Kahn v. Hardy

144 S.W.2d 725, 201 Ark. 252, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 4, 1940
Docket4-6080
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 144 S.W.2d 725 (Kahn v. Hardy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kahn v. Hardy, 144 S.W.2d 725, 201 Ark. 252, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 349 (Ark. 1940).

Opinion

McIíaNey, J.

The appellants, other than Sidney L. Kahn, are the Mercantile Trust Company and G. S. Jernig'an, Bank Commissioner in charge of Union Trust Company. The appellees and cross-appellants, other than Corinne Hardy, are George L. Mallory, C. M. and Elizabeth Taylor, Hamilton Moses and the estate of C. M. Conway by Hamilton Moses, administrator.

The record now before us is the consolidated record of three separate cases, growing out of the affairs of the Research Development Company, a domestic corporation organized on December 8, 1927, which became the owner of a large tract of land just west of the city of Little Rock. One of said cases was an action to foreclose a deed of trust given by the Research Company on said lands to the Union Trust Company, as agent, to secure a note or bond issue of $75,000, wherein the Union Trust Company had sold and assigned some of the notes or bonds to various purchasers. In this case there was first a decree awarding parity of security under the deed of trust to all noteholders, and thereafter, after the lapse of the term, there was another decree postponing the lien of the Mercantile and Union Trust companies to that of other noteholders. Another case grew out of a written instrument executed by certain of the appellees and others guaranteeing the payment of the nóte or bond issue of $75,000 of the Research Company to the extent of $5,000 each, in which there was a decree awarding to certain of them liens upon the lands ahead of the lien of the indebtedness which they had guaranteed. The third case was a snit by certain stockholders of the Research Company against Sidney L. Kahn, who originally owned all the issued stock, to rescind their purchases of $10,000 stock each, and they also sought certain recoveries against Kahn in behalf of the Research Company.

The original complaint in the third case, which we will refer to as the Kahn case, was filed May 7,1936, and was a suit by Mrs. Hardy against Kahn and Research Development Company as a stockholder of the latter for the use and benefit of herself, other stockholders and the corporation. It alleged various fraudulent acts of Kahn in the acquisition of a large tract of land, nearly 8,800 acres, west of Little Rock, the transfer thereof to a corporation organized by him with “dummy” stockholders, the issuance of 2,030 shares of stock therein to said nominal stockholders, the assignment of said shares to him in blank, the sale of a part thereof as treasury stock and the distribution of the funds thus realized to him. Several forms of relief were prayed and a receiver for the corporation was asked. Kahn filed motions to strike various allegations of the complaint and for misjoinder of causes of action, which were overruled and he answered with a general denial, a plea of voluntary payment to him by the corporation and a plea of the three and five year statutes of limitations. A master was appointed on December 11, 1936, who was directed to take the testimony in the cause, to make findings of fact and of law, and to make recommendations for a decree. A receiver for Research Development Company was also appointed, the master and receiver being the same person.

On November 9, 1938, the complaint was amended by making Oscar W. McCaskill a party defendant, and by making the executors and trustees of the estate of M. W. Hardy, O. H. Moses, personally and as administrator of the estate of O. M. Conway, and G-eorge L. Mallory, parties plaintiff. On February 25, 1939, Mrs. Julia P. Taylor and United Corporation, as trustees of the estate of C. M. Taylor, deceased, and Charles M. Taylor and Elizabeth Taylor intervened in the Kahn case and adopted'the complaint and the amendment to complaint of Mrs. Hardy and others. We do not set out the allegations of these pleadings, all of which were denied in timely answers, but all that are material and on which reliance is placed will appear hereinafter.

Thereafter the master took the testimony,' from which he made findings of fact and of law that exonerated Kahn of any fraudulent conduct in the acquisition and transfer of said lands to the corporation, or in the organization of said corporation, or in the sale of stock to any of the appellees and recommended a decree to this effect. He did find, however, that in the distribution of the proceeds of the $75,000 loan, he was paid certain sums to which he was not legally entitled and recommended that he be charged therewith. On a hearing before the court on exceptions filed by both sides to the master’s report, a decree was entered setting it aside in all respects, and the sales of stock to appellees were rescinded and they were directed to surrender their respective certificates of shares to Kahn, properly indorsed, and entered judgments in favor of appellees against Kahn for $10,000 each, with interest at 6 per cent, per annum, from November 9, 1938, except as to appellees Chas. M. and Elizabeth Taylor, whose judgment should bear interest at 6 per cent, from February 24, 1939. In all other respects the complaints and amended complaints and interventions were dismissed for want of equity. This decree was made and entered November 28, 1939. It was slightly modified as to the judgment in favor of the Taylors by a supplemental'decree of December 26, 1939, which latter decree will be considered elsewhere in this opinion.

From the decree of November 28, 1939, in the Kahn case, he has appealed and appellees therein have cross-appealed.

It is first insisted by counsel for Kahn that appel-lees were not induced by fraud or mispresentation to purchase their stock in Research Development Company, and that the evidence of fraud and mispresentation, if any, as to the late C. M. Conway’s purchase of stock was incompetent. It is next argued that appellees’ cause of action, if any, is barred by limitations and ladies.

In the consideration of the question first presented, it becomes necessary to state the history, now almost ancient, of transactions out of which this litigation arises. The following findings of fact by the master are undisputed in the evidence: “Early in 1927 and probably prior thereto, there was a plan or program being’ promoted • by the Methodist Episcopal Church, South, to consolidate its various schools in Arkansas and form one large university and locate same in the vicinity of Little Rock. Oscar McCaskill and Sidney L. Kahn conceived the plan of assembling a large block of land near Little Rock with the view of giving or ceding several thousand acres of same to any school or university that would accept same and build and maintain an institution, reserving to themselves sufficient acreage, the enhanced value of which caused by establishment of the school or university would procure a profit for them out of the acreage retained. ¡Both Kahn and McCaskill were dealers in real estate, and Kahn agreed to furnish the money for the purchase of the land, McCaskill to superintend the purchase and development of the land; after Kahn had been reimbursed for all sums expended by him, he and McCaskill were to share equally in the net profits. A written contract was entered into between Kahn and McCaskill embodying their agreement. Later McCaskill entered into an oral contract with E. J. Bodman, on a fifty-fifty basis, to share his profits in the contract he had with Kahn.

“It was decided between McCaskill and Kahn that in the purchase of lands it would be better that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
144 S.W.2d 725, 201 Ark. 252, 1940 Ark. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahn-v-hardy-ark-1940.