Merchants & Planters Bank v. Spears

243 S.W.2d 751, 219 Ark. 492, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 551
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 5, 1951
Docket4-9693
StatusPublished

This text of 243 S.W.2d 751 (Merchants & Planters Bank v. Spears) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants & Planters Bank v. Spears, 243 S.W.2d 751, 219 Ark. 492, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 551 (Ark. 1951).

Opinion

Ed. F. MoFaddin, Justice.

This suit stems from a dispute between rival groups in the Merchants & Planters Bank of West Memphis. Appellants constitute the majority faction and are directors of the Bank. Appellees, the minority faction, filed suit to require the Bank and the appellants to recognize the appellees as stockholders. From a decree in favor of the appellees there is this appeal.

The capital stock of the Bank consists of 500 shares. On December 12, 1949, appellants, Smith, Cooper, Johnson, McCaa, McKee, Johnson, et al., owning or controlling 285 shares, entered into a voting trust agreement which provided, inter alia,

“The said parties shall at all times vote their stock as a unit. The decision as to the way said stock shall be voted on any issue shall be determined by the majority of the stock covered by this agreement.
“The parties hereto agree that they will not sell any stock covered by this agreement to anyone not a party to the agreement.
‘ ‘ This contract shall remain in effect for a period of ten (10) years from the date of execution of same, unless sooner cancelled by mutual agreement of all parties hereto. ’ ’ ,

At the time the said voting trust agreement was signed Jack Rich owned 163 shares, and his brother-in-law, B. G-. Dickey, owned 52 shares; and these constitute the remaining 215 shares against which the voting trust agreement was apparently directed. Rich was one of the directors of the Bank in 1949; but when he learned of the said voting trust agreement he resigned as director, and removed from the Bank the accounts which he controlled, although he and Dickey retained all of their stock in the Bank, except the 20 shares now to be discussed.

On November 27, 1950, Jack Rich sold five shares of his bank stock to each of the four appellees, Spears, O’Bryant, Fallis and Wood. Each purchaser paid Rich $1,250 which was 2% times the face value of the stock, even though the book value at that time was probably 3.9 times the face value. Each of the purchasers was a trusted friend and business associate of Jack Rich; and Rich testified that it was his thought that three of these men might become directors in the Bank, in which he held such a large block of stock, but that he would not be a director because he felt the other directors had evidenced animosity against him by the adoption of the voting trust agreement. Each of the. four appellees is a good business man; and it was frankly stated by the attorneys for the appellants in the oral argument before this Court that the only thing wrong with any of the appellees is the close association with Jack Rich.1

Among other stock certificates, Rich held Certificate No. 32 for 20 shares of stock in the Bank. On November 27, 1950, he endorsed this certificate in blank and forwarded it to the Bank by mail with a letter reading:

“I enclose Capital Stock Certificate No. 32 for twenty shares of stock in the Merchants and Planters Bank. This stock has been sold, and I ask that you reissue as follows and mail to me for delivery.
“J. H. Spears ........................................................................5 shares
L. R. 0 ’Bryant ...............................................................5 shares
R. R. Fallis...........................................................................5 shares
James Wood........................................................................5 shares”

The majority faction (appellants) in charge of the Bank refused to comply with Rich’s direction that the shares be issued to the four appellees. Also, at a directors’ meeting on December 12, 1950, the majority: (1) advanced the annual meeting of stockholders from the second Tuesday in January (as it had been), to the first Wednesday of January of each year beginning in 1951; and (2) closed the stock books against transfer for a period of forty days prior to any annual stockholders’ meeting. At the same meeting the directors adopted “Resolution Number 4,” which reads:

“That no one shall be eligible to serve as a director of this bank who is an officer of, or member of a board of any competitive institution-of banking in Crittenden County, Arkansas, or whose business connections, interests, or conduct, are hostile to or antagonistic to the well-being of this institution. ’ ’

On December 20, 1950, appellees filed suit, alleging that each of them had purchased from Jack Rich five shares of stock in the Bank; that appellants had refused to allow the stock to be transferred to appellees; and prayed that appellants be mandatorily enjoined to transfer the said stock certificates, and recognize appellees as the shareholders.

On January 25, 1951, appellees filed amendment to the complaint, alleging that at the so-called annual stockholders ’ meeting on January 3, 1951, the appellants, as the majority faction in the Bank, had arbitrarily and illegally refused to admit appellees as stockholders; and had refused to count votes cast for appellees, Spears, Wood and O’Bryant for directors; and that the said three appellees received more votes than three of the persons whom the appellants claimed to have been elected as directors. In the amendment, appellees prayed, inter alia, that they be issued their five shares of stock, that the meeting of January 3,. 1951, be declared void, that a new stockholders’ meeting be called.

The cause was heard by the Chancery Court and resulted in a decree in favor of the appellees. The learned Chancellor used this language:

“The Court is of the opinion that the defendants totally failed to allege facts in their answer sufficient to justify their action in refusing to recognize the transfer and that the evidence offered in support of their pleadings likewise failed to justify such action.
“The integrity of the transferees is admitted and the main objection to them seems to be that they will be representatives of an alleged hostile stockholder and, as such, will be passing upon matters of vital importance to the Bank.
“It is, therefore, the holding of the Court that the transferor had the right to sell and the transferees had the right to purchase the Stock Certificate in question and the order will be to the effect that Stock Certificate Number 32 be cancelled and reissued in the names of the plaintiff, five shares each, and that such transfer be made upon the books of the Bank.”

The Chancery Court also ordered that a meeting of the stockholders be held for the purpose of conducting a legal election for directors. Prom the decree in favor of the appellees, the appellants prosecute this appeal, and argue, here, these points:

(1) —The Stock Certificate No. 32 was never legally delivered by Rich to the appellees, nor by the appellees to the Bank.

(2) —The appellees were not bona fide stockholders, but were merely representatives of Rich.

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Bluebook (online)
243 S.W.2d 751, 219 Ark. 492, 1951 Ark. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-planters-bank-v-spears-ark-1951.