
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1931
DocketNo. 22875. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 297 P. 759 (Horejs v. American Plumbing & Steam Supply Co.) 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
Horejs v. American Plumbing & Steam Supply Co., 297 P. 759, 161 Wash. 586, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 678 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Main, J.

By this action, the plaintiffs sought to have a receiver appointed for a solvent corporation. To the amended complaint (which will be referred to as the complaint), a demurrer was interposed and sustained. The plaintiffs refused to plead further, and elected to stand upon their complaint. Judgment was entered dismissing the action, from which they appeal.

The complaint is too long to be set out here in full, and we will therefore undertake to briefly state only *587 what appear to us to be the essential facts alleged therein.

In the spring of 1919, the appellants, with the respondent Joe L. Long, organized the American Plumbing & Steam Supply Company, a corporation, which subsequently engaged in business in the city of Tacoma. The capital stock of the corporation was twenty-five thousand dollars, of which Long furnished $12,750, and the appellants $12,250, consisting of five or six thousand dollars cash and a loan from Long for the balance. The $12,750 furnished by Long constituted fifty-one per cent of the capital stock of the corporation, and was owned as follows: Seventeen per cent by Long; seventeen per cent by H. K. Monroe; and seventeen per cent by George I. Hill and wife. Monroe and Hill and wife are relatives of Long, and, although they are the record owners of the stock, it was paid for by Long. The remainder of the capital stock, or forty-nine per cent, was owned by appellants.

Long, at the time the corporation was organized, assured the appellants that he would not be active in' the business, and would be satisfied with dividends which the same would yield; he, with Monroe and Hill, being engaged in the wood pipe business on a large scale. Immediately after the formation of the corporation, the appellants took up the active management thereof, and continued such management until January 8, 1930. During this period, the business showed a profit, over and above salaries and bonuses, of approximately two hundred thousand dollars, most of which was earned during the early years of the corporation’s existence.

Immediately after the formation of the corporation, Long required that he be placed upon the payroll of the company at a salary of two hundred dollars per month, and such salary was at all times charged as an *588 item of expense and credited to him until January 1, 1929. On that date, his salary was increased to six thousand dollars per year on his assurance that he proposed to devote his time and attention to the furtherance of the business of the corporation. For a short time, he did devote his time and attention to its business, but later abandoned all efforts on behalf of the company, continuing, however, to draw his salary of five hundred dollars per month.

During the latter part of the year 1928, Long informed the appellants that he proposed to place his brothers-in-law, Monroe and Hill, upon the payroll of the company, and that he was dissatisfied with the returns which the family were receiving upon their investment. Appellants objected to the placing of Monroe and Hill upon the payroll without the rendition by them of service to the corporation, and nothing further was done about the matter until late in the year 1929. Sometime prior to the annual meeting of the stockholders on January 8,1930, Long informed the appellants that he proposed to place upon the payroll of the corporation Monroe and Hill, and that if the appellants objected they would be discharged. The appellants did object, and were accordingly discharged and removed from office, except that the appellant Horejs was permitted to remain as trustee.

At the annual meeting in January, 1930, respondents elected Long as president of the corporation, and fixed his salary at six thousand dollars per year; Monroe as vice-president, at a salary of forty-eight hundred dollars per year; and Hill as secretary, with a salary of forty-eight hundred dollars per year. At this time, the appellants were discharged from the management of the company, and from its employ. The salaries fixed are greatly in excess of the value of services to the corporation of the parties named. Long, acting *589 for himself and the other trustees, offered to permit the appellants to remain upon the company’s payroll upon condition that their salaries be materially reduced. Long, Monroe, and Hill did not have any knowledge of the plumbing and steam supply business, in which the corporation was engaged, and had never engaged in that line of business.

During the time Long had been connected with the company, he had been paid $28,200 in salaries, for which he had rendered no service, and interest on this salary account had been compounded annually for a long period of years (which would indicate that the salary had not been paid, but only credited on the books). During the life of the corporation, Long, by reason of his control of the fifty-one per cent of the stock, obtained from the company the sum of approximately thirty thousand dollars to which he was not entitled.

The earnings of the company and the volume of business done was not sufficient to permit any greater overhead or salary account than already existed prior to January 8, 1930, when the corporate management was taken from the appellants, and the payment to Long, Monroe, and Hill of the salaries above mentioned would destroy the value of the stock held by appellants. The forty-nine per cent of the stock owned by appellants was of the value of approximately sixty thousand dollars.

' After the annual meeting in 1930, the appellants proposed to Long that they would sell their stock at a price named, or that they would purchase Long’s stock at the same price; only fifteen thousand dollars of the purchase price to be paid in cash in either event. This proposition was rejected by Long, unless appellants wuuld enter into contract not to engage in the *590 plumbing and heating business in Tacoma for a considerable period of time, which they declined to do.

The complaint further alleges that, prior to the time the American Plumbing and Steam Supply Company was organized, appellants had been employed by a large plumbing supply house in Tacoma; one as sales manager, and the other as assistant manager. They were induced to leave such employment and form the corporation upon the assurance that they would have fifty-one per cent of the stock. When the corporation was organized, Long* refused to allow them to have fifty-one percent of the stock, but took that amount for himself and those associated with him. Shortly after the rejection by Long of the proposition made by appellants, in which they offered to sell or purchase, the present action was brought for the purpose above stated.

The first inquiry is as to what showing is necessary in order that a receiver may be appointed for a solvent corporation actively engaged in business, its affairs wound up, and the corporation dissolved.

The power of appointing a receiver is a discretionary one, and should be exercised with caution and only in cases where there is fraud, spoliation or imminent danger of the loss of property if immediate possession should not be taken by the court. In Van Horn v. New Western Shingle Co., 54 Wash. 117, 103 Pac. 42, it is said:

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Bluebook (online)
297 P. 759, 161 Wash. 586, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horejs-v-american-plumbing-steam-supply-co-wash-1931.