McCallum v. Wing

30 F.2d 505, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2438
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 19, 1929
DocketNo. 2166
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 F.2d 505 (McCallum v. Wing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCallum v. Wing, 30 F.2d 505, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2438 (1st Cir. 1929).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Circuit Judge.

This case comes here upon a writ of error to the District Court of the United States for the District of Massachusetts. George B. MeCallum, the plaintiff in error, is the executor -of the will of Alexander MeCallum, and the defendant in error, Thomas E. Wing, is the trustee under a written declaration of trust. The rights of the parties have been the subject of much litigation.

[506]*506The writ was dated March 2, 1914. A demurrer to .the declaration was filed, and on January 12,1915> the District Court sustained the demurrer in an opinion which appears in 244 F. 199.

From the judgment sustaining .the demurrer the plaintiff sued out a writ of error, and October 3, 1918, this court vacated the judgment of the District Court and remanded the ease for further proceedings. 254 F. 5.

At the time the writ in this ease was brought, another writ was sued out against one Sedgwick for the same cause of action as against MeCallum. This was heard on its merits and judgment entered for the defendant Sedgwick by the District Court with an opinion which appears in 299 F. 311.

To this judgment the plaintiff sued out a writ' of error, and this court vacated the judgment of the District Court and ordered judgment for the plaintiff. 4 F.(2d) 177.

A petition for writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court was denied October 12, 1925. 269 U. S. 558, 46 S. Ct. 19, 70 L. Ed. 410.

Prior to trial in this ease the parties entered into a written stipulation, waiving a jury and agreeing that all issues of fact be tried by the court in this ease, and that depositions taken in the Sedgwick Case and exhibits therein could be offered in evidence in the trial of this ease by either party. The entire record in the Sedgwick Case was made up of depositions and exhibits, and no oral proof was offered at the trial.

In the present case, in addition to the record in the Sedgwick Case, the plaintiff has offered evidence in the nature of an additional deposition of one John H. House to prove Alexander McCallum’s signature to his subscription agreement and the mailing of notices calling for payment of his subscription. With this exception the plaintiff’s evidence in this ease is the same as in the Sedgwick Case.

The defendant has offered additional depositions of four witnesses, and additional exhibits, and also called a witness who testified at the trial.

The learned District Judge states in his opinion that after reviewing all the evidence he had only considered the defense resting upon facts not developed in the Wing-Sédgwiek Case, or not presented in that case, and found nothing new to defeat plaintiff’s right to recover in full the balance of the defendant’s subscription in view of the conclusion reached by this court in the Sedgwick Case.

The facts in this ease have been so many times stated in the protracted litigation before the courts that it is unnecessary to incumber this opinion with their restatement except so far as it may be necessary to show the questions in issue.

Alexander MeCallum, the defendant’s testator, with others, were stockholders in a corporation known as Refugio Syndicate. This corporation was organized under the laws of the state of New Jersey, with a capital of $1,000,000 divided into 10,000 shares of the par value of $100 each. It appears from the record that its purpose was to purchase and operate gold mines in the republic of Mexico.

On September 1, 1907, MeCallum and his associates owned 2,000 shares of this company’s stock. Upon that date he, with his associates, signed an underwriting agreement by which the subscribers agreed to take and pay for 8,000 shares of the capital stock of Refugio Syndicate; he binding himself to pay the sum of $46,000 towards its purchase. • This underwriting agreement provided that each subscriber'should turn over to the syndicate managers his interest in 2,000 shares of stock which had been previously purchased and receive $1,000 in face value of the stock of the company for each $800 of his subscription.

George W. MeElhiney and E. A. Wiltsee were designated as syndicate managers, made by the subscribers to this underwriting agreement their attorneys, authorized to borrow for the account of each subscriber a sum not exceeding his cash subscription, and to pledge the underwriting agreement and all the stock underwritten as security for said loans. The syndicate managers were given the “sole direction, management, and conduct of the syndicate,” and it was further provided that “the enumeration of particular and specific'powers” should not be considered “as in any way limiting or abridging the general power or direction intended to be conferred upon and reserved to the syndicate managers.” It is the plain import of the underwriting agreement that the subscribers to it bound themselves to take and pay for the number of shares of stock whose value should correspond to the amount of money which they subscribed, and that the managers should obtain the money by loan for the purchase of the stock.

The managers did not wait to obtain a loan before they entered into *an agreement with Refugio Syndicate by which the corporation issued to them two certificates, [507]*507each dated September 30, 1907, one for 5,D00 and one for 3,000 shares of its unissued capital stock of a total par value of $800,000, and received from them a written agreement by which they agreed to pay for said stock in installments; the last payment to be made upon the 1st day of March, 1908.

By a vote of the directors of said corporation, on September 30, 1907, the contract of sale was approved and its president and secretary were authorized and directed, upon the execution of the contract, to issue certificates of stock of the company to the aggregate amount of $800,-000 par value to said McElhiney and Wilt-see as syndicate managers.

It was the evident intention of the syndicate managers and of the subscribers to the syndicate agreement to pay for the stock by obtaining loans with the stock as collateral, but tho managers were not able to do this, and on March 2, 1908, with the evident knowledge and consent of the -subscribers, the managers entered into a trust agreement with the Guardian Trust Company of New York City by which their note for $800,000 payable to bearer should be deposited in trust with the trust company and participation certificates should be issued by it to be secured by the capital stock of the company and also the underwriting agreement.

Upon tho same date Refugio Syndicate also entered into an agreement with the trust company, called a deposit agreement, by-which it purported as owner of the $800,-000 note to deposit the same with the trust company, and provided also for the issue of participation certificates in the same by the trust company. It is evident from the record that in making this deposit agreement Refugio Syndicate was only an instrumentality of the syndicate managers, as McElhiney was the president of the Refugio Syndicate.

It was not until March 31, 1908, that the board of directors of Refugio Syndicate voted to receive the note in payment of the subscription of the managers. At a meeting on that date the treasurer of the company reported that McElhiney and Wiltsee had offered in payment for their option for 8,000 shares of the stock of the company their note payable to bearer on the 1st day of March, 1909, and recited that McElhiney and Wiltsee were syndicate managers under and pursuant to the underwriting agreement dated September 1, 1907.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F.2d 505, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccallum-v-wing-ca1-1929.