Lovell v. Smith

169 So. 280, 232 Ala. 626, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 21, 1936
Docket6 Div. 889.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 169 So. 280 (Lovell v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lovell v. Smith, 169 So. 280, 232 Ala. 626, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 323 (Ala. 1936).

Opinion

*629 THOMAS, Justice.

The complaint was against the defendants as promoters and directors of a corporation. It alleges a breach of duty as such promoters occupying a fiduciary re-latipn to prospective subscribers for the corporation’s stock.

The questions for consideration are thus stated by appellant’s counsel: “ * * * that the defendants, while promoters, and inviting the plaintiff and others to subscribe to the stock, and having secured for themselves special prices and advantages and control of the voting stock of the company, caused the plaintiff to be solicited as a subscriber without disclosing to her in the prospectus, caused by the defendants to be issued, or otherwise, that the defendants had secured their stock upon more advantageous terms than the stock was being offered to the plaintiff and the public, and without disclosing that the defendants had procured at the outset control of the company by acquiring a majority of the voting stock, and that plaintiff was ; mislead and thereby caused to subscribe Jo stock of the company for which she would not otherwise have subscribed, and was damaged thereby; that this suit was brought within one year of the time that the fraud was discovered by the plaintiff.”

A phase of this controversy presented by plaintiff’s suit against the corporation for damages sustained in several purchases of its capital stock, is reported in Birmingham Bond & Mtge. Co. v. Lovell (C.C.A.) 81 F. (2d) 590, 592. There was judgment for rescission and the price and interest paid for initial purchases from the corporation of April 25, 1936, June 24, 1926, and March 1, 1927. It was held that there was no fraudulent statement of material facts contained in' the prospectus there and here exhibited; nor was there fraudulent concealment of such facts as affecting the amounts and other purchases and damages sustained by the purchaser. As just stated, the district court held against plaintiff in the last indicated respects and there was appeal by the corporation and cross-appeal by plaintiff — appellant. As illustrative of this pleading, it may be well to note the observations on the material facts there stated, as follows:

“Plaintiff assigns error to the action of the court in excluding the stock bought from brokers from consideration by the jury, and in charging there was no fraud in the prospectus. Defendant assigns error to the refusal of the general affirmative charge.
“We agree with the District Court that it was not shown that any statements in the pro&pectus voere fraudulent and calculated to deceive plaintiff. At the time the prospectus was shown to Lovell, none of the subsidiaries had been established. The establishment of these subsidiaries was to a certain extent germane to the main business of defendant, loaning money on Birmingham real estate, and the evidence was undisputed that they were profitable to the defendant and therefore beneficial to the stockholders; nor would the ownership of a large amount of common stock by the directors, sufficient to control the corporation under ordinary circumstances, convert defendant into a closed corporation.
“We also agree with the District Court in ruling against plaintiff as to recovery on the stock bought from brokers. Before *630 that time all the treasury stock had been sold by defendant. Defendant received nothing from these sales, and the brokers were not its agents. Plaintiff was charged with knowledge that the market value of the stock was constantly going down. When she initially purchased her stock it was at the rate of $58 for a unit of one share of preferred and one share of common. The price paid Glass was approximately $54 for the same unit. The price paid Pickens- was approximately $51 per unit, and the average price of the stock bought from brokers was approximately $22 for the same unit. Furthermore, plaintiff had ample opportunity, through her husband as her agent, to familiarize herself with the business of defendant. No obstacle was put in her way to examine the books and ascertain the financial condition of the company. Notwithstanding the false statements of Crane, the stock for a time zuas worth all that she paid for it. It would be ¡stretching presumption too far to say that the stock purchased from brokers was bought on the faith of Crane’s statements. Cheney v. Dickinson (C.C.A.) 172 F. 109, 28 L.R.A.(N.S.) 359.” (Italics supplied.)

Demurrer being sustained to the several counts as amended in this suit against the several defendants, plaintiff declined to plead further on account of the adverse ruling of the court. This appeal/ is taken to review the action of. the court in sustaining the demurrer.

The complaint shows that the mortgage company was organized under the laws of Delaware on September 16, 1925, by Jay Smith, E. W. Saucier, and Ed S. Moore, with an authorized capital of 125,000 shares of nonpar stock, 85,000 shares of common and 40,000 shares of preferred stock, each, under authority of law, without nominal or par value (Randle v. Win-ona Coal Co. et al., 206 Ala. 2,54, 89 So. 790, 19 A.L.R. 118), and immediately qualified to do business in this state; that the common stock was to be sold at a price fixed by its board of directors at not less than $1 per share, and preferred stock to be sold for not less than $50 per share. It is averred that each defendant subscribed for 3,750 shares of common stock and paid 25 per cent of the amount of the subscription in cash and executed to the corporation demand notes for the balance of 75 per cent; that the corporation sold its other stock in units of one share of common with one share of preferred at prices ranging from $51 per unit to $58 per unit.

In the face of purchase by plaintiff it is alleged that th.e defendants failed to disclose that they had acquired the controlling interest in the mortgage company’s capital stock, and that they concealed this information from her.

The complaint does not show that any one of the defendants was instrumental in selling plaintiff any of the shares of stock to which reference is made — the first three purchases being made direct from the mortgage company and the subsequent purchases made on the open market. This is the effect of the pleading when construed most strongly against the pleader.

The complaint further alleges the .matters contained in the prospectus, which is exhibited, as follows:

“(14-c) That the defendants caused a prospectus to be issued by the company on to-wit, the 1st day of February, 1926, and prior to the first subscription of its stock by the plairjtiff on April 26, 1926, addressed to the public as an invitation to invest in its securities, one of said prospectuses was handed to the plaintiff’s agent, W. S. Lovell, by an authorized agent of said- Company, which said prospectus stated among other things the following: ‘This Company differs from similar companies in that it is not a closed corporation, and that the invited subscriber is permitted to purchase its common stock “with full voting rights

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 So. 280, 232 Ala. 626, 1936 Ala. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovell-v-smith-ala-1936.