Jordan & Davis v. Annex Corp.

64 S.E. 1050, 109 Va. 625, 1909 Va. LEXIS 73
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 10, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 64 S.E. 1050 (Jordan & Davis v. Annex Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan & Davis v. Annex Corp., 64 S.E. 1050, 109 Va. 625, 1909 Va. LEXIS 73 (Va. 1909).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Prior to March 11, 1901, W. G. Davis and K. E. Jordan, partners trading as Jordan & Davis, Garrett Smith and Benjamin Lowenherg obtained a charter of incorporation under the name of the Annex Corporation, for the purpose of conducting a hotel business. The firm of Jordan & Davis, Smith and Lowenherg each subscribed for five thousand dollars of its capital stock, which was fully paid up. Subsequently, each of the said shareholders made advances for the purpose of carrying on the business.

On the 11th of March, 1901, the Annex Corporation entered into an agreement -with the Pine Beach Hotel Corporation, by which it leased from the latter a certain parcel of land upon which it agreed to erect a hotel building of the dimensions [627]*627named in the lease, and to have it ready for nse not later than June 1 of that year, and to operate it in the manner provided therein to the end of the Jamestown Exposition, scheduled to close November 30, 1907. It was further provided, among other things, that the lessee was to pay the lessor, as rent, $5,000 and ten per cent, of the gross receipts from all sources from the operation of the hotel, was to remove the building within 30 days from the expiration of the lease, and in the event of non-payment of the rent or any other breach of the agreement during the lease on the part of the lessee, the lessor had the right to cancel the lease and take possession of the building and all the assets of the lessee therein, and to operate the same upon certain conditions.

The building provided for was erected and the business conducted until September of that year by the lessee corporation, when Jordan & Davis and Smith instituted this suit.

Briefly stated, and as far as is material to the questions involved in this appeal, in addition to what has already been stated, the complainants (appellants here) allege in their bill that B. Lowenberg, before the creation of the Annex Corporation, represented to them that he had an option from the Pine Beach Hotel Corporation to erect and operate a hotel upon lands adjoining it upon the terms and conditions above stated; that he proposed to organize a corporation to be known as the “Annex Corporation” with a minimum capital of thirty thous- and dollars, of which $15,000 was to be preferred and paid for in cash; that he requested the appellants each to subscribe for $5,000 of the preferred stock, and stated that he would subscribe for the other $5,000; that they inquired of him whether or not there were any promotor’s fees or secret profits coming to him, and upon his replying there were not and that he and they would become stockholders upon the same terms, they, relying on those representations, subscribed for' $5,000 each of the said preferred stock, applied for and obtained the charter under the name 'of the “Annex Corporation,” [628]*628in which the appellants, Jordan and Smith, respectively, were named as president and vice-president, and said Lowenberg as secretary and treasurer, and all were named as directors; that after the organization of the company it made the agreement hereinbefore referred to with the Pine Beach Hotel Corporation, erected and equipped the hotel as required by the lease, and opened the same, expecting large profits to accrue from its operation by reason of the fact that the Jamestown Exposition would be in progress during the term of the lease; but that up to the time of filing their bill their expectations had not been realized and the hotel had been operated at a loss. It was further alleged in the bill that they had just discovered that the $5,000 which the lease provided to be paid to the lessor was a fiction, and that the real agreement between Lowenberg and the Pine Beach Hotel Corporation was that Lowenberg and the Lowenberg Corporation, of which he was a stockholder, should receive that sum as a promotor’s fee, and that it was put in the lease as rent by collusion between the lessor and Lowenberg and the Lowenberg Corporation; that of the said $5,000 $2,500 was paid in cash, and a note for $2,500 made by the lessee to the lessor, and immediately both were turned over by it to the Lowenberg Corporation, which was a large stockholder in the lessor corporation; that in addition to the amounts due the appellants on account of the fraudulent representations made, the Annex Corporation was indebted in the sum of about $12,000, and that its only asset was the hotel operated by it which was worth nothing more than what the lumber in it would sell for; that the Annex Corporation had been unable to pay the ten per cent, of its gross income to the lessor as provided for by the lease; that if the lessor, for the failure to pay the rent should take possession and operate the hotel as it had a right to do under the terms of the lease, it would result in loss to all concerned, and this fact was recognized by the lessor since it was threatening to have the Annex Corporation placed in the hands of a receiver.

[629]*629The Pine Beach Hotel Corporation, the Annex Corporation, the Lowenberg Corporation, and Benjamin Lowenberg, were made parties defendant to the bill.

The prayer of the bill was that the appellants’ subscriptions to the stock of the Annex Corporation be annulled; that it be adjudged insolvent and dissolved, and a receiver appointed to distribute its assets to those entitled thereto; that the defendants be required to return to it the said $5,000 unlawfully obtained from it as rent, and apply the same to the liquidation of the claim of appellants; and that so much of their claims as is not thus paid the defendants be required to pay; and for general relief.

The trial court refused to annul the subscriptions of appellants to the stock of the Annex Corporation, holding them to be valid and binding; required B. Lowenberg and the Lowenberg Corporation to pay to the receivers who had been appointed in the cause the sum of $2,500 with interest, and directed the $2,500 note given for the residue of the alleged rent to be surrendered and cancelled; and directed the moneys advanced by the said stockholders in excess of their subscriptions to be paid pro rata out of the proceeds of the assets of the Annex Corporation. Erom that decree this appeal was taken by Jordan & Davis and Garrett Smith.

The first error assigned is to the action of the court in refusing to annul or rescind the contracts of subscription made by the appellants to the stock of the Annex Corporation.

Although a promotor is not strictly an agent of or a trustee for a company before its creation, the principles of law of principal and agent and of trustee and beneficiary have been extended to meet such cases, and a promotor of 'such a company is accountable to it as if the relation of principal and agent, or of trustee and cestui que trust, had actually existed. His acts are carefully scrutinized, and he is precluded from taking a secret advantage of other stockholders. See Sydney, &c. Iron Ore Co. v. Bird, 33 Chy. Div. 85; Dickerman v. [630]*630Northern Trust Co., 176 U. S. 181, 44 L. Ed. 423, 20 Sup. Ct. 311; Va. Land Co. v. Haupt, 90 Va. 533, 537, 19 S. E. 168, 44 Am. St. Rep. 939; Central Land Co. v. Oberchain, 92 Va. 130, 143, 22 S. E. 876, and note to Telegraph, &c. v. Christian, &c., 4 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cases, pp. 669-70.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 S.E. 1050, 109 Va. 625, 1909 Va. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-davis-v-annex-corp-va-1909.