McManus v. Durant

168 A.D. 643, 154 N.Y.S. 580, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9046
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 9, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 168 A.D. 643 (McManus v. Durant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McManus v. Durant, 168 A.D. 643, 154 N.Y.S. 580, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9046 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Dowling, J.:

The controversy between the parties herein arises out of the affairs of a corporation known as the St. Gabriel Lumber Company, Limited, formed under letters patent of the Province of Quebec, Canada, in September, 1902. Prior to the incorporation of said company, Lindley M. Garrison, one of the plaintiffs who had met defendant Durant socially, had a conversation with the latter, in which Durant said that he had been interested from time to time largely in the matter of purchasing tracts of land containing timber, either for purchasers who had commissioned him so to do or as a broker, and Garrison having clients who were largely interested in the purchase of timber lands and lumber, they concluded to interest themselves together, Durant undertaking to search in Canada for suitable timber land which could be purchased at an attractive price, and Garrison undertaking to look for persons desirous of investing therein, the intention being that in the event of a sale they should profit therefrom as brokers. Garrison at that time was a member of the firm of Garrison, McManus & Enright, attorneys at Jersey City, N. J., the other partners being [645]*645Francis P. McManus, one of the plaintiffs in this suit, and John M. Enright. In the spring of 1902 Garrison received word from Durant, who was then in Canada, that he was willing to become personally interested in a timber tract about which he had heard, and McManus was sent to Canada to look over the ground with Durant. He did this, and upon his return he and his partners, Garrison and Enright, concluded to go into the enterprise personally and prepared a prospectus and arranged the preliminaries for the capitalization of the corporation, which was to have a capital stock of $200,000, of which but $133,000 was eventually issued, $108,000 whereof was paid for in cash and the other $25,000 whereof was issued to Durant in payment for his services. Durant had paid $500 personally for a thirty days’ option on the tract in question, known as the St. Gabriel proposition. About July 18, 1902, and before the organization of the new company, Garrison met Durant in New York and was informed by the latter that he had had a talk with George R. Sheldon, who was a director in the Union Bag and Paper Company, and that it was understood that that concern would make a contract with the new company by which the latter would realize a profit of one dollar a cord for pulp wood, together with an advance which would cover the necessary working capital. Durant also said that he had been conferring with the Sovereign Bank of Canada for a mortgage of $100,000 on the entire plant and that he had been trying to interest friends in Canada in the project. He also said that he personally would put up $50,000. Garrison then told him that he and his associates, Enright, McManus and Mrs. Archer (sister of the last named), would put up $40,000. On August 15, 1902, McManus returned to Canada and a meeting was held in Montreal, at which the details of the proposed corporation were settled. At this time Durant stated that the property previously investigated by himself and McManus (McManus, however, having no practical knowledge of the timber business) and on which Durant had obtained an option, could be obtained for about $200,000, $100,000 of which would be raised by a mortgage to the Sovereign Bank. Durant, with McManus’ consent, had made arrangements with certain customers of the proposed corporation, who agreed to put in [646]*646$15,000 temporarily to work the plant, it being understood that this sum was to be returned to them later on, and in the interim they were to have stock as security. An agreement was then "drawn between the parties by which Durant was not to sell his stock without first giving Garrison and his associates the opportunity of purchasing it, while they made a similar agreement with Durant. Five directors were provided for, whereof Durant was to name two, the Sovereign Bank one, McManus and Garrison jointly one, and Durant and McManus jointly one. Then, in September, 1902, a conference was held at the office of William 0. Sheldon & Co. in New York, where the further details of the organization were settled and where it was arranged that Durant was to receive $25,000 in stock for his work in connection with the inception of the enterprise, together with a salary of $5,000 a year. McManus and his associates subscribed for $43,000 of the stock of the company, whereof McManus contributed $23,000; Garrison; $6,500; Mrs. Archer, $10,000; and Enright,- $3,500. Durant contributed $50,000 for stock. After the incorporation of the company in September, 1902, the capital stock was distributed in the proportions indicated, and the property was bought for $195,000, whereof $100,000 was obtained on mortgage from the Sovereign Bank. The first directors of the company were W. Graham Brown, Howard M. Durant, Victor E. Mitchell, W. L. Moore and Francis P. McManus. Durant was elected president of the company, Mitchell vice-president, Brown secretary and treasurer. About two years after the business' began McManus became vice-president. In 1906 certain difficulties arose between the St. Gabriel Company and the customers who had originally put the $15,000 into the business, as a result of which Durant purchased their stock from them. He gave McManus and his associates an opportunity to purchase part of this stock, but they refused to take it. In January, 1907, Enright sold his stock to Durant at ninety, on the completion of which sale the holdings in the company were as follows: Durant, $93,500 (made up of his $50,000 originally-invested; $25,000 voted to him for his services before the organization of the company; $15,000 bought from the customer corporations and $3,500 bought from Enright); McManus, [647]*647$23,000; Mrs. Archer, $10,000; and Garrison, $6,500. The company continued business, but what profits it made went into improvements and it was obliged to borrow large sums of money. During the first year the plaintiffs and Enright obtained the discount of a note for $10,000 for the accommodation of the company, but declined to join in any subsequent guaranties of loans made by the Sovereign Bank, and when the latter insisted upon such a guaranty Durant gave it personally. In 1907 the amount so owed and guaranteed amounted to about $200,000. Meantime, plaintiffs had been desirous of selling their stock, apparently commencing so to feel in January, 1904. In March, 1905, the Union Bag and Paper Company requested an option on all the stock of the company for a price of about $330,000, on condition that all liabilities would be paid and that Durant should have the liquid or floating assets for that purpose. On March 8, 1905, plaintiffs and Enright gave an option on their stock to Durant at a fixed price of 115. This sale to the bag company never went through, though negotiations continued for gome time thereafter. Although Enright’s stock was bought by Durant in January, 1907/ it had been offered to him as early as December, 1904, at the fixed price of $90 a share, and at this time he could also have purchased Garrison’s stock at the same figure per share, but he declined to buy, saying that he thought Garrison should get more for it. Garrison himself testified that when he gave the option on his stock at 115 he told Durant that the latter was optimistic about the outlook; to go ahead, that he would take a fixed price for his stock, and if any profit was made over and above that, Durant could take it and do with it as he pleased. In 1907 the Sovereign Bank began pressing for the amount due it from the company, aggregating about $180,000 in addition to the $100,000 mortgage.

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Bluebook (online)
168 A.D. 643, 154 N.Y.S. 580, 1915 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmanus-v-durant-nyappdiv-1915.