Lex v. Selway Steel Corporation

206 N.W. 586, 203 Iowa 792
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 206 N.W. 586 (Lex v. Selway Steel Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lex v. Selway Steel Corporation, 206 N.W. 586, 203 Iowa 792 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Vermilion, J.

This case, in the.form in which it comes to us on this appeal, involves, in its general aspects, the right of the receiver of the Selway Steel Post & Fence Company,.an insolvent eorpoisation, and two judgment creditors- of the corporation on their own behalf, to recover, as against subscribers to its- capital stock, the amounts unpaid on their subscriptions, and the right of stockholders who have paid in full for their stock to contribution from subscribers who have not so paid in full, to the end that, as between them, the loss shall be equalized; The case assumed these aspects only after many'mutations, some of which will be referred to in the further consideration of’ the questions presented. It may here be briefly 'noted, however, that the present ease is a consolidation of sixteen cases against the Selway Steel Post & Fence' Company — which will for convenience be referred to' as the corporation — or its receiver. The decree below granted the'general relief asked by the receiver as against all of the defendant subscribers who had not rescinded their contracts of subscription prior to filing of the application for the appointment of the receiver, but denied a recovery as against those who had so 'rescinded; sustained the claim to-contribution of stockholders whose stock was fully paid for; and denied individual relief to the two creditors referred to above. A portion *800 of .the defendants against whom a recovery was granted, appeal. The plaintiffs appeal from the decree denying them relief against certain defendants. The creditors appeal from the decree against them.

Numerous questions arise, affecting the claims of particular defendants, that will be considered in’ later divisions of this opinion.

The principal and ultimate question involved in the claims of all but á few of the parties is as to the right of the receiver, or the creditors, to recover against subscribers to the stock of the corporation who were induced to enter into subscription contracts by fraud of the corporation or its agents.

Some questions are presented affecting' all, or a considerable portion, of those sought to be held as subscribers to the stock, which it is necessary to dispose of before passing to a consideration of the principal question.

I. 1~[any of the defeLdants are not resIdents o~ Polk County, where the actions were commenced, and, at variois stages of the original ,aotions, aiid when called upon to answer the present claims of the receiver and the cornplaining creditors, they endeavored by motions to have the place of trial changed, as tc~ them, to the various, counties of their residence. These moti&ns were all overruled.

The.original action was by Lex and Harlan,.as plaintiffs, against the Selway Steel Post’ & Fence Company, the corporation primarily involved,.and certain of its officers; the Selway Steel Post Company, a copartnership, to whose property and rights it was alleged the corporation had succeeded; and the Selway Steel Corporation, to which it was alleged the property of the first named corporation was about to be fraudulently transferred, The petition was filed October 12, 1920. The plaintiffs alleged that they .were stockholders in the first named corporation, ■ and had paid in full for their stock, and they asked and procured the appointment of a receiver for the Selway Steel Fence & Post Company. On April-7, 1921, the plaintiffs in that action filed an amendment to their petition, in which they asked that all who had.subscribed for stock in the principal corporation-.be made parties; that the affairs of the corporation be wound up; and that subscribers to stock who had not paid their subscriptions- in *801 full be required to pay such amounts, in addition to what they had paid, as would make the burden equal upon all stock subscribers; and that plaintiffs, and all others who cared to join with them and who had paid in full for their stock, have contribution from those who had not so paid. On April 8, 1921, the General Fireproofing Company, a judgment creditor of the corporation, by an amended and substituted petition,' in an action in equity commenced by it against subscribers to the stock of the Selway Steel Post & Fence Company, asked that the defendants be required to pay into court, t'o the extent of their liability as subscribers, an amount sufficient to pay its judgment and the claims of any other creditors who might elect' to come into the case. The Republic Iron & Steel Company, holding an unpaid judgment against the corporation, intervened, and joined the plaintiff therein in asking the same relief. The receiver subsequently intervened in the latter action, asking that the subscriber defendants be required to pay to the extent of their liability, to satisfy the debts of the corporation.

The State, by the attorney-general as relator, intervened in the original action, alleging various acts of fraud and mismanagement on the part of the officers of the corporation, and that it was insolvent, and asked that its franchise be canceled, the corporation dissolved, and its property held by the receiver distributed among the creditors and stockholders. As stated, all of these actions were consolidated.

*802 *801 We are not now called upon to determine whether motions made in the creditor's suit, to transfer the causes of action against individual defendants to the counties of their residence, were properly overruled, since, by the amendment and the' consolidation of the other actions with it, if proper, any error in that respect was without prejudice. If the issue as finally pre^sented and tried by the court was such that the defendants were properly joined and suable in' the county where the action was pending, they were not prejudiced by an earlier ruling, — if it be assumed to have been erroneous, as the issues then stood,— refusing a change of the place of trial. Miller v. Hawkeye Gold Dredging Co., 156 Iowa 557. It should require no argument to sustain the proposition that, in an action by one stockholder of a *802 corporation for contribution from the other ot~ier stockholders, to the end that the. loss should be equally borne by all, all the stockholders would be proper parties, and that the action, could be maintained in the county where the corporation and some of the stockholders were resident; or that they would all be proper parties in an action by the state to dissolve the corporation. Sections’3465 and 3501, Code of 1897 (Sections 10975 and 11049, Code of 1924); Merrill v. Prescott, 67 Kan. 767 (74 Pac. 259); Hinshaw v. Austin, 64 Kan. 460 (67 Pac. 882); Allen v. Fairbanks, 45 Fed. 445; Van Pelt v. Gardner, 54 Neb. 701 (75 N. W. 874).

The issue, as tried, was not a mere money demand by creditors, or the receiver for the amount of unpaid subscriptions, as was the case in Kell v. Lund, 99 Iowa 153, relied upon by-the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 586, 203 Iowa 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lex-v-selway-steel-corporation-iowa-1925.