Maine Steel, Inc. v. Mead-Morrison Sales Corp.

36 A.2d 569, 70 R.I. 32, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 9, 1944
StatusPublished

This text of 36 A.2d 569 (Maine Steel, Inc. v. Mead-Morrison Sales Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maine Steel, Inc. v. Mead-Morrison Sales Corp., 36 A.2d 569, 70 R.I. 32, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 12 (R.I. 1944).

Opinion

Flynn, C. J.

This bill in equity was brought against certain officers and directors of the respondent corporation to enforce a liability created by the general laws of Massachusetts (Ter. Ed.) chapter 156, sections 37 and 38; and also for other equitable relief independent of that statute. The superior court overruled the respondents’ demurrers to the amended bill of complaint and the cause was then heard on bill, answers, replications and evidence. Thereupon a decision was rendered in favor of the complainant on both aspects of the bill, and after the complainant, by leave of *33 court, had filed additional grounds of complaint to conform to the proof, a final decree was entered, ordering the respondents David Dwares and Sam Mencoff to account to complainant for the sum of $1000 with interest. The cause is before us on an appeal by those respondents from that decree.

The complainant is a Maine corporation which became the owner of a certain snow plow that is involved in this dispute. The respondent Mead-Morrison Sales Corporation was a Massachusetts corporation but was not served with process because its charter had been forfeited. The only respondents therefore are Sam Mencoff and David Dwares, who were president and treasurer respectively of said Mead-Morrison Sales Corporation and the sole officers and directors thereof.

The evidence discloses the following facts which are admitted or proved. Complainant, by assignment from its predecessor, became and was the owner of a “Sargent Snow Plow Serial |2-B” which was held for it, on consignment, by another company in Buffalo, New York. That company also held on consignment some tractors and equipment made and owned by Mead-Morrison Manufacturing Company, a Massachusetts corporation. Later receivers for the Mead-Morrison Manufacturing Company were duly appointed by the United States district court in Massachusetts and they proceeded, with the approval of the court, to liquidate the assets of that corporation. Accordingly they negotiated a sale of all its equipment, patents and assets, exclusive of buildings, to Walter E. O’Hara and the respondent Dwares, each of whom had advanced one-half of the purchase price.

For some reason the formal agreement of that sale was executed by the receivers and another corporation controlled by O’Hara; but it was expressly understood that the Mead-Morrison Sales Corporation would be organized for the purpose of carrying out that contract of sale with the receivers. This new corporation, Mead-Morrison Sales Corporation, hereinafter called the Sales Corporation, was or *34 ganized under the laws of Massachusetts and all of the assets and equipment under the above-mentioned contract were duly sold to it and became its property.

Thereafter, on March 14, 1934, upon request, the company in Buffalo shipped to the Sales Corporation at East Boston certain tractors and equipment which were in its custody and which had belonged to the old Mead-Morrison Manufacturing Company that was in receivership. This shipment, however, also included the snow plow which belonged to the complainant. The entire shipment, including the plow, was received and receipted for by the Sales Corporation which, on April 18, 1934, wrote the complainant: “It is also our understanding that this plow is to remain on loan until sold.”

Later, in reply to complainant’s request for a signed “Loan Receipt”, the Sales Corporation on April 25, 1934 wrote: “There is no question about the fact but what this Plow is owned by your Company .... We can emphatically state to you that the Plow when returned to you, if not sold by us, will be in as good condition as it is at the present time. For your further information we wish to advise thát this Plow is now located in our East Boston Plant and you can make an inspection of same if you care to.” This letter was written on the stationery of -the Sales Corporation, described therein as “Successors To Mead-Morrison Mfg. Co.”. It was signed for the Sales Corporation by Jacob Ziskind, who was one of its incorporators and who apparently was then acting as its general manager in selling the equipment which had been originally purchased from the receivers. During this time the respondent Dwares was represented at the Sales Corporation plant by the respondent Mencoff.

Thereafter the respondent Dwares purchased from his associate O’Hara all of the latter’s interest in the Sales Corporation and its assets; and Mencoff, who had been working with Ziskind at the time in liquidating the equipment, became the president of the Sales Corporation and Dwares became its treasurer.

*35 In February 1935 the Sales Corporation attached the complainant’s snow plow to one of its own tractors and sold and delivered both to the city of Chelsea, receiving in payment therefor that city’s check in the sum of $4800, payable to the Sales Corporation. This check was indorsed by the respondents, as president and treasurer respectively of the Sales Corporation, and admittedly the proceeds therefrom were transferred to the private account of the respondent Dwares. A portion thereof was then paid to the respondent Mencoff as his share or for a commission. No notice of the sale of the plow was ever given to the complainant and no part of the sale price received therefor was ever paid to it.

Sometime later the complainant heard of this sale and mailed to the Sales Corporation an invoice for $1000, the value of the plow. To this demand the Sales Corporation replied by letter, dated November 1, 1935, stating that its officials “now (know) nothing of any plow from your plant”. Shortly thereafter the respondents negotiated and carried out for the Sales Corporation a sale of all its remaining assets and equipment to a new corporation, which is not concerned here, for substantially $9000. This amount likewise was transferred ultimately to the respondent Dwares, leaving no assets of any kind in the Sales Corporation itself, although both respondents then had notice of complainant’s claim.

Then the respondents deliberately defaulted in their obligations under the Massachusetts law in connection with corporation returns or taxes, so that the state forfeited the charter of the Sales Corporation. This was not found out by the complainant until it attempted to bring an action in Massachusetts against the Sales Corporation, which could not be served with process because that corporation was then defunct and its sole officers and directors were residents of Rhode Island. Accordingly the instant suit in equity was brought against the respondents in this state.

The respondents first contend that the bill was demur- *36 rabie chiefly because it was based entirely upon the Massachusetts statute; that such statute created a new liability against officers and directors of corporations; and that, as part of the complainant’s right to enforce such liability, that statute provided a procedural remedy which was enforceable exclusively in the courts of Massachusetts. They further claim, in substance and effect, that the bill fails to state a cause cognizable in equity and that in any event complainant had an adequate remedy at law.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A.2d 569, 70 R.I. 32, 1944 R.I. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maine-steel-inc-v-mead-morrison-sales-corp-ri-1944.