Mile Wide Copper Co. v. Piper

239 P. 799, 29 Ariz. 129, 43 A.L.R. 1359, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 199
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1925
DocketCivil No. 2233.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 239 P. 799 (Mile Wide Copper Co. v. Piper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mile Wide Copper Co. v. Piper, 239 P. 799, 29 Ariz. 129, 43 A.L.R. 1359, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 199 (Ark. 1925).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, J.

— J. P. Piper, P. W. Eockstraw, George T. Eichards, Wayne McKee and Alice A. Trill, hereinafter called plaintiffs, filed this suit in the superior court of Pima county, against Charles P. Eeiniger, hereinafter called defendant, and the Mile Wide Copper Company, a corporation, hereinafter called the company. The complaint sets up the following allegations in substance:

About January 21st, 1916, defendant, in pursuance of a plan which he had previously formed to secure *131 options on certain mining claims and to organize and promote a corporation for the purpose of selling and transferring said options to the corporation at a large secret profit to himself, and inviting the public to purchase the stock of the corporation and contribute all necessary funds for its purposes, took the options, paying therefor the sum of $1,000, which was later repaid him from the funds of the company; the deferred purchase price being $75,000. Immediately after he commenced a campaign for the sale of stock in the corporation about to be organized, receiving under a contract of sale for such stock, made before he had expended any money on the property, about $40,000. He then organized the corporation, which is the company defendant herein, paying the expenses of organization out of the funds received by him under the contract of sale of stock. The capital stock of the corporation was $5,000,000, divided into 1,000,000 shares.

At the first organization meeting of the stockholders of the corporation, there were present defendant, L. E. Jettinghoflf, M. D. O. Fuller and R. R. Schweitzer, none of whom, it was alleged, were bona fide stockholders of the company, and the latter three were merely dummies acting for and- under the direction of defendant. These parties caused themselves and one Morford, an employee of defendant, to be chosen as directors of the corporation, and thereafter, acting as a board of directors, entered into a contract whereby the -company purchased from defendant the above-described options, paying him therefor all of the capital stock of the corporation, except one share for each of the directors. Thereafter defendant caused to be transferred to one Charles W. Freeman 80,000 shares of the stock so issued to defendant, which the latter had theretofore contracted to deliver to Freeman for the $40,000 above *132 referred to, and placed a large block of the remaining stock in the hands of certain stock brokers, named Lyon and Singer, of Pittsburgh, Pa., for sale to the general public. Some 140,000 shares of the stock so placed was sold to various investors, among them being plaintiffs, under the representations, made by Lyon and Singer, that it was treasury stock, and that the proceeds, less a fair commission, were to be turned over to the company and used for development purposes, the purchasers relying on such representations when they bought the stock, when, as a. matter of fact, it was not treasury stock, but a portion of that issued to Reiniger as above stated, and the company received only half the proceeds of the sales, the balance, less commissions, going to Reiniger.

In November, 1919, defendant, as president of the company, called a special meeting of the stockholders, and by use of his stock aforesaid elected a board of directors who were not bona fide stockholders, but merely the tools of defendant, and acted at all times under his directions and hostile to the only bona fide stockholders, who were the purchasers of stock through Lyon and Singer. Thereafter, the options having expired, without being exercised by the company, defendant with funds secured by the sale of stock aforesaid, purchased certain interests in part of the claims formerly under option to the company for himself, and also with similar funds bought a large amount of valuable machinery on the property, and converted to his own use personal property of the company to the value of $25,000.

Plaintiffs alleged that, by reason of the control of the board of directors by Reiniger as aforesaid, it would have been useless to ask them to bring suit on behalf of the corporation to compel Reiniger to account to it, so they as stockholders brought this suit, and asked that defendant be held to stand in a *133 fiduciary relation to the company, that the issue of stock to him be declared void, that the stock still. held by him be delivered up and canceled, and that he be compelled to account to the company for the benefit of the bona fide stockholders therein, for all the money received by him through the sale of stock, and the property purchased with the proceeds thereof, and the property he was alleged to have converted, for an attorney’s fee, and general relief.

Defendants demurred to the complaint, and also answered. The answer, in substance, admits the sale of the options to the company in exchange for all its capital stock, but alleges that the property was purchased by Eeiniger with his own funds and was of great value. It further sets up that the sale was approved by the board of directors of the company and all the stockholders thereof at the time of the sale, and that no secret profit whatever was made by the sale, nor indeed any profit, except such as he made later through the sale of the stock. It further denies, both generally and specifically, every allegation of the complaint which might impose any liability on Eeiniger, or make him a trustee for the benefit of the company. Since both pleadings are voluminous, we shall not encumber this opinion with either the substance or language thereof, except so far as may be necessary for a proper consideration and disposition of the action.

The matter was originally presented to a jury, but at the close of the evidence the jury was discharged,, in accordance with a stipulation, and the case submitted to the court for its decision. The trial judge, who was not the regular judge of the superior court of Pima county, filed his opinion under paragraph 346, Eevised Statutes of Arizona of 1913 (Civ. Code), and also findings of fact and conclusions of law, and, as he retired from the trial bench immediately on these being filed, the formal judgment was rendered *134 by the regular judge. After the usual motion for new trial was made and overruled, this appeal was taken.

There are some thirty-five assignments of error, raising a number of legal questions, some of which are of great interest as a matter of practice, but, since there is a principle of substantive law, going to the very gist of the action, and decisive thereof, we consider only the one issue.

It appears, from the undisputed evidence in the case, that Eeiniger, at the time of the organization of the defendant corporation, was the owner of certain options of purchase on some mining claims. For these he had paid several thousand dollars, and it was his intention to organize a corporation, exchange the options for all the stock of the company, and then proceed to sell the stock, so taken by him, to the general public.

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Bluebook (online)
239 P. 799, 29 Ariz. 129, 43 A.L.R. 1359, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mile-wide-copper-co-v-piper-ariz-1925.