Jacobs v. Morgenthaler

112 N.W. 492, 149 Mich. 1, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 610
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1907
DocketDocket No. 101
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 112 N.W. 492 (Jacobs v. Morgenthaler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jacobs v. Morgenthaler, 112 N.W. 492, 149 Mich. 1, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 610 (Mich. 1907).

Opinion

Hooker, J.

This plaintiff is a receiver in an action brought by one Gilbert against the Grocers’ Specialty Manufacturing Company, Limited, and the order appointing [3]*3him required that company, and all of its officers, agents, and servants, to turn over to him its property. Gilbert was a stockholder and secretary of the company. There is nothing in the record showing the nature of the bill filed by him, whether as a creditor, alleging insolvency, or as a stockholder, claiming a misapplication of its proceeds. The record does conclusively show, however, that prior to the bringing of said suit, the stockholders of said company all assenting (including Gilbert), sold the business of said company to the extent of its manufacture of ‘ ‘Eat-a-Biscuit,” to the Malta Vita Company, for $50,000 down, and a further sum of $50,000, contingent on certain prescribed results, dependent upon the purchaser’s profits from the business. We discover no claim that the debts of the Grocers’ Company, outside of debts owed to its several stockholders, exceeded $5,000 or $6,000, while the receiver testified that all of the claims filed with him amounted to about $6,000, and of these Mr. Gilbert’s amounted to $5,207.52. According to Gilbert’s testimony, $5,000 of his claim was a sum that was promised him upon the surrender of a verbal option, and was conditioned on a sale to the Malta Vita Company. He admitted that he got his salary up to June 30, 1903, which was less than two weeks before the agreement of sale to the Malta Vita Company. Gilbert signed the bill of sale to the Malta Vita Company, and, while that is not shown by the record, Gilbert’s own testimony shows that he as secretary received from that company $5,000 in cash and $20,000 in notes, and that he acquiesced in the application of $4,000 to the payment of the claim of the Malta Vita Company against the Grocers’ Specialty Company, and $21,000 to Mr. Wisner, for money that he claimed to have advanced to the Grocers’ Specialty Company, under circumstances similar to, if not identical with, those under which Cole and the defendant claim that they advanced money, and for which all other witnesses to the transaction say that they — i. e., Cole and the defendant— were to receive the $20,000 in notes.

[4]*4We may start with the proposition, then, that all stockholders, including Gilbert, agreed to the sale, and thátthe only differences in their understanding are (1) whether Cole and defendant were to receive the $20,000 notes in payment of money loaned; (2) whether Gilbert was to receive $5,000 from, the payment made, or from, and subject to the condition of, the deferred payment. It being clear that the parties agreed to the sale to the point mentioned, and that Gilbert aided in consummating it, and that according to his theory $20,000 in notes went to the company, it is apparent that his bill was not filed to attack the sale as a fraud upon creditors, and we must, therefore, assume that it was filed against the defendant to reach assets in his hands belonging to the company in which he claimed an interest as creditor and stockholder; and that the court appointed the receiver to take possession of the assets, to preserve them, and, incidentally, to pay all claims against the concern before otherwise disposing of the assets. If this is not the theory upon which the bill was filed, we do not know what it was.

Perhaps it is enough for the purposes of this action to know that a receiver has been given authority to take over the assets and that he has brought trover for the alleged conversion of some of them, that they were clearly the assets of the company, and recoverable by him, unless they were turned over by consent of a majority of the stockholders to be applied on a valid debt of the company, or by consent of all the stockholders, if the claim was not a valid debt for advancement, but was at the time one of several payments made by different persons upon an agreement that it should pay for treasury stock purchased. The evidence conclusively shows that at the time the contract was made with the Malta Vita Company it was agreed and understood by all of the stockholders, unless it were Gilbert, that the claims of Wisner, Cole, and Morgenthaler were advancements of cash, and debts of the concern, and should be so treated, and that the $20,000 in notes to be given to the Grocers’ Company should be [5]*5turned over to them, to be applied in payment, so far as that sum should go, and it is overwhelmingly proved that Gilbert understood and consented to this arrangement, so overwhelmingly proven, indeed, that were there opportunity we should order a new trial upon this ground. It is also conclusively shown that, whatever Gilbert knew or agreed to at that time, he acquiesced in the payment by the Malta Yita Company of $21,000 to Wisner, to be applied to the payment of the $26,000, which he now claims was paid upon a purchase of treasury stock. The liability of the defendant, then, depends upon "the jury’s being able to say (l) that Gilbert did not consent to the arrangement which is clearly shown to have been made with the Malta Yita Company, and (2) that the money paid by defendant was for a purchase of treasury stock, and not as a loan, and therefore did not become'an indebtedness from the company. Failing to find either of these, the verdict should have been for the defendant, as in such case there would be an absence of an unlawful conversion.

Gilbert testified that he was not present when the arrangement that Cole and defendant should have the $20,000 of notes was made. That is as far as his testimony goes upon this subject. Therefore we have said that it conclusively appears that such an arrangement was made by the majority of the stockholders. Such an arrangement was not binding upon Gilbert, in the absence of his knowledge or consent if the company did not owe defendant. Therefore it was for the jury to determine whether he did have knowledge of, or consent to, it. In case they had found that he did, a verdict for defendant should have followed. If, however, they found the contrary, the verdict should still have been for the defendant, if he was a creditor, but not if the payment was for the purchase of stock. It becomes important, then, to determine whether either proposition was conclusively shown. It is admitted that defendant paid the money claimed. In the absence of proof that it was for the pur[6]*6chase of stock, the record justified a direction that it made him a creditor of the company.

To prove that it was for the purchase of stock, plaintiffs offered the following testimony:

Gilbert testified:

“ I listened to the testimony of Mr. Morgenthaler and others that they didn’t purchase any treasury stock. I was secretary of the company, and as such kept the company’s minutes. I have examined that book, and it is the record minute book of the company. I know, because I kept it as secretary, and it is in my handwriting.

Q. I will ask you if the entries in here were made cotemporaneous with the transactions they record ?

“A. They were, and they are correct.

Q. Now, I show you the minutes of the meeting, June 21, 1903, and ask you if you are familiar with the entries there, and if they are the same there as they transpired at the meeting ?

Mr. Moore: Objected to. The meeting was not held at the company’s office, but at the Phelps Sanatorium. All the managers were not present and no hour is stated for the meeting; also that the resolution is ambiguous.

The Court:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 N.W. 492, 149 Mich. 1, 1907 Mich. LEXIS 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jacobs-v-morgenthaler-mich-1907.