Murphy Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Skaggs

248 P. 127, 67 Utah 487, 1926 Utah LEXIS 67
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 12, 1926
DocketNo. 4402.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 248 P. 127 (Murphy Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Skaggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murphy Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Skaggs, 248 P. 127, 67 Utah 487, 1926 Utah LEXIS 67 (Utah 1926).

Opinions

THURMAN, J.

Plaintiff alleges in its complaint that it is a corporation existing under the laws of Utah, engaged in the business of “buying and selling groceries, drugs, and merchandise at wholesale, and the manufacturing thereof, such as the prosecution of said business may require, and the buying and selling, leasing and holding, of all such real and personal property as may, from time to time, be necessary or desirable in the furtherance of its business.”

The complaint further alleges that on or about May 10, 1923, defendants became stockholders of the plaintiff by *489 purchase of its stock, amounting to 51 per cent thereof, and that they continued as such stockholders until on or about Aug. 18, 1923; that on July 20, 1923, defendants sold said shares of stock to the plaintiff, and delivered the same on said Aug. 18,1923, for the sum of $25,500; that said amount was paid in installments on and between said July 20 and Aug. 18, 1923. The complaint further alleges that at the time of said sale and purchase of said stock, and the payment of said money therefor, defendants well knew that said sums of money, and each of them, were the money and property of the plaintiff, and that defendants also knew that said sums of money were being paid to them from the capital stock— the working capital of plaintiff — and that said working capital was being diminished and lessened to the extent of said $25,500, and that said plaintiff had no surplus money, or property than its said working capital. Finally, it is alleged that at the time of said sale and purchase of said stock plaintiff was, and for some time had been, indebted to various creditors in large sums of money incurred in the promotion of its business, all of which the defendants well knew; that by the purchase of said stock and the payments of said money therefor by plaintiff to defendants plaintiff became and is, insolvent, and was thereby rendered unable to pay its just debts and liabilities incurred in the prosecution of its said business to an extent aggregating a sum in excess of $25,500, concerning all of which defendants were fully informed; that plaintiff is unable to pay its creditors in full, and there is, and will remain unpaid to said creditors, by reason of the premises aforesaid, sums of money aggregating in excess of $25,500, which plaintiff is unable to pay, for the reason that it has no assets or property from which such payment can be made. Plaintiff prays judgment for said amount, interest thereon, attorneys’ fees, and costs.

Defendants, answering the complaint, admit the corporate existence of plaintiff, the character of its business, and that they were stockholders of plaintiff, as alleged in the com *490 plaint, except that they allege they ceased to be such stockholders on or about July 19, 1923. Defendants deny the remaining allegations of the complaint, and the whole thereof.

The case was tried to the court without a jury. The court found in favor of defendants, and plaintiff appeals to this court for a reversal of the judgment. The errors assigned principally relate to the findings of the court. Exceptions are taken to each of the findings, and also to the failure to find upon certain issues alleged to be material.

Before discussing the exceptions relating to the findings, it is necessary to determine one exception to which we have not referred. The action was originally commenced in Weber county. The defendant Skaggs resided in Oakland, Cal., and the defendant Holt in Salt Lake City, Utah. The defendants first appeared by motion challenging the jurisdiction of the court. This motion was afterwards amended and treated as a motion for a change of venue. The motion was granted, and the cause transferred to Salt Lake City, where the case was tried. Plaintiff assigns as error the order granting the change of venue. Respondent objects to the consideration of this assignment, for the reason that matters relating to a change of venue are not part of the judgment roll, and in the case at bar they are not included in the bill of exceptions.

It is elementary in this jurisdiction that questions not appearing in the judgment roll and not preserved in a bill of exceptions will not be considered by the court on appeal. A question similar to this was decided adversely to the contention of appellant here in Broadbent v. D. & R. G. Ry. Co., 48 Utah, 598, 160 P. 1185. In the instant case the motion for change of venue and documents in support thereof, together with the order of the court thereon, are incorporated with the judgment roll, and there is nothing whatever to show that plaintiff’s counsel was not present in court and consented to the *491 order now complained of. This assignment cannot be sustained.

In order to understand the question raised concerning the findings of the court and its failure to find, it is necessary, before proceeding further, to make brief reference to the main features of the evidence, as disclosed by the record. In doing so we will indulge largely in conclusions rather than to undertake to detail the evidence.

In March, 1923, the plaintiff, as a corporation, was doing business in Ogden, Utah, as a wholesale grocery concern. Defendants were doing a retail grocery business in Salt Lake City, Utah, and in several of the adjoining states. In April, 1923, plaintiff moved its business to Salt Lake City. About 90 per cent of its entire business was with the defendants Skaggs and Holt. Skaggs and Holt purchased groceries from plaintiff under written contracts, and the goods as ordered were shipped to the various concerns operated by the defendants. In May, 1923, defendants became stockholders in the plaintiff company purchasing from C. S. Murphy 51 per cent of its capital stock. C. S. Murphy, who had been manager of the plaintiff company before, was continued in that position after Skaggs and Holt purchased the stock. In July, 1923, defendants became dissatisfied with Murphy’s management, and became desirous of either changing the management or disposing of their stock in the plaintiff company. At this point there is a wide divergence between the testimony of Murphy on the one side and Skaggs and Holt on the other as to what was said in the many interviews that were had leading up to the sale of the stock. The effect of Murphy’s testimony is that he informed. defendants that plaintiff was not able financially to buy the stock; that it was heavily indebted to various creditors; that it was then unable to take care of its discounts, and certain creditors were pressing for payment. In other words, according to Murphy’s testimony, he conveyed the information to defendants that the plaintiff was unable to pay the sum of $25,500 for the stock, and that to *492 attempt to do so would result in the plaintiff becoming insolvent, but that defendants insisted it could be done and proposed different expedients looking to that end. The whole meaning and effect of Murphy’s testimony was that the sale of the stock was made by defendants to plaintiff company under such circumstances as practically amounted to duress and compulsion. He was in their power. Practically all of his business was with them, and to refuse to purchase the stock meant loss of their business and his removal as manager of the concern. Such was the effect of his testimony as we glean it from the record.

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 127, 67 Utah 487, 1926 Utah LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murphy-wholesale-grocery-co-v-skaggs-utah-1926.