Milwaukee Sanitarium v. Lynch

300 N.W. 760, 238 Wis. 628, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 94
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 300 N.W. 760 (Milwaukee Sanitarium v. Lynch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Milwaukee Sanitarium v. Lynch, 300 N.W. 760, 238 Wis. 628, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 94 (Wis. 1941).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The plaintiff, respondent herein, is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Wisconsin, with its principal place of business in the city of Wauwatosa, Milwaukee county. It has an authorized capital of $400,000, divided into four thousand shares of capital stock of the par value of $100 each, of which three thousand six hundred shares have been issued and are outstanding. The defendant Clara Lynch, appellant herein, is the holder of record of one hundred twenty-seven shares of said capital stock. The defendant William A. Swift, Jr., is the holder of record of one share of the capital stock.

The corporation was organized on or about May 7, 1895, under the provisions of ch. 86, R. S. Among other purposes for which the corporation was organized was the maintenance of a sanitarium, for the care, treatment, and relief of nervous or insane persons; and for the conduct and maintenance of one or more hospitals, asylums, or other like institutions. At the annual meeting of stockholders, held on January 5, 1940, the holders of three thousand one hundred seventy-two shares of the capital stock (being all of the stock represented at such *631 meeting except the one hundred twenty-seven shares held by the defendant Clara Lynch) voted to adopt and did adopt the following resolution:

“Resolved, that the articles of association of Milwaukee Sanitarium, as heretofore amended, be and the same hereby are further amended by amending article third thereof so that said article third when so amended shall read as follows, to wit: ,
“Third, the capital stock of said corporation shall be four hundred thousand dollars ($400,000) and shall be divided into four thousand (4,000) shares of one hundred dollars ($100) each.
“Such amount of any unissued or treasury stock of said corporation as the board of directors from time to time may deem wise, but not exceeding an aggregate of ten per cent (10%) of the total authorized capital stock may be issued or sold at any time or times (to such officers) or employees of the corporation and for such consideration in money or services as the board of directors may determine, without prior offer of the same to the stockholders of said corporation, and no stockholder of said corporation shall be entitled as a matter of right to subscribe for, purchase or receive any part of such issue or sale of such capital stock of said corporation or shall have any pre-emptive or preferential right to subscribe for or purchase the same.”

A duly verified copy of said amendment was filed with the secretary of state on January 17, 1940, and a like verified copy, together with the certificate of the secretary of state, showing the date when said amendment was filed with him, was recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Milwaukee county on January 18, 1940.

It is alleged that since the annual stockholders’ meeting the holders of three hundred additional shares of the capital stock, who were not present or represented at the annual stockholders’ meeting, have consented to the amendment; thus leaving only one hundred twenty-eight shares, of which one *632 hundred twenty-seven shares belonging' to appellant were voted against the adoption of the amendment.

On February 21, 1940, the respondent’s board of directors, acting under the authority conferred by the amendment of the articles of association, adopted the following resolution:

“Whereas, by amendment to the articles of association of the Sanitarium, it is authorized to issue and offer for sale additional shares of capital stock up to the balance of its authorized but as yet unissued capital stock, namely, four hundred shares, to its employees in consideration for services or money as the board of directors may determine; and
“Whereas, it is in the best interests of the Sanitarium and its stockholders to sell a portion of such stock to Dr. Lloyd H. Ziegler, associate medical director of the Sanitarium, who has agreed to purchase such stock upon the terms hereinafter set forth ;
“Resolved, that the officers of the Sanitarium be and they hereby are authorized and directed to sell to Dr. Lloyd H. Ziegler thirty shares of the capital stock of the Sanitarium at a price of $185 a share, twenty shares to be sold for cash payable upon delivery of such shares, and the remaining ten shares to be transferred, at said price, as part of the compensation of Dr. Ziegler pursuant to the resolution of the directors adopted January 15, 1940.
“Further resolved, that the officers of the Sanitarium be and they hereby are authorized and directed to institute proceedings for a declaratory judgment with respect to the validity of said amendment to the articles of association and the powers of the board of directors thereunder, and that the arrangement for sale of such stock to Dr. Ziegler provide for consummation upon approval thereof by counsel for the Sanitarium.”

Among other facts, the court found that the board of directors of respondent corporation, in order to secure permanency of officers, physicians, and other employees, and to minimize the possibility of their taking employment elsewhere, desire to increase their interest in the corporation and its continued success through the issuance and sale to them of stock of the plaintiff corporation, so that they will have a *633 financial interest in the corporation; that the directors believe that such action is for the best interests of the corporation and' to the benefit of its stockholders, and tends to protect the value of the stock in the corporation, which depends to a large extent upon the personnel of the medical staff and of the management; that the board of directors are of the view that the associate medical director should be a person of national reputation in the field in which the plaintiff corporation is engaged, and also that inasmuch as he may sometime be. expected to take over work now performed by the medical director, he should, through ownership of stock in the corporation, have a greater personal interest in the corporation than that which a salaried person would normally have, so that there may be a greater incentive to continue his association with the plaintiff corporation.

The court further found that:

“To carry out their plan with respect to continuity of operations the board of directors secured Dr. Lloyd H. Ziegler as an associate medical director approximately three (3) years ago after seven or eight years of endeavor on the part of the plaintiff corporation to secure a suitable person, and have made tentative arrangements to issue to him, as part of his compensation for the year 1940, ten (10) shares of stock at a valuation of one hundred eighty-five dollars ($185) a share, and also to issue to him twenty (20) shares of stock for a cash consideration of one hundred eighty-five dollars ($185) per share, and the board of directors desire in the future to make available to Dr. Lloyd H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 N.W. 760, 238 Wis. 628, 1941 Wisc. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/milwaukee-sanitarium-v-lynch-wis-1941.