Marston v. Singapore Rattan Co.

39 N.E. 1113, 163 Mass. 296, 1895 Mass. LEXIS 98
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 39 N.E. 1113 (Marston v. Singapore Rattan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marston v. Singapore Rattan Co., 39 N.E. 1113, 163 Mass. 296, 1895 Mass. LEXIS 98 (Mass. 1895).

Opinion

Field, C. J

These two actions were tried together. At the close of the evidence the court, after declining to direct a verdict for the defendants upon each and all the counts in both notions, submitted in all five questions to the jury, which they answered. The presiding justice thereupon directed the jury to return a verdict in the first case against the defendant on the first and second counts for $13,300, with interest from the date [297]*297of the writ, and a verdict for the defendant on the third count, and also directed the jury to return a verdict in the second case against the defendants for the same sum of $13,300, with interest from the date of the writ; and verdicts were returned accordingly. This was done against the objection and exception of the defendants in each case. The jury found in each ease that the net value of the property conveyed by the plaintiff to the defendant company above the liabilities assumed by the company was $13,300. The main question raised by the exceptions, and the only question argued by the defendants, is whether, upon the findings of the jury and the' admitted facts, the court was warranted in directing the verdicts for the plaintiff for the amount stated. The argument is, that in neither case is the verdict a necessary conclusion of law from the facts found and admitted. The verdicts must have been ordered on the theory v that what is called the net value of the property conveyed by the plaintiff to the company was the true measure of damages in each case. The breach of agreement found by the jury was discharging the plaintiff from his position of manager of the business of the company, in violation of the agreement found to have been made with the plaintiff by the company and by Curtis and Lynde to elect and continue him as manager until such time as he and the company should mutually agree to terminate the relation. In the first case, the verdict ordered for the plaintiff on the first and second counts must have been ordered on the theory that it appeared by the findings of the jury and the admitted facts, that the plaintiff had a right to rescind the transaction whereby he transferred his property to the company in reliance upon the agreement to elect and continue him as manager. It appears from the exceptions, that the evidence was that the certificate of incorporation of the company is dated December 11, 1890; that the plaintiff’s -property was conveyed to the company on January 20, 1891; that the plaintiff was made manager, and continued to act as manager until September, 1891, when he was discharged; and that on October 2, 1891, the plaintiff demanded from the company a return and reconveyance of the net amount of property conveyed by him to the company, or payment of the same, and then brought these suits. The property conveyed consisted of real estate, [298]*298merchandise, tools, fixtures, book accounts, etc., and the liabilities of the plaintiff which were assumed by the company were mortgages on the real estate, accounts payable, notes payable, etc. It does not appear that this property remained the same from the time of the conveyance up to the time of the demand. Although the net value of the property of the plaintiff conveyed to the corporation is found to be $13,300, the capital stock of the corporation was $42,000. Lynde testified that the plaintiff owed him at the time of the formation of the corporation $5,000, and that he took fifty shares of stock therefor. Curtis testified that at the same time the plaintiff owed him $17,116.87; that he, Curtis, agreed to furnish money or merchandise to make up his debt to $20,000, for which he was to receive two hundred shares of stock, and that ultimately he furnished merchandise so that his whole debt amounted to $24,600 for which he received two hundred and forty-six shares of stock; that one hundred and twenty shares of stock were allotted to the plaintiff, which were put in the name of Curtis as trustee for the plaintiff under an agreement signed by Curtis, Lynde, and the plaintiff, and one share was put in the name of each of four other persons, making all the shares issued four hundred and twenty. A statement of the value of the whole property made by the plaintiff just before the organization of the corporation was: assets, $49,535.16; liabilities, $34,706.40; leaving the net value $14,828.76. The liabilities, exclusive of $10,000 secured by two mortgages on the real estate, were estimated by the plaintiff then to be $24,706.40. A second statement made by the plaintiff, on December 15,1890, made the net value $13,913.55. This was afterward cut down by certain deductions, and the plaintiff testified that “ at last I consented to call my equity in the property $12,000.” This equity he testified, against the objection of the defendants, was worth $13,300 at the time he made the conveyance to the company, and he also testified, against the same objection, that the “ value of the property taken in connection with the business which he was conducting ” was $18,300. Some of the debts of the plaintiff must in the course of the business which he managed have been paid by the company, and merchandise was bought and sold, and it must in the nature of things have been impossible, at the time the [299]*299plaintiff made the demand for a reconveyance, to put the parties into the same positions as they were in when the conveyance was made, or when the agreement was made for the formation of the corporation and for the conveyance to it of the plaintiff’s property. The plaintiff does not seriously contend that the parties could be put into their original positions; he contends that, on his releasing to the company all his interest in it, the company on the facts found and admitted was bound to pay to him what he calls the net value of the property conveyed, which is the value of the property conveyed above his liabilities which the company assumed. These liabilities, on this theory, if not actually already paid off by the company, must be paid off by the company in the future. The exceptions recite that “ the plaintiff in court offered, during his case, and at the end of the second day’s trial, to execute a release in any form desired of his rights in the stock and business and under the agreement of January 20, and defendant refused to accept any release whatsoever, and at the close of his case plaintiff tendered the release, a copy of which is annexed, and defendant refused to accept the same.” This release is dated March 3, 1893, and is a release to the company, its successors and assigns, of “ any and all interest which I may now have, or which I had on the 18th day of September, 1891, or upon the 2d day of October, 1891, in any stock of the company issued to J. Gardner Curtis as trustee for me in any way.” The agreement of January 20 referred to is the agreement dated January 20, 1891, signed by Curtis, Lynde, and the plaintiff, which provided, among other things, that the certificates of stock should be distributed in certain proportions, and that the twelve thousand dollars’ worth of stock allotted to the plaintiff should be put in the name of Curtis as trustee for account of the plaintiff, to be held by Curtis “ as collateral for said Curtis and said Lynde as their interests may appear, and to be turned over to ” the plaintiff on December 12, 1891, in case a dividend of six per cent is earned and paid on the stock from December 17, 1890, to December 12, 1891, and the provision is that if said six per cent yearly dividend is not earned and paid, “ the said twelve thousand dollars in stock held by said Curtis as trustee shall revert to said Curtis and Lynde as their interests may appear.” Under this [300]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.E. 1113, 163 Mass. 296, 1895 Mass. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marston-v-singapore-rattan-co-mass-1895.