Millen v. Potter

157 N.W. 101, 190 Mich. 262, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 869
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 1916
DocketDocket No. 75
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 157 N.W. 101 (Millen v. Potter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millen v. Potter, 157 N.W. 101, 190 Mich. 262, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 869 (Mich. 1916).

Opinion

Person, J.

This suit was brought to enforce the assignment and delivery by defendant Potter to com[263]*263plainants of certain stock in the defendant corporation and for the performance of certain other features of an alleged agreement between defendant Potter and Homer C. Millen, one of the complainants.

The Millen Portland Cement Company became an involuntary bankrupt in August, 1909. In October of the same year the Union Bank of Jackson began the foreclosure of a mortgage which covered all the prop-’ erty of the company. On the 1st day of June, 1910, the property was sold under the foreclosure and bid in for the bank by one of its directors. Defendant Potter had before this taken some interest in the affairs of the company, and on the 9th day of July, 1910, he secured from the bank an option for the purchase of all its rights and interest in the propferty accruing from the foreclosure. In September, 1910, he acted upon his rights under the option, and the agreement for the sale and purchase of the property became binding upon both parties. In the meantime he had obtained a deed of all the company’s lands and other assets from the trustee in bankruptcy, and had made arrangements with those creditors of the company who held liens upon its property for the payment of their claims at a greatly reduced figure. Later, and in 1911, he organized the Michigan Portland Cement Company, the other defendant, with authorized capital stock to the amount of $500,000, divided into 5,000 shares of the par value of $100 each. Of this authorized capital $400,000 is in the form of common stock, and $100,000 is preferred stock. According to the articles of association all of the stock had been subscribed, and $50,000 had been paid in on the common stock, and $100,000 on the preferred stock, all in cash. The incorporators were the defendant Nathan S. Potter, his sons, Nathan S. Potter, Jr., Kennedy L. Potter, Clark Zeph Potter, and his daughter, Harriet L. P. Stewart. Of these Nathan S. Potter subscribed for and yet holds 3,500 [264]*264shares of the common stock and 500 shares of the preferred .stock, while Nathan S. Potter, Jr., Kennedy L. Potter, Clark Zeph Potter, and Harriet L. P. Stewart each subscribed for and holds 125 shares of the common stock and 125 shares of the preferred stock. On the 3d day of November, 1914, defendant Potter conveyed to this new company by warranty deed all of the lands and property received by him through the deed from the trustee in bankruptcy as belonging to the old Millen Portland Cement Company. In and by this deed he especially warranted the property to be free and clear from all rights and claims of the Union Bank of Jackson. And either through defendant Potter personally or through the new company considerable improvements have been made to the cement plant.

The Millen Portland Cement Company, when it went into bankruptcy, owned some 683 acres of land containing beds of marl and other material for the production of cement; and upon this land was a plant with machinery for its manufacture. The company had also a small amount of personal property. The value of all such property must be somewhat problematical, but Mr. Millen testifies that it was worth from $400,000 to $500,000, and his testimony does not seem to be directly disputed in the record. The liens and incumbrances thereon amounted to about $130,000, and the unsecured indebtedness of the old company seems to have been small. The complainants, who are husband and wife, owned a majority of the stock of the old company — that is, of the Millen Portland Cement Company. And, whatever the value of the property may really have been, the old company and the complainants, as owners of a majority of its stock, seem to have had an equity therein of considerable value. Such being the situation, it is the claim of complainants in this suit that in his activities above described Mr. Potter was but carrying out, in part, the terms of an agree[265]*265ment which he had entered into with Mr. Millen, one of the complainants, whereby the new company was to be formed to take over the property of the old company, and the stock of the new company divided in certain proportions between them. As it is the purpose of this suit to obtain such division of the stock and the performance of certain other provisions of the alleged agreement, to be hereinafter mentioned, the important questions to be first determined are whether the complainants are right in claiming that such an agreement was made between the parties, and its terms if it was made. The defendants deny that any such agreement ever existed, and insist that complainants have no interest whatever in the new company, or in its stock.

Inasmuch as the agreement was oral, if there was one, and resulted .from many conferences and interviews between Mr. Millen and Mr. Potter, about which there is much dispute, it would be almost impossible from their testimony alone to come to any satisfactory conclusion as to the result of those conferences and interviews. But there are certain documents and letters which throw much light upon the questions to be determined. It is claimed by complainant that on the 23d day of May, 1910, just before the sale of the property of the Millen Portland Cement Company in the foreclosure proceedings by the Union Bank, Mr. Millen was in the office of defendant Potter, in the city of Jackson, urging him to put their agreement in writing. It is Mr. Millen’s testimony that Potter at this time picked up a large envelope in which mail had evidently been received, and upon the back of it made a memorandum of the principal points in their agreement. Mr. Millen says that he took the envelope home that evening for the purpose of showing it to his wife, and that she, in the presence of a Mr. Coe and himself, copied the memorandum upon a- typewriter, changing it only [266]*266enough to put it in the form of a contract. Mr. Millen, Mrs. Millen, and Mr. Coe all testify that they read the memorandum on the back of the envelope, that it was in the handwriting of Mr. Potter, that it was compared by them all with the copy made by Mrs. Millen, and that the copy was absolutely correct, except as to such changes only as were necessary to put it in contract form. The envelope, they say, was then thrown away, and Mr. Millen says that he took the copy to Jackson the next morning for the purpose of having it signed. He testifies that, when he showed it to Mr. Potter, the latter said it was correct, but declined to sign it until after the foreclosure sale should have taken place. This memorandum is referred to in the record as Exhibit E, and will be so referred to here. It was never signed, but was produced in evidence, and reads as follows:

“Chelsea, Mich., May 23, 1910.
“N. S. Potter, of Jackson, Mich., party of the first part, hereby agrees with Homer C. Millen, party of the second part, that he will before the 1st day of June, 1910, reorgánize the Millen Portland Cement Company for the purpose of taking over the property of the present company, and that if matters are not satisfactorily arranged before that date that he will buy it. Such company to be reorganized with a capital stock of four hundred thousand common stock, one hundred thousand of preferred stock, and a bond issue of one hundred thousand dollars (100) ; one hundred thousand of the common stock to go with bonds, one hundred thousand common stock to remain in the treasury of the company to be given as necessary with the preferred stock, the remaining two hundred thousand common stock to be equally divided between N. S. Potter, N. Potter, and H. C. Millen; N.

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Bluebook (online)
157 N.W. 101, 190 Mich. 262, 1916 Mich. LEXIS 869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millen-v-potter-mich-1916.