Kentucky Electric Development Company's Receiver v. Head

68 S.W.2d 1, 252 Ky. 656, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 838
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 6, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 68 S.W.2d 1 (Kentucky Electric Development Company's Receiver v. Head) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Electric Development Company's Receiver v. Head, 68 S.W.2d 1, 252 Ky. 656, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 838 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion, of the Court by

Judge Richardson

— Affirming.

Minnie W. Head brought this action in the Jefferson circuit court to rescind contracts of purchase o.f stock in the Utilities Investment Corporation- on the .ground of fraud and misrepresentation. About July 7, 1931, she was the owner of 61 certificates of preferred stock in the Louisville G-as & Electric Company of the city of Louisville of the market value of $116 per share, or a total of $7,070. It was paying, and had been paying for many years, a dividend of 7 per cent. It was listed on the Louisville Stock Exchange at $116 per share of $100, and this was the current daily market price. It was the custom of the Louisville Gas & Electric Company, for the convenience of its stockholders and patrons, to maintain a sales agency in the same building in which its general offices were located, where it would sell or exchange their stock at market value on any business day. Its stock was very desirable and in demand. On the 7th of July, Mrs. Head resided in the ■city of Louisville, Ky., and, while visiting at the home of Mrs. Mary E. Dixon, in the city, Hedley R. Rowe, a •sales agent of the Utilities Investment Corporation, accompanied by a young lady employee, was at the home of Mrs. Dixon for the purpose of inducing her to purchase stock of the Utilities Investment Corporation. At that time Mrs. Head was 70 years of age, making her home wherever she was able to engage a comfortable one, living among strangers and without relatives. For ten years she had been afflicted with high blood pressure, hardening of the arteries, and “heart trouble.” She was not acquainted with Rowe nor with any official of the corporation. She had no knowledge or information concerning the corporation nor of its financial condition. While he was endeavoring to sell Mrs. Dixon some of the common stock of the corporation Mrs. Head, fo use Rowe’s language^, “seemed interested.” He immediately made an appointment to see her shortly after the conversation with Mrs. Dixon. She left the home •of Mrs. Dixon with Rowe; they went together to her *658 home, where he remained extolling the qualities and value of the stock of his corporations for a period of about forty-five minutes. He made an appointment with Mrs. Head to meet her the next day at noon at the office of the company, and, to make certain she came, another employee, in an automobile, went after and brought her to the office, where he closed the deal with her by which he exchanged 3 shares of Kentucky Electric Development, preferred, for her 3 shares of building and loan stock. The Kentucky Electric Development Company was affiliated with the Utilities Investment Corporation and the Public Utilities Development Company, the three occupying the same office and were managed by the same officials. Within three or four days after he had induced her to exchange her stock in the building and loan association for 3 shares of the Kentucky Electric Development Company, preferred, he again sought Mrs. Head for another deal. He was accompanied on the latter occasion by Wildenburg,- another employee or official of one or more or all three of the corporations. At the time Rowe was at the home of Mrs. Dixon in the presence of Mrs. Head, he represented to them that, if they purchased stock in his corporations, they could get their money back “just like from the Louisville Gas and Electric Company”; “they were going to pay 6% interest and the Louisville Gas and Electric Company was jus’t going to pay 5% after a little while.” After he and Mrs. Head reached her home, he said to her that the Louisville Gas & Electric Company “was not any better than his company — no company was any better than his.” His company “would promptly pay interest four times a year,” whereas “she had only gotten, last year her dividend one time.” He represented to her that the Louisville Gas & Electric Company within less than two weeks would quit paying 7 per cent, and pay only 5 per cent, or less. He advised and urged her to take her money out of the Louisville Gas & Electric-Company and put it into one of his corporations where she “would get 6% regularly, all the time and get it promptly and would not have to wait a day.” Mrs. Head testified “he talked so much and so fast” she was unable to repeat all of his statements. Rowe claims-that at the time he and Wildenburg were at the home of Mrs. Head she “did not evitice any particular concern as to when she could get her money out.” Later she did. Two days after he and Wildenburg were at- *659 her home, she was again conveyed to the office of the corporations. The agents beleaguered her until they induced her to deliver to their corporations her stock in the Louisville Gras & Electric Company and to accept in exchange therefor 37 shares of preferred stock of the par value of $100 each, in one of their corporations, and a certificate for 34 shares of like value in the same corporation, and surrender to it her stock in the Louisville Gas & Electric Company. As a form they caused her to sign and deliver a request order for the stock. Before the actual delivery of her stock in the Louisville Gas & Electric Company was completed she claims she found out she could not get her money back as represented to her by Bowe and Wildenburg, and for this reason she refused to go on with the deal. Therefore Wildenburg went to see her, and, as she claims, “talked and talked, stood over her and waved his hands over her head,” and “confused” her until she signed the paper consenting to the transfer of her stock in the Louisville Gas & Electric Company. We are not favored with Wildenburg’s testimony.

William T. Boden, a certified accountant, audited the books of the three corporations and reported the same for the years 1930 and 1931. The report for 1930 bears date April 17, 1931. It embraces these statements:

“We feel that we should be derelict in our respon-sibilies and duties to the Boards of Directors in the Oscar C. Wright Company and the Kentucky Electric Development Company did we not call their attention in an emphatic manner to the danger involved in the declaration and payment of dividends in excess of earnings and out of capital. * * * It applies to future declarations. * * * We must, therefore, suggest and earnestly advise you to pass all dividends and refrain from the deeláration of them until earnings will have absorbed present deficits and large proportions of capitalized expenses, which from a sound and conservative standpoint should be charged off as quickly as it is possible to do so.”

During the year 1930, dividends were declared and paid, partly out of earnings and partly out of capital. The profits were $6,300 and the dividends $16,000.

“As of that time, the book value, with that charged off — $284.00, minus $55,000.00, of which the Com *660 mon Stock would have absorbed $43,000.00, leaving $12,000.00 to be charged off, which would make the Preferred Stock less than par, something around 95c.”

The Kentucky Electric Development Company, along with the other corporations, was in the hands of a receiver at the time of the trial of this action.

The application of Mrs. Head for stock was taken on the application form of the Public Utilites Development Company.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.W.2d 1, 252 Ky. 656, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 838, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-electric-development-companys-receiver-v-head-kyctapphigh-1934.