Lamprecht v. Swiss Oil Corp.

32 F.2d 646, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3843
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 10, 1929
DocketNos. 5219, 5220
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 F.2d 646 (Lamprecht v. Swiss Oil Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamprecht v. Swiss Oil Corp., 32 F.2d 646, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3843 (6th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.

For present purposes, the situation out of which this case grows may be thus sufficiently stated:

The Swiss Oil Corporation (hereinafter called the Swiss Company) is a Kentucky corporation, having its principal office at Lexington, in that state, and engaged in producing oil. It had a large number of off properties variously located. Defendant Combs was president of the Swiss Company, J. Fred Miles its vice president and general manager, and defendant McDonald its secre[647]*647tary-treasurer and general counsel. Defendant Pynchon & Co. was a partnership engaged in merchandising financial securities, with offices in Chicago and New York. Defendant Martin, who resided in Chicago, was a partner in Pynchon & Co-, and a director of the Swiss-Company. The latter was capitalized at $5,000,000, only $2,808,000 of stock having been issued. In, and for a long time before, 1924, the business of the Swiss Company was unprofitable. It had been steadily losing money. It desired to procure profitable oil-producing properties.

On July 29, 1924, President Combs and one Thraves, in their own names, but in the interest of the Swiss Company, took from the three stockholders of the Union Gas & Oil Company (which was a wealthy and successful owner and operator of gas and oil properties in Kentucky and elsewhere) an option for the purchase of the entire capital stock of that company, $5,000,000, at pa.r, $1,500,000 thereof payable in cash practically on the acceptance of the option; an additional $1,000,-000 as soon as earned through the continued operation of its properties by the Union Gas & Oil Company; whereupon the stock certificates were to be delivered to the optionees, and the remaining $2,500,000 of the purchase price secured by a series of mortgage notes constituting a first lien upon the Union Gas & Oil Company properties. Soon after the option was taken Thraves formally assigned his interest thereunder to Combs, in whose name the extensions were all taken. The option as originally given ran until November 3, 3924. Written extensions were made to December 8, 1924, and again until January 7, 3925, and thereafter, orally, at least until January 12, 1925 — Combs being reimbursed by the Swiss Company on account of an aggregate of $75,000 paid upon the written extensions of the option. On January 7, 1925, Combs assigned the option to the Swiss Company.

On January 12, 1925, the day it was understood' the option would expire, Combs notified the Union Gas & Oil Company’s stockholders of his acceptance of tho option and his election to purchase the property covered thereby, and binding himself to make the initial payment thereunder of $1,500,000 on or before February 1, 1925.

In order to enable the Swiss Company to take the benefit of the option for the purchase of the Union Gas & Oil Company’s stock, it was necessary to have financial assistance and backing. Accordingly, through Martin’s efforts, an • arrangement was made whereby Pynchon & Co. (in whose name Combs had meanwhile caused the acceptance of the Union Gas & Oil option to be taken) caused the contract for the purchase of the latter company’s stock to be conveyed to tho Swiss Company, and in that connection received from the latter company $2,000,000 of its theretofore unissued stock, and $2,000,000 par value of its 7 per cent, mortgage gold notes, secured on the Swiss Company’s original properties; Pynchon thereupon paying the Swiss Company $1,750,000 in cash, of which amount $1,500,000 was to be applied in payment of tho first installment on the purchase „of the Union Gas & Oil Company’s stock. The remaining $194,000 par value of the Swiss Company’s stock theretofore unissued was to be held by Pynchon & Co. for the benefit of the Swiss Company. This action was fully approved by both the directors and stockholders of the Swiss Company. Among other provisions for the protection of Pynchon & Co., they were to have the privilege of selecting three more directors (in lieu of three then present directors), in addition to the three already regarded as representing Pynchon & Co., thus giving them six of the eleven directors.

Lamprecht, who is a stockholder in the Swiss Company, claiming that the issue of $2,000,000 of tho capital stock, and $2,000,-000 of mortgage notes of that company, for $1,750,000 cash, amounted merely to the issue of $2,000,000 of Swiss Company notes at 87% cents on the dollar, with a bonus o;£ 10.0 per cent, of stock, and so violated the Constitution and statute of Kentucky, which forbid the issuing of corporate stocks or bonds, except for an equivalent in money paid or labor done, and, asserting that the issue of said stocks and bonds was procured by fraud, conspiracy, and misrepresentation on the part of certain directors and stockholders of the Swiss Company, filed in this cause bill in equity against the Swiss Company, Pynchon & Co., Martin, Combs, McDonald, and about 100 other defendants, on behalf of himself and all others similarly situated (the Swiss Company having refused to take the action requested), praying that the stocks and bonds so issued to and held by Pynchon & Co. be canceled, and that so much of the capital stock as was alleged to have been bought from Pynchon & Co. by certain directors of the Swiss Company at substantially the cost price thereof to Pynchon & Co. be likewise canceled.

Three stockholders of the -Swiss Company intervened as plaintiffs. Upon hearing on pleadings and proofs, Judge Cochran dismissed the bill. Separate appeals were tak[648]*648en by the original complainant and the intervening complainants respectively — the latter being No. 5220. Counsel agree, in effect, that the only issue tried below, and the only issue before this court, is the validity of the initial issuance in January, 1925, to Pynehon & Co. of the $2,000,000 par value of the Swiss Company stock.1

Judge Cochran’s opinion (omitting a prefatory paragraph, and renumbering the sections) is as follows:

“1. It is urged on behalf of the defendants that, even -if the nature of the transaction complained of was as plaintiff and interveners claim it to have been, they are not entitled to the relief they seek. They claim that its nature was this. Pynehon & Co. purchased the defendant corporation’s notes for $2,000,000 at a discount of 12% per cent., i. e., for $1,750,000, and it issued to them $2,000,000 of its stock as a bonus for thus discounting its notes. The relief sought is the cancellation of the stock issued. It will be noted that no effort is made to recover the discount of $250,000. I do not find it necessary to pass on this position of defendants. But I am sure that neither one of the two decisions of the appellate court of this circuit, to wit, Altenberg v. Grant (C. C. A.) 85 F. 345, and Detroit-Kentucky Coal Co. v. Bickett Coal & Coke Co. (C. C. A.) 251 F. 542; or of the five decisions of the Kentucky Court of Appeals, to wit, Mayfield Water & Light Co. v. Graves County Banking & Trust Co., 170 Ky. 56, 185 S. W. 485, Taylor v. Citizens’ Oil Co., 182 Ky. 350, 206 S. W. 644, Stoecker v. Goodman, 183 Ky. 330, 209 S. W. 374, Rice v. Thomas, 184 Ky. 168, 211 S. W. 428, and McCombs Producing & Refining Co. v. Ogle, 200 Ky. 208, 254 S. W. 425, is against this position of defendants. This is so because in neither one of those cases were the ultimate facts the same as they aré here.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 F.2d 646, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamprecht-v-swiss-oil-corp-ca6-1929.