Menke v. Gold Medal Oil Co.

191 N.E. 472, 47 Ohio App. 180, 16 Ohio Law. Abs. 440, 1933 Ohio App. LEXIS 383
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 11, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 191 N.E. 472 (Menke v. Gold Medal Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Menke v. Gold Medal Oil Co., 191 N.E. 472, 47 Ohio App. 180, 16 Ohio Law. Abs. 440, 1933 Ohio App. LEXIS 383 (Ohio Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Ross, J.

This case was presented on appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton county. A petition in error was also filed. The plaintiffs and defendants are the Gold Medal Oil Company, a corporation, and the several stockholders and directors thereof.

Some years ago the corporation was formed to deal in gasoline and oils, by Isaac Meyerfeld, Joseph B. Menke, C. P. Wagner, Jr., A. Julius Freiberg and William Geoghegan. The original capital stock consisted of three hundred $100 shares. Meyerfeld held one hundred and twenty shares, Wagner sixty, Menke sixty, Freiberg and Geoghegan fifty. Thereafter the capital stock was increased by the addition of fifty $100 shares, purchased by Meyerfeld, who later disposed of forty of such shares, twenty to A. B. Menke, brother of Joseph B. Menke, and twenty to Michael Ryan, a company employee.

In 1929 Joseph B. Menke bought from Meyerfeld ninety shares and from Freiberg twenty shares. In this year also the capital stock was again increased by one hundred and fifty $100 shares, making the total five hundred shares.

Immediately this new stock was by order of the board of directors directed to be sold by Joseph B. Menke. While no formal record of an empowering resolution appears in the evidence, the affairs of the corporation being conducted in an irregular manner, there is no question that such action was lawfully taken and was known to all stockholders and directors, who were *182 given full opportunity, and in fact urged, to purchase the new stock. The evidence shows at this time an active campaign led by Joseph B. Menke, then president of the company, to dispose of this stock. Notices were posted in the factory, and some of the stock was purchased by employees of the company and by the plaintiffs in this case. The directors of the company were identical with the stockholders of the company at this time.

In the summer of 1931 Meyerfeld and Joseph B. Menke, two of the founders and active executives in the company, died. Immediately after their deaths the holdings in the corporation were as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
191 N.E. 472, 47 Ohio App. 180, 16 Ohio Law. Abs. 440, 1933 Ohio App. LEXIS 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/menke-v-gold-medal-oil-co-ohioctapp-1933.