Loomis v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

65 S.W. 962, 165 Mo. 469, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 287
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 3, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 65 S.W. 962 (Loomis v. Missouri Pacific Railway 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
Loomis v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 65 S.W. 962, 165 Mo. 469, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 287 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

GANTT, J.

Plaintiff’s petition is a statement of his case.

In substance, it avers that the plaintiff, prior to February, 1881, owned practically all of the five hundred shares of the stock of the Choctaw Coal & Mining Company, said shares being of the par value of $100 each. That this company was engaged in the mining of coal in the Indian Territory and had expended large sums of money for machinery, tools, equipments, etc., in the prosecution of its operation. That the policy of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, which then owned and operated a railroad extending from .the city of Hannibal in Missouri, through the State, crossing and connecting with its main line at the city of Sedalia, into - and through the said Indian Territory and near the coal lands of the Choctaw Coal & Mining Company at Savanna in said Territory, was to acquire control of all the coal lands and coal mines and to monopolize the coal business whenever and wherever it could do so, especially the so-called coal lands in the Indian Territory, and, to carry out its purpose, it employed co-defendant, E. J. Crandall, to look into, examine and report upon the character and extent of the coal fields in the Territory. That, in the year 1881, the said Crandall, in furtherance of the purpose of the railway company, went to the Indian Terri[478]*478tory and examined certain coal lands, among them those belonging to the Choctaw Coal & Mining Company.

In the early part of the year 1881, the Missouri Pacific Railway Company and A. A. Talmage, its general superintendent and manager, James A. Ilill, its general freight agent, and E. J. Crandall, formed a conspiracy to obtain the control and possession of the stock and mining property of the Choctaw Coal & Mining Company, and to that end proposed to plaintiff in February, 1881, that the capital stock of said mining company should be increased to $100,000, the $50,000 of new stock to be issued to the plaintiff who should sell the same, with $16,000 of the original stock, to defendants, who were either to pay him in cash therefor or expend an amount of money equal to the par value of the stock in improving the mines belonging to the Choctaw Coal & Mining Company and securing transportation facilities for their output, and that the number of directors, of which defendants were to form a majority, was to be increased from three to five. The plaintiff accepted the proposition so made and the capital stock of the Choctaw Coal & Mining Company was increased to $100,000 and the new stock of $50,000 and $16,000 of the old stock were turned over to Talmage, Hill and Crandall (who were elected directors in pursuance of the agreement), and to the railway company.

That, thereafter, Talmage, Hill and Crandall and the railway company caused to be incorporated, under the laws of Illinois, the Atoka Coal & Mining Company, one of the defendants herein, with a capital stock of $500,000, comprising five thousand shares of $100 each. That the subscribers for the Atoka stock were: J. N. Patton, C. M. Hays, A. A. Talmage, J. A. Hill, L. S. "W. Folsom and E. J. Crandall; the said Patton, Hays, Talmage, Hill and Folsom subscribing for fifty shares of stock each, and E. J. Crandall for four thousand, seven hundred and fifty shares. That no part of the subscription of 4,750 shares, the par value of which amounted to [479]*479$475,000, was made by Crandall for bimself, but 2,500 shares of it were subscribed for and on account of the railway company, and 2,250 shares were held by him in trust for the Atoka Coal & Mining Company, to be disposed of in the manner thereafter tó be directed by its board of directors. That Crandall subscribed for the large amount of the capital stock of the Atoka company in pursuance of a conspiracy devised and carried out by the Missouri Pacific Railway Company and Talmage, Hill and Crandall, by means of which the railway company was to acquire and keep the cóntrol and management of the Atoka Coal & Mining Company and its business, and in order that it might acquire the control and benefits of the property and business of the Choctaw Coal & Mining Company without paying anything therefor. That A. A. Talmage, James A. Hill, E. J. Crandall, C. M. Hays and L. S. ~W. Eolsom were elected directors of said Atoka company, and A. A. Talmage was elected president; C. M. Hays, secretary, and E. J. Crandall, treasurer. That, on or about the first of. July, 1881, said Talmage, Hill and Crandall transferred the $66,000 of the capital stock of the Choctaw company, theretofore assigned to them by ~W. H. Loomis, to the Atoka company, receiving therefor $64,800 of the capital stock of the latter company, which latter stock they converted to their use, and that of the Missouri Pacific Railway Company, and thus defrauded the plaintiff out of the whole amount of the $66,000.

That, from the year 1881 to the year 1887, the mines of the Choctaw company were worked at a monthly profit of $5,000, and that such profits were expended by Tahnage, Hill and Crandall, under the direction of the railway company, in the development of the mines of the Atoka company; and such of said profits as were not so expended, were wrongfully and fraudulently converted to the use of the railway company and said other parties, to the damage of plaintiff in the sum of $550,000.

[480]*480That the Atoka Goal & Mining Company, prior to the institution of this suit, had. declared and paid out to the holders of 4,900 shares of its‘capital stock the sum of $220,500, which said sum was paid to defendants, Missouri Pacific Railway Company, James A. Hill and Atoka Coal & Mining Company, and which sum was derived from operating the properties of said Choctaw Coal & Mining Company by the Atoka Coal & Mining Company. That, in April, 1881, the mines were carelessly and negligently destroyed and abandoned by the Atoka company, and the machinery, property and business belonging to the Choctaw company were converted by said Atoka company to its own use. That plaintiff was thereby deprived of all his interest in said property, income and business of the Choctaw company, in addition to his loss of $66,000, the purchase price of the stock transferred by him, which had never been paid for. That the promise to expend that amount for betterments upon the property was not kept.

That Talmage, Hill and Crandall were employees of the railway company and committed the fraudulent acts stated at its dictation and for its, as well as their own, benefit. That all of these acts and things were done by the railway company, Talmage, Hill and Crandall, without the knowledge of plaintiff, and so secretly as not to put him on notice thereof. That he was kept in ignorance as to the wrongful and fraudulent acts of the parties aforesaid until about January 4, 1890, when disclosures were made by Crandall and Hill in a certain suit instituted by said Hill against the Atoka Coal & Mining Company in the circuit court of the city of St Louis, Missouri, to recover a dividend claimed to have accrued on a number of shares of the stock of the Atoka company held by him.

The petition contains the following averment:

“Plaintiff further says that, under the facts and circumstances of this case, as they have come to his knowledge, since the institution and trial of the said suit of the defendant, James A. Hill, against the Atoka Coal & Mining Company, [481]*481in the circuit court of the city of St.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 S.W. 962, 165 Mo. 469, 1901 Mo. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loomis-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-mo-1901.