Lucile Dreyfus Mining Co. v. Willard

89 P. 935, 46 Wash. 345, 1907 Wash. LEXIS 620
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 3, 1907
DocketNo. 6546
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 89 P. 935 (Lucile Dreyfus Mining Co. v. Willard) 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
Lucile Dreyfus Mining Co. v. Willard, 89 P. 935, 46 Wash. 345, 1907 Wash. LEXIS 620 (Wash. 1907).

Opinion

Root, J.

This action was brought by respondent, a corporation, to cancel a large amount of overissued stock held by numerous persons. The appellants Willard and Jamison each appeared in said action and interposed a counterclaim for the amount paid for certificates of such overissue held by him; and appellants Finley and Jamison each interposed a like counterclaim for money loaned upon such certificates, deposited as collateral security by one Kressly, secretary of the corporation. From a judgment and decree adverse to them, each has appealed.

The respondent was incorporated under the laws of this state, with a capital stock of $50,000, divided into a million shares of the par value of five cents per share., and assessable to an amount equal to par. It was organized for general mining purposes. The stock certificates were transferable on the books of the company by assignment, each certificate having upon the back thereof a blank form of assignment. No restrictions or limitations- existed as to officers holding and [347]*347transferring stock. The fraudulent overissue of certificates which occasioned the trouble herein was made by the secretary of the company, one H. J. Kressly. The following articles of the by-laws will show what duties were enjoined upon him as secretary, and indicate the general method of transferring the stock provided for by the company:

“Article III. It shall be the duty of the secretary to keep a record of the meetings of the stockholders and board of trustees. He shall keep a book of blank certificates of stock and fill up and sign all certificates issued; making the proper entries in the margin of said book of said issuance, and have the same properly receipted for when delivered; he shall keep a stock ledger in debit and credit form showing the number of shares issued to or transferred to any stockholder, and the dates of such issuance or transfer; he shall prepare and cause to be published and recorded all reports and statements required by law of the company; he shall keep a proper set of books showing the business of the company and make a statement of the conditions of the company at the annual meeting and shall discharge such other duties as may be prescribed by the board of trustees.”

“Article VI. No member of the board of trustees shall receive any compensation for his services as such, nor shall the company be held liable for any services rendered by them. Where a trustee performs the duties of secretary, he shall receive as compensation $15.00 per month.”

“Article ÍX. The shares of the company may be transferred by the holder thereof, or by any attorney legally constituted, or by his or her legal representatives. The transfers shall be made by endorsing on the back of the certificate of stock, surrendering the same, and the same shall be noted in the proper form on the stock ledger of the company. The surrendered certificates shall be cancelled by the secretary before a new one is issued in lieu thereof, and the certificate so cancelled shall be preserved by the secretary as a voucher. A charge by the secretary may be made for the transfer of stock, not to exceed twenty-five cents for each transfer, when authorized by the board of trustees.”

“Article XI. The books and papers in the office of the secretary and treasurer shall, at all times, during business hours, be open to the inspection of the board of trastees or any stock[348]*348holder. The principal office and place of business of the company shall be at Spokane, Washington.”

“Article XII. Certificates of stock shall be of such form and device as the board of trustees may direct, and each of such certificates shall be signed by the president or vice president, and countersigned by the secretary, and express on its face its number, date of issuance, the number of shares for which and the persons to whom issued, and shall not be valid before stamped by the secretary with the seal of the company.”

Kressly was elected secretary of the company, and entered upon the discharge of his duties as such officer early in December, 1902, and continued to act as such officer until the 1st of June, 1908, during which period all of the fraudulent certificates were issued. The facts appertaining to the appellant Willard were about these: At the time of his election as secretary, Kressly was, and had been for several years prior thereto, a stock broker engaged in buying and selling and handling stock of this and other corporations. After his election he continued his business as such stock broker and maintained his office as secretary of the company in his brokerage office, keeping the books, accounts, certificates of stock, seal, and other property and appurtenances of the office at said place.- Appellant Willard was at all times a resident of the State of Ohio. Shortly before Kressly’s election as secretary of the company, Willard sent him fifty-five thousand shares of the capital stock of this company, which he had purchased in the open market, and directed that Kressly should take them to the secretary of the company, have them cancelled, and new certificates in lieu thereof issued in his — Willard’s— name. Kressly received these certificates of stock, but instead of taking them, to the company and having them can-celled and new certificates issued in lieu thereof to Willard, he disposed of them otherwise, and after he became secretary he executed fraudulent certificates in the sum of fifty-five thousand shares, and forwarded those to Willard, who received them under the belief that they were issued in lieu of the [349]*349genuine shares of stock which he had theretofore sent to Kressly to have cancelled and transferred. The stock just mentioned will be hereafter referred to as lot 1.

After Kressly had become secretary of the company, Willard sent him, some time in December or the early part of January, certificates representing seventy-two thousand shares of stock, which he had purchased in the open market, and requested that a transfer thereof be made to himself, the former certificates cancelled, and new certificates, in his name, issued in lieu thereof. Kressly, instead of cancelling the stock and issuing in lieu thereof certificates to Willard, used the stock otherwise and forwarded to Willard seventy-two thousand shares of fraudulent stock; that is, certificates issued for stock over and above the amount allowed by the capitalization of the company, all of the capital stock having been theretofore issued. Willard received these certificates, supposing them to have been issued in lieu of the seventy-two thousand which he had sent in for cancellation and transfer. Subsequent to this transaction, Willard authorized Kressly to buy stock of the company in the open market, in various amounts aggregating seventy-eight thousand shares. The certificates thus purchased or pretended to be purchased by Kressly never came into the possession of Willard, but Kressly ai different times sent to Willard new certificates of stock in his — Willard’s name — which Willard supposed were issued in lieu of stock purchased, cancelled, and transferred by Kressly.

The appellant Jamison bought overissue stock from Kressly, and paid him therefor $7,000. He also loaned him $1,675 and took like stock as collateral. Appellant Finley loaned Kressly $6,802, and received similar spurious certificates of stock as secui’ity therefor. The loans to Kressly by both Jamison and Finley were to him in his individual capacity and not as an officer of the company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 P. 935, 46 Wash. 345, 1907 Wash. LEXIS 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lucile-dreyfus-mining-co-v-willard-wash-1907.