Howard v. Tatum

94 S.E. 965, 81 W. Va. 561, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 16
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1918
StatusPublished

This text of 94 S.E. 965 (Howard v. Tatum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Howard v. Tatum, 94 S.E. 965, 81 W. Va. 561, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 16 (W. Va. 1918).

Opinion

Williams, Judge:

Mrs. A. J. Howard, a stockholder in the Carr Furnace Company, brought this suit on behalf of herself and all other stockholders against Peebles Tatum, L. J. Bayha, A. S. List, [562]*562W. M. Carr, S. M. Noyes, the said Carr Furnace Co., a corporation, and the Wheeling Steel Casting Co., also a corpor poration, charging the aforesaid individual defendants with fraud in converting certain assets of the. Carr Furnace Co. without its authority and turning over the proceeds thereof to the Wheeling Steel Casting Co. without any consideration therefor; with having fraudulently purchased its assets at much less than their actual value, and with having violated their duty as its officers and directors. She avers she has made fruitless efforts to induce the directors of said company to bring suit or take some action to redress her alleged grievances by applying first directly to them and later to the stockholders in general meeting, and being unable to get any relief through the voluntary action of the company or its officers, she was compelled to sue in her own proper person. She prays that the individual defendants may be required to discover and disclose what the assets of said company purchased by them were actually worth, what they paid for the same and what disposition they made of the proceeds; that they be required to account to the company for the same; and that an accounting be had between said company and the Wheeling Steel Casting Co. She prays also for general relief. The individual defendants answered, denying the aver-ments of the bill charging them with fraud, dereliction of duty and want of proper authority to dispose of the company’s assets, and admitting the existence of an alleged contract made between the aforesaid company and the Wheeling Steel Casting Co. and that there had been no settlement between them of the matters and things therein contained. J. M. Ritz, one of the appellants, was not an original party •■to the bill but filed his petition adopting its averments and uniting -therein and by order of court was made a party plaintiff. Depositions were taken on behalf of both plaintiffs and ■defendants, the cause was heard on the 33st of January, 1917, and a final decree entered denying all relief to plaintiffs, except an accounting between the two corporations, which was ordered to be taken and for that purpose the cause was referred to a commissioner.

Plaintiffs have appealed and assign numerous errors, the [563]*563merit of all of which depend upon -whether the individual defendants were authorized by the Carr Furnace Co. to make sale, at the price of $25,000, of the capital stock which it held in the 'Wheeling Steel Casting Co. of the par value of $40,000, whether they were guilty of fraud or a breach of official duty in buying it themselves and turning over the pro-^ ceeds to the Wheeling Steel Casting Co. without taking any security for its repayment.

The Carr Furnace Co. was incorporated in November, 1910, for the purpose of purchasing and testing a certain patent right for a steel casting furnace, which had been issued to Wm. M. Carr who became one of its stockholders. Its authorized capital was $10,000, one-half of which was taken by said Carr in consideration for his patent, and the balance purchased at par by L. J. Bayha, Peebles Tatum, C. E. Blue, A. S. List and S. M. Noyes. The company acquired a piece of land and erected on it a small furnace for the purpose of testing the practicability of the patent and, being satisfied that it could be made a profitable business if a larger amount of capital could be raised for exploiting it, the stockholders organized another corporation with an authorized capital of $100,000, which was named the Alloy Steel Casting Company. This company was organized sometime in 1911, about a year after the first one was formed. It later changed its name to the Wheeling Steel Casting Co., without changing its organization. These two corporations will be hereinafter spoken of as the Carr Co. and the Casting Co., respectively.

On November 19, 1911, a contract ivas entered into between the two companies whereby the Carr Co. assigned to the Casting Co. all its contractual rights and all its property and improvements thereon, except its patent, and the exclusive privilege of constructing and operating the patented furnace within a certain territory including a large number of states. In consideration therefor, the Casting Co. assigned to the Carr Co. four hundred shares of its capital stock of the par value of $40,000, assumed its debts and contractual liabilities, and agreed to build furnaces according to the patent, manufacture steel castings and pay the Carr Co. on the 15th of each.month certain royalties thereon, depending on the weight [564]*564and kind of .castings. Thereafter the property of the Carr Co. consisted only of its rights under this contract, the $40,000 of stock in the Casting Co. and its patent right. Nearly all the remaining $60,000 of the Casting Co.’s stock was subscribed and paid for at par. It began operations immediately, under the aforesaid agreement, and, within a year, appears to have exhausted its capital and become heavily involved in debt, so much so, some of the witnesses say, that it would have gone into bankruptcy if it had not succeeded in getting ■additional funds. . Its financial distress was discussed among' the officers and principal stockholders of both the companies, and it was agreed among them that the $40,000 of capital stock owned by the Carr Co. should be sold and the proceeds turned over to the Casting Co. in order to put it on its feet and enable it, if possible, to succeed, for it was apparent that failure of the Casting Co. meant serious loss to, if not complete failure of the Carr Co. as well. Accordingly at a meeting of the stockholders of the Carr Co., held on the 24th of September, 1912, a resolution was passed authorizing a sale of that stock at $62.50 per share, and the turning over of the fund to the Casting Co., with the understanding “that some suitable arrangement should thereafter be made between the two companies, so as to make suitable reimbursement to said Carr Furnace Company for said stock so sold, which said arrangement shall be -satisfactory to proper representatives of both ■ Companies. ’ ’

It is contended, (1) that no such resolution was passed by the stockholders; (2) that, if it was passed, it was done irregularly and without notice to all the stockholders; and (3) that it was ultra vires and void. The chancellor' held that the proof showed the'resolution was passed at a meeting at which all stockholders, who appeared on the books, were present either in person or by proxy, and that, in view of See. 19, Ch. 53, Code, treating stockholders appearing on the company’s books as the only stockholders, so far as the corporation is concerned, it was not necessary that plaintiffs, whose names did not so appear, should have had notice. This rule is certainly correctly' applied so far as Mrs. Howard is concerned, because it does not appear any of the officers of the [565]*565company knew she was a stockholder. She purchased the stock from her brother W. C. Handlan, who had previously purchased it from defendant Noyes, he having acquired it from Carr, who originally owned one-half of the capital stock. Noyes says he thought Handlan still owned it. At the time of the meeting no certificates of stock had been issued to any-of the stockholders, and no transfers made on the books. Noyes was secretary of the company and admits he knew plaintiff J. M. Ritz was a stockholder, notwithstanding his name did not appear as such on the company’s books.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 965, 81 W. Va. 561, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-tatum-wva-1918.