Johns v. Coffee

133 P. 4, 74 Wash. 189, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 2020
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1913
DocketNo. 10921
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 133 P. 4 (Johns v. Coffee) 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
Johns v. Coffee, 133 P. 4, 74 Wash. 189, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 2020 (Wash. 1913).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

— In February, 1909, the Pioneer Fire Insurance Company was incorporated under the laws of the state of Washington as a domestic fire insurance company. Its articles of incorporation located its principal place of business at Seattle, Washington, and fixed the amount of its capital stock at $200,000. On May 25, of the same year, and before it attempted to transact any insurance business, it filed supplemental articles of incorporation increasing its capital stock to $1,000,000; the stock being divided into 10,-000 shares, of the par value of $100' each. Of these shares, the incorporators subscribed for 975, agreeing to pay therefor at the rate of $150 per share, and did pay into the treasury of the corporation, either in cash or securities taken for cash, one-half thereof, or $75 per share. In the month of June, 1909, the company was examined by the state insurance commissioner and granted a certificate authorizing it to write fire insurance within the state of Washington from, and after July 1, 1909. In August, 1909, further supplemental articles of incorporation were filed changing the principal place of business of the corporation from Seattle, Washington, to Tacoma, Washington, and its offices were at once [191]*191moved to the Equitable building in the latter city, where they remained until the appointment of a receiver, as hereinafter stated. After the removal of the corporation to Tacoma, an effort was made to induce the citizens of that place to purchase shares of stock in the corporation, and among others, the respondent William B. Coffee was induced to subscribe for 40 shares thereof, his contract of subscription being as follows:

Pioneer Fire Insurance Company
No. 67 Par Value $100
Stock Subscription
Shares 40 Subscription Price,
$150 per share
I, the undersigned, hereby subscribe for forty shares of the capital stock of the Pioneer Fire Insurance Company, of Tacoma, Washington, and I promise to pay for the same- at the rate of One Hundred and Fifty Dollars ($150) per share, $100 whereof shall be credited to capital stock and $50 to the Surplus Fund and I agree to pay on account of this subscription- the sum of Seventy-five Dollars ($75) per share, of which amount $50 per share is to be, credited to capital stock and $25 per share to surplus.
Wm. B. Coffee,
P. O. Address, 1012 A. St.
Dated this 2nd 'day of Nov., 1909. :

In settlement of the amount immediately due, Coffee gave his promissory note for $£,000, and agreed to assign to the insurance company certain capital stock of thé par value of $1,000 which he held in another corporation; but which was not at that time fully paid up; Coffee agreeing in the contract of assignment to pay the balance due thereon as it matured, and when fully paid to turn the stock over to the insurance company. The company early got into financial difficulty, and on August 18, 1910, the board of directors passed a resolution making a call upon all of the subscribers to the capital stock for the balance due thereon. The formal notice of the call was given by the secretary on September £7, 1910. On August £8, 1910, five days after the call was made, an informal meeting of'directors and stockholders of the company was held at Tacoma, at which meeting Mr. Coffee attended'. [192]*192At this meeting, the affairs of the company were fully gone over. From what he learned at this meeting, Mr. Coffee conceived that he had been deceived and fraudulently induced to make a subscription to the capital stock of the insurance company, and immediately thereafter served a notice upon the company that he rescinded and repudiated his contract of subscription and demanded the cancellation thereof and the 1 return of the same to him, together with the sums he had paid I on account of the subscription. This notification and demand | was in writing, and in it the respondent demanded that the in- ( surance company be placed immediately in the hands of a receiver and its affairs wound up without further attempt to do business or the incurrence of further indebtedness. The company, however, continued as a going concern until March, 1911, when a receiver was appointed over it at the suit of creditors. In the meantime it had greatly increased its in^-debtedness.

This is an action brought by the receiver to recover on the unpaid balance of the respondent’s subscription. The complaint is in the usual form in such cases. The respondent answered, and among other defenses, set up that he had been induced to subscribe to the capital stock of the corporation by fraud and deceit practiced upon him by the corporation’s agent and vice president. A reply was filed putting in issue this allegation of the answer, and afterwards a trial was had on the issues thus made, by the court sitting without a jury. The court determined the issues in favor of the respondent, and entered judgment in his favor. From this judgment, the receiver appeals.

The particular fraud and deceit which the court found had been perpetrated upon the respondent was that he had been induced to enter into the written contract of subscription by the false representations of the insurance .company’s agent to the effect that the subscription was to the capital stock of a fire insurance company thereafter to be formed by the subscribers to such capital stock, among whom were certain men [193]*193of the city of Tacoma whose names were furnished the respondent, and who the respondent well knew to be men of repute and standing in the community and of good business and financial ability, and concealed from him the fact that the corporation had then been organized and was then controlled and would thereafter continue to be controlled by men strangers to the respondent, and not by the men named to him and in whose business ability and integrity he had confidence; further finding that the respondent would not have entered into the contract of subscription had he been made aware of the true state of the matter.

The appellant assails this conclusion of the trial court on a number of grounds, the first of which is that the finding is contrary to the weight of the evidence. On this question we find the facts found by the court are testified to by the respondent and denied by the agent, with but little else in the record that seems to us to lend support to the testimony of either party, although much is pointed out in the record that it is thought to do so. It is claimed, on the part of the appellant, that a certain letter of introduction was handed the respondent by Marsh, when the respondent was first approached, which recited the fact of the insurance company’s organization and incorporation, but the contention rests wholly on the evidence of Marsh, and is denied by the respondent. Again, it is said that Marsh testified that he solicited insurance from the defendant at the time he solicited his subscription to the capital stock, and that this statement is not denied by the respondent; also that Marsh testified that he showed the respondent a list of the officei’s and directors of the company and that his (Marsh’s) name was included therein as such an officer, and that this statement is not denied by the respondent. It is probably true that the respondent did not specifically negative these statements in his testimony, but his testimony amounts to a denial of them in substance and effect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 P. 4, 74 Wash. 189, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 2020, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johns-v-coffee-wash-1913.