Kienker v. Power Truck & Tractor Co.

19 S.W.2d 1060, 323 Mo. 281, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 472
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 30, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 19 S.W.2d 1060 (Kienker v. Power Truck & Tractor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kienker v. Power Truck & Tractor Co., 19 S.W.2d 1060, 323 Mo. 281, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 472 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

*284 GANTT, J.

Action by certain stockholders of the Power Truck & Tractor Company against the company, the directors thereof, and P. G. and B. B. Craven, individually and as copartners doing business under the name of P. G. Craven & Co.

The suit was instituted July .8, 1923. A second amended petition ivas filed September 24, 1923, praying for an accounting by the directors of the property of the corporation; that they be removed as directors for misconduct, mismanagement and fraud; that they be compelled to account for money and property of the- corporation illegally transferred to and withheld by them; that certain contracts between the corporation and the Cravens and their company, alleged to be illegal, be canceled; that the Cravens and their company be enjoined from selling or disposing of stock of. the corporation, and from altering or destroying the books and records thereof; that they be restrained from using or voting proxies held by them; that an order be made for a special meeting of the stockholders to elect" others as directors to manage and control the corporation; and that a receiver be appointed, and defendants ordered to show cause, etc.

The return is a general denial, with pleas of solvency, conspiracy to wreck the business, failure to apply to the directors for redress, *285 and that it was no longer necessary for the corporation to sell its treasury stock to conduct the business.

No action was taken to bring -the cause to trial until January 25, 1926, when the parties appeared in person and by counsel. Plaintiffs then announced ready, and defendants stated they had no defense to offer and would consent to the appointment of a receiver if the “sting” was taken out of certain allegations in the petition. On request of the defendants, the matter was continued to two p. m., when the following stipulation, signed by the parties, was filed:

“There has heretofore been filed an original and a first and second amended petition, making divers and sundry charges against the Power Truck & Tractor Company and certain of its officers therein named, and it is stipulated that all charges in said amended petition may be considered withdrawn, except the charges ‘that the officers and directors of said corporation have unsuccessfully managed its affairs, and that the said corporation has been running at a loss for the past .twelve months and is now being run and. operated at a loss,’ and in consideration of this stipulation, the said Power Truck & Tractor Company, by and through its directors, and also the other defendants named', hereby consent that a receiver may be appointed upon the allegations, as stipulated in the petition. ’ ’

Accordingly, a receiver was appointed who took charge of the property. On June 18, 1926, certain stockholders filed a petition seeking “to lift the receivership” by paying the expenses thereof and the debts of the corporation. Hearings were had from time to time on this petition with all parties present and participating. The petition was denied on August 30, 1926.

On October 2, 1926, defendants’ attorneys having withdrawn, another attorney representing them filed a motion to revoke the order appointing the receiver and all orders wdth reference to the receivership, for the reason that ¿11 the jurisdictional allegations of the petition were eliminated by the stipulation. A motion to remove the receiver for misconduct was also filed. The motion to revoke the order appointing the receiver was submitted, and the motion to remove him was continued. On plaintiffs’ motion the submission of defendants’ motion to revoke the order appointing the receiver was set aside on November 15, 19'26.

By moving to revoke the order appointing the receiver, the defendants repudiated the stipulation. In this situation, and on November 19, 1926, the court permitted the plaintiffs to amend the second amended petition by reincorporating all the jurisdictional allegations eliminated from the petition by the stipulation. Thereafter and on the same day the court, of its own motion, removed the receiver. This action in effect overruled defendants’ motion to revoke the order appointing the receiver and to remove him for mis *286 conduct. Thereafter and on the same day the court on the petition as last amended and on the evidence taken at the hearings on the petition of the defendants “to lift the receivership,” reappointed the same person receiver. Thereupon the defendant corporation filed a motion to revoke this appointment, which was overruled. From this ruling the defendant corporation appealed.

I. The second amended petition covers sixty pages of the abstract and is challenged. The facts therein set forth and relied upon may be summarized as follows:

The Power Truck & Tractor Company was organized under the laws of Delaware with an authorized capital of $2,500,000, divided into 25,000 shares of the par value of $100. It was a nominal resident of that state for organization, but located in Detroit and engaged in the manufacture and sale of motor trucks. On January 5, 1920, there had been sold 420 shares of the stock, the remainder being in the treasury of the corporation. About this time L. R. Acton, the president of the corporation, came under the influence of P. G. Craven, a salesman of corporation stocks, who induced him to enter into a contract Avhereby he (the president) agreed to influence the directors of the corporation, to be presently elected, to give him (Craven) an exclusive right to sell 22,500 of its unissued stock, Craven to receive the excess over $80 and under $110 per share and half of the excess over $110 per share. In addition, for advice given and to be given by Craven to the president to influence the corporation to pay him (Craven) $25 for each of the first 20,000 trucks sold. The president did influence the directors to enter into such a contract with Craven; and'on March 20, 1920, the corporation, acting under the same influences, engaged the services of B. B. Craven, a brother of P. G. Craven, to sell 10,000 shares of its unissued stock at $80 per share, he (B. B'. Craven) to receive the excess over, and the purchasers of the stock to receive one per cent monthly cash dividends and half of the net earnings over one per cent per month and less than three per cent per month “if earned,” and under the same influences the corporation declared a dividend of its outstanding stock of one and one-half per cent in April, 1922, and one per cent in August, 1922, and such dividends were paid out of the capital stock and not out of the earned profits or surplus of the corporation. In addition, the corporation agreed to pay B. B. Craven $10 per share on stock sold by him if the purchaser, in writing, promised to aid the corporation by furnishing names of persons likely to bo in the market for trucks or tractors. Furthermore, B. B. Craven was appointed resident agent of the company in Missouri and' Southern Illinois, and allowed $25,000 for agency and advertising purposes, and ten per cent commission on all trucks sold *287 by him or his agents in said territory. Under the same influences, the corporation purchased a tract of land in St. Louis, erected thereon a building and moved its plant to that "city.

In the meantime and thereafter, the corporation, from time to time, delivered to P. G. and B. B.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.2d 1060, 323 Mo. 281, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kienker-v-power-truck-tractor-co-mo-1929.