McGuire v. Kaysen-Mcguire Co.

239 N.W. 616, 184 Minn. 553, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 1117
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 4, 1931
DocketNo. 28,636.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 239 N.W. 616 (McGuire v. Kaysen-Mcguire Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGuire v. Kaysen-Mcguire Co., 239 N.W. 616, 184 Minn. 553, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 1117 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

Holt, J.

The appeal is from an order .sustaining a demurrer to the complaint.

The substance of the allegations of the complaint, in condensed form, may be thus stated: For some period prior to December 19, *554 1927, plaintiff and defendant Kaysen were equal copartners in an established business from which each received $5,000 yearly as salary. That on the date mentioned the copartnership entered an agreement to organize a corporation under the laws of Delaware under the name of The McKays Company, with an authorized capital stock of 2,000 shares of common stock of no par value and 500 shares of seven per cent cumulative stock of the par value of $100, for purchasing the copartnership, its property, business, and good will; and for the same plaintiff and Kaysen were to receive 510 shares of the common stock, being a majority of the 1,000 shares agreed to be issued of the authorized 2,000 shares. As a part of the same transaction, the copartnership agreed to organize the defendant corporation, under the laws of this state, as a holding corporation for the 510 shares of The McKays Company stock issued to plaintiff and Kaysen for the purchase of the copartnership property and business, said holding corporation to own or hold no other property than said stock nor to engage in any other business. The two corporations were organized, the shares of stock were issued, the copartnership property transferred, and The McKays Company continued operating the business, all as agreed. Of the 510 shares of The McKays Company stock issued to the defendant holding corporation for the former copartners, 255 are now owned by plaintiff and 255 by defendants Kaysen, husband and wife, the husband having 254 and the wife one so as to qualify as a director. It was the intention of the parties that the stock issued for the copartnership . business should at all times ■ control The McKays Company and should at all times be held and owned by the defendant corporation as a unit and have a particular value by reason thereof.

A by-law of the defendant corporation, enacted at its organization, provides that unless otherwise ordered by the board of directors the president shall have full power and authority in behalf of the corporation to attend and to act and to vote at the meeting's of the stockholders of any corporation in which the defendant corporation may hold stock and exercise all powers incident to *555 ownership of the stock, the same as the corporation could do if present. It is alleged that this by-law was adopted for the purpose of preserving the particular value of the 510 shares of stock as a unit.

Defendant Kaysen has always been president of the defendant corporation, and by reason of the power so vested in him has caused the directors of The McKays Company to be elected. That such directors fixed Kaysen’s salary at $10,000 and plaintiff’s at $5,000 for their services in The McKays Company, which salaries were reduced in June, 1930, to $8,000 for Kaysen and to $2,500 for plaintiff. When the salaries were so reduced, plaintiff' was obliged to relinquish the employment. After this historical statement of the corporations and of plaintiff’s and defendant’s dealings and participation in the organization and conduct of the same, the complaint alleges, as the grounds for the interposition of the court, that

“plaintiff and defendant Kaysen have been unable to agree as to the management of the affairs of the defendant corporation, and because thereof, the defendant Kaysen, as the representative of the Kaysen-McGuire Company, controls the defendant corporation, and' controls The McKays Company. That the plaintiff is deprived of any right to vote, or to participate in the management of the affairs of The McKays Company.”

Another reason alleged for a receivership is that defendant Kay-sen and plaintiff are unable to agree as to the election of directors in the defendant corporation, thus creating a deadlock, and as a result Kaysen continues as president of the defendant corporation in full control of The McKays Company. It is also alleged that when the two corporations were organized it was agreed between the individuals interested that if any of the stockholders, other than defendant Kaysen, desired to sell the stock in the defendant corporation such stockholder should first offer it to Kaysen and the other stockholders, and, if not accepted, then must offer the same to the remaining stockholders of The McKays Company; and that after plaintiff’s salary was reduced he did offer his stock accord *556 ingly, but all refused to buy. It is also averred that the 510 shares of common stock of The McKays Company, practically the only property of the defendant corporation except the 102 shares of preferred stock, has particular value as a unit and if sold otherwise than as a unit has little value. The relief prayed for is the appointment of a receiver for the defendant corporation and that such receiver be authorized to exercise all the rights of ownership of its Xiroperty until a sale thereof, and that he make a sale thereof subject to the approval of the court, “provided, however, that no sale shall be made for said 510 shares of common stock of The McKays Company * * * except as a unit,” and for distribution of the proceeds and dissolution of the corporation.

It is to be noted that there is no allegation of insolvency or of mismanagement of the defendant corporation or interruption of its business. The only thing is that a new board of directors cannot be elected because plaintiff and the defendant Kaysen control an equal number of shares of stock. The old board therefore holds over. The corporation being a mere holding corporation, the business of the oxierating corporation, The McKays Company, goes on. There is no claim that the latter is mismanaged or unprofitably conducted or its business endangered. The profits to be derived by the stockholders of the defendant corporation proceed solely from the operation of The McKays Company. That that corporation has reduced salaries of its officers, including Kaysen’s, surely is not to the injury or damage of its stockholders, there being no averment that the reduction was so great that efficient officers or servants could not be had at -the present salaries. It is also to be noted that no fraud or imposition is alleged against any member of the copart-nership in making or carrying out the agreement to transfer its assets to The McKays Company for the shares of its stock and the organization of that coloration as well as of the defendant corporation, for the purposes already stated. The agreement, the in-corporations, and the by-law mentioned were the voluntary and deliberate acts of plaintiff and the personal defendants, or of the ones from whom all the shares of stock in which they now have an *557 interest were acquired, and acquired with full knowledge of the agreement pleaded and the situation existing.

The applicable law is this, stated in 14A C. J. p. 955, § 317%:

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Bluebook (online)
239 N.W. 616, 184 Minn. 553, 1931 Minn. LEXIS 1117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcguire-v-kaysen-mcguire-co-minn-1931.