Kelly v. Clark

42 L.R.A. 621, 53 P. 959, 21 Mont. 291, 1898 Mont. LEXIS 141
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 42 L.R.A. 621 (Kelly v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Clark, 42 L.R.A. 621, 53 P. 959, 21 Mont. 291, 1898 Mont. LEXIS 141 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

Hunt, J.

Appellant’s counsel, in their opening brief, declare they find difficulty in telling whether the respondent’s action was brought upon the theory that defendant was liable, as a subscriber of stock, for the difference between what he actually paid therefor and .the par value thereof, or whether it is sought to charge appellant with fraud, as a director of the company. This difficulty arises, argue counsel, because it appears by the complaint that the theory of respondent is. that the trustees fraudulently, and to relieve themselves of personal liability, caused all the capital stock to be issued to. Pardee in payment of the property, which they claim was of the value of only $75,000. Counsel say: “Actual fraud” is. charged, but, because it is not alleged or proved how Kelly was put in any different position by reason of the issuance of the stock in payment of the property in excess of its actual value than he otherwise would have been, they conclude no damage was proved to have come to him. Solution of this, difficulty being of importance, an examination of the findings of the jury is appropriate in order to understand the exact facts to which must be applied the principles that should control.

Considerable testimony was heard bearing directly upon the issues submitted to the jury, and the following facts were found:

(1) That the trustees of .the corporation, when they directed the issuance of 750,000 shares of stock in payment of a seven-eighths interest in the mine, did not actually believe that the said interest was worth the par value of said stock, namely, $7,500,000.

(4) That the par value of the seven-eighths interest in the mine at the time of the purchase by the trustees of the corporation was $125,000.

(5) That the trustees of the corporation, at the time they agreed to issue all of the stock of the company to Pardee et [315]*315al. in payment of a seven-eighths interest in the mine, knew, or might have ascertained by the exercise of reasonable diligence, that the par value of the stock paid for such interest was in excess of the actual value of the property purchased.

(6) That the defendant Clark, in taking part at the meeting of the trustees of the corporation held on December 19, 1889, did not participate therein with the intent to relieve himself or other stock purchasers from a personal liability to the stock that he or they might acquire.

(7) That from information of the miné that defendant Clark had on December 19, 1889, there was no reasonable ground to believe that a seven-eighths interest was apparently worth the amount of the par value of the shares.

(8) That Clark at that time did not honestly believe that a seven-eighths interest in the mine was apparently worth the amount of the par value of the shares.

(9) That the apparent value of a seven-eighths interest in the mine at that time was not thq amount of the par value of the shares.

(10) That the defendant Kleinschmidt, in participating at the meeting of the corporation of December 19, 1889, did not intend to relieve himself or other stock purchasers from' a personal liability on the stock that he or they might acquire.

A motion was made to the district' court to reject the findings of the jury, with the exception of those numbered 6 and 10. This was denied, and all the findings of the jury were adopted by the court except 6 and 10, and in addition the court found as follows:

(11) That all of the stock of the corporation standing in the name of Kleinschmidt, with the exception of 250,000 shares, were held by him as trustee for Pardee, under the trust agreement referred to in the complaint.

(12) That the remaining 250,000 sh'ares held by said Kleinschmidt were held by him as trustee for the company, and were treasury .stock, donated to the corporation by Pardee at the first meeting of its board of trustees after the agreement between him and the company by which the entire issue of the [316]*316capital stock was to be paid to him for a seven-eighths interest in the mine.

(13) That all the stock issued to Kleinschmidt was issued to and stood on the books of the company in the name of T. H. Kleinschmidt, trustee, and that the trust in Kleinschmidt for Pardee and- the company was created by direct resolution and previous authority of the company itself, and that the ■company was privy to the creation of both trusts.

The learned judge who presided at the trial of the case drew the following conclusions of law: (1) That defendants Klein■schmidt and Seligman were not liable for the claim of the plaintiff; (2) That the defendant Clark was liable.

What led to the exoneration of any defendants other than Clark is immaterial. The case before us presents for consideration Clark’s attitude only.

We regard this action as one brought to collect from Clark, a stockholder in the Fourth of July Mining Company, a corporation organized under Chapter 25 of the Fifth Division of the Compiled Statutes of the State of Montana (1887), the amount of a judgment debt against the corporation, under the provisions of section 457 of chapter 25.

That section provides as follows: “The stockholders of every company incorporated under the provisions of this article (chapter) shall be severally and individually liable to the creditors of the company in which they are stockholders, to the amount of unpaid stock held by them respectively, for all acts of and contracts made by such company, until the whole amount of capital stock subscribed for shall have been paid in. ”

The respondent’s complaint is in the nature of an equitable petition, instituted in behalf of himself and all the creditors of the corporation, upon the ground that defendant holds a large amount of unpaid stock, and that by the statute he is individually liable to the amount of such unpaid stock for the acts of and contracts made by the Fourth of July Company, until enough of the capital stock held by him shall be paid in to satisfy respondent’s claim. That such is the main theory [317]*317upon which the respondent proceeded is evident by the pleadings, by the evidence, and by the judgment. The com plaint, substantially averred that defendant Clark owned 173,800 shares of the stock of the company; that 750,000 shares were-, transferred for a seven-eighths interest in a mine, worth no more than $75,000; and that the trustees, of whom defendant was one, knew, at the time of the conveyance of the mining-interest referred to, that such seven-eighths interest was worth no more than $75,000; that the defendant and certain others,, knowing 'that the mine was not worth more than $75,000, agreed to organize the corporation, and that the capital stock thereof should be $7,500,000; that each member of such association agreed to take, and did take, a certain number of shares in the company, at 25 cents per share; that defendant, having taken his shares with the full knowledge that the par value of the stock exchanged for the mining property was grossly in excess of the true value of the property, and, having full knowledge of the transaction antecedent to the issuance of the stock, thereby became the holder of unpaid stock except in the proportion of $75,000 to $7,500,000. The prayer is to have defendants decreed to be holders of unpaid, stock, and that they each pay into court the amount to which the stock held by him is unpaid, until enough shall be paid to satisfy plaintiff’s claim.

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Bluebook (online)
42 L.R.A. 621, 53 P. 959, 21 Mont. 291, 1898 Mont. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-clark-mont-1898.