Lewis v. Coleman

79 P.2d 633, 194 Wash. 674
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1938
DocketNo. 26718. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 633 (Lewis v. Coleman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Coleman, 79 P.2d 633, 194 Wash. 674 (Wash. 1938).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

This action was brought to recover damages for the alleged conversion of corporate stock.

In November, 1932, B. F. Coleman, defendant below, appellant'here, was engaged in selling automobiles in Kent, Washington. Respondent, Lewis, was one of his salesmen.

Lewis owned 24% of the 214 shares of non-par capital stock of the Auburn Dairy Products, Inc., which had been operating a creamery at Auburn since 1923, and had pledged the certificate to secure a note to a Renton bank. The note was overdue, and immediate payment of $475.88 had been demanded. He went to his employer for help.

From this point on, there is much dispute in the evidence. Lewis testified that Coleman was very eager to aid in the matter. Coleman said he did so with great reluctance, and only after much pleading and urging. At all events, after discussing the matter with the bank, Coleman furnished $187.17 and took on a liability to pay the balance of three hundred dollars in one hundred dollar installments. He was compelled to discharge the liability and, upon making the final payment, took up the papers, including the stock certificate and the stock power.

Coleman sold the stock to the corporation on May 8, 1933, for $618, which was the amount he had paid out for the benefit of Lewis, plus some other small *676 sums which Lewis owed him. Lewis testified to things which, if true, tended to prove that this sale constituted a conversion, and Coleman testified to circumstances which indicated it to be a justifiablé foreclosure of pledge. The jury evidently believed Lewis, for it gave him a verdict for $2,125.

Coleman contends that the action should have been dismissed on his trial motions, that he should have had judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and that, at the very least, he was entitled to a new trial. He asks, in the alternative, for the same relief in this court. As to his prayer for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, we have concluded, for reasons hereinafter stated, to give his adversary the benefit of the doubt, but a new trial must be granted.

In instruction No. 6, the jury was told, in substance, that Lewis would be entitled to recover if Coleman converted his stock and its value exceeded the amount of the debt secured, and in instruction No. 10, that, if Coleman sold the stock without notice and contrary to the pledge agreement, such act would constitute a conversion of the stock and render Coleman liable to Lewis for its value at the time of the conversion, less the value of the loan, with interest.

In instruction No. 14, the court laid down the following rule for the guidance of the jury in valuing the stock:

“Where stock in a corporation is not listed, and no market value can be ascertained, its value is determined by the worth of the company. This worth is the difference, of course, between its assets and liabilities. So, if you find for the plaintiff, to ascertain the value of the stock, you should take the assets of the company, from which you should deduct its liabilities. Then to this difference, if it is a surplus, you should add the amount of paid-in or paid-up capital and divide the amount so ascertained by the number of shares of stock outstanding and this will give you *677 the actual value of each share. Then multiply by the number of shares in question and that will be the total value .” (Italics ours.)

There had been introduced in evidence, over violent objection, certain financial statements and bookkeeping records purporting to show the worth of the company. These were produced by Bryan, secretary and treasurer of the company, who had kept its books for many years. Most of these records, though not all of them, had been prepared and compiled by him from time to time in the course of his work. Plaintiff offered a balance sheet of the dairy company, dated June 30, 1932, about a year prior to the alleged conversion. Bryan could not remember definitely that he made it out, but thought that he did. Upon vigorous objection being made to its admission, the court inquired:

“Mr. Bryan, I am going to ask you whether or not this plaintiff’s exhibit TO’ for identification shows the corporate assets and liabilities of your company as of June, 1932? A. That is what it is supposed to show. The Court: It may be admitted in evidence and marked TO’ over objection.”

This exhibit showed, a surplus of $14,240.43 and a paid-up capital of $14,400, that is to say, a net worth of $28,640.43. Plaintiff’s exhibit “12” was a financial statement prepared by Bryan for banking purposes, showing a surplus as of December 31,1932, of $12,967.83, which, plus the paid-up capital stock of $14,400, showed a net worth, as of that date, of $27,367.83. Plaintiff’s exhibits “19,” “20” and “21” consist of monthly statements prepared by Bryan during the years 1932, 1933 and 1934. We shall not detail these amounts. The monthly statement nearest to the time of the alleged conversion is that of April 30, 1933. This shows a surplus of $12,907.38, or a net worth of $27,307.38. Coleman sold the stock nine days later.

Plaintiff’s exhibit “11” is an auditor’s report pur *678 porting to have been made by Racine & Co. It contains general comments on the financial condition of the • corporation, followed by a profit’and loss statement for the year ending December 31, 1933, and a balance sheet. It recites that these statements were prepared without a complete audit of the books, but are believed to be “substantially correct.” The balance sheet shows a surplus of $8,943.44 on December 31, 1933, and a net worth of $23,343.44.

The sudden shrinkage of surplus from $12,907.38 on April 30, 1933, to $8,943.44 on December 31, 1933, is accounted for in the following manner: When Racine & Co. made the audit in December, 1933, it found that the corporation had taken no depreciation on its milk cans, dairy machinery, and other equipment, since 1925, and thereupon proceeded to adjust the matter by writing off $4,833.45. It must follow, of course, that the net worth shown at the date nearest the alleged conversion, April 30, 1933, is deceptive, for it includes the value of dairy equipment as of 1925, some of which had, by April, 1933, been in use for eight years.

This, however, is not of much importance, for it is demonstrably plain that the members of the jury, in making the computation directed by instruction No. 14, must have used the smallest surplus given in all the testimony bearing upon the matter, that is, the surplus remaining after depreciation taken in the Racine & Co. audit. Indeed, they either slightly discounted it or made some mistake in computation, for, applying the rigid mathematical formula made mandatory by instruction No. 14, that surplus, $8,943.44, plus the paid-in capital, $14,400, divided by the number of shares outstanding, 214, multiplied by the number of shares alleged to have been converted, 24%, less the amount admittedly owing from Lewis to Coleman, *679 $618, should have resulted in a verdict for $2,163.56; whereas the verdict was for slightly less than that.

The record shows that, after deliberating upon the matter for some time, the jury sent out to the trial judge the following note:

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Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 633, 194 Wash. 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-coleman-wash-1938.