National Clay Products Co. v. District Court

243 N.W. 727, 214 Iowa 960
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 24, 1932
DocketNo. 41373.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 243 N.W. 727 (National Clay Products Co. v. District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Clay Products Co. v. District Court, 243 N.W. 727, 214 Iowa 960 (iowa 1932).

Opinion

Morling, J.

The National Clay Works was a corporation organized under the laws of Maine, doing business at Mason City, Iowa. It is alleged on both sides that the National Clay Works has been dissolved. About June 24, 1926, defendant National Clay Products Company, a Delaware corporation, succeeded to the National Clay Works. The process by which the dissolution and succession were effected, the time of dissolution, and the results thereof are in dispute.

On August 27, 1930, a petition in equity was filed, and about September 1, 1931, an amended petition at law by Albert F. Tretten and a large number of others against National Clay Products Company, F. E. Keeler and G. 0. Gould, who are now the only parties defendant to the action. The amended petition may be summarized as alleging that on June 24, 1926, plaintiffs were minority stockholders of the National Clay Works; that a number of companies named, including the Mason City Brick and Tile Company and the National Clay Works operating brick and tile factories at Mason City were owned and controlled by F. E. Keeler, Mrs. F. E. Keeler and B. C. Keeler, who conspired to acquire control of the industry at Mason City and in adjoining territory; that to accomplish this purpose they employed T. A. Potter and G. 0. Gould to conduct a campaign for the secret acquisition of the stock of the National Clay Works; that thus a majority of the stock was acquired by F. E. Keeler, Mrs. F. E. Keeler, B. C. Keeler and the corporations which they owned *963 and controlled; that these alleged conspirators caused the election of their nominees as members of the board of directors of the National Clay Works, caused the by-laws to be amended, and with G. Ó. Gould, William E. Lamb, Garfield E. Breese and T. A. Potter entered into a plan to acquire the assets of the National Clay Works without consideration and to freeze out the minority stockholders; that pursuant to this plan the parties to it held a purported special stockholders’ meeting whereby for the purpose alleged they abrogated the corporate contractual rights of stockholders; that they made an ultra vires purported amendment to the articles of incorporation and organized the National Clay Products Company, a Delaware corporation, for the purpose of taking over the assets of the National Clay Works, pursuant to which the parties to the scheme transferred all the assets of the National Clay Works to P. E. Keeler and to the National Clay Products Company for no consideration, or for a consideration so greatly inadequate as to be fraudulent as to the minority stockholders; that the National Clay Products Company came into apparent existence as a fiction to be used as an instrumentality to acquire for F. E. Keeler the assets of the National Clay Works without consideration, and that the parties to the plan have used such assets for P. E. Keeler’s gain, and that the profits belong to the National GÍlay Works or to its stockholders and are held in trust for them; that the transfer was in violation of the preferential and contractual rights of the preferred stockholders; that all of the outstanding stock of the National Clay Products Company is in the name of F. E. Keeler or his representatives, and no consideration has been paid the minority stockholders of the National Clay Works for their interest; that F. E. Keeler and the National Clay Products Company have appropriated all the assets of the National Clay Works to the damage of the minority stockholders "in an amount equal to the value of their aliquot part of said property, to wit, the sum of $300,000, and that the assets of the National Clay Works are held by the parties of said scheme and the National Clay Products Company in trust for the National Clay Works or for the plaintiffs and other minority stockholders and that the complainants and minority stockholders are entitled to an accounting of the defendant F. E. Keeler and National Clay Products Company jointly.” The amended petition alleges that no sufficient notice of the meeting *964 of the National Clay Works was given; “that as a part of said plan and scheme the parties of such plan and scheme and the majority stockholders have dissolved the National Clay Works.” Plaintiffs pray “that a joint accounting be had of the defendants, F. E. Keeler and the National Clay Products Company, and that these plaintiffs and all other stockholders similarly situated be awarded a judgment against the defendant, F. E. Keeler, and the defendant, National Clay Products Company, jointly for the value of their aliquot parts of the property and assets of the National Clay Works * '* * in the sum of $300,000 and that they be awarded a first lien on all the properties and assets and income thereof transferred and appropriated as aforesaid. ”

The plaintiffs in the amended action will be denominated here as plaintiffs, and the National Clay Products Company, F. E. Keeler and G-. O. Gould as defendants. Defendants answered denying generally the allegations of the petition except as admitted, modified or explained. Defendants set up the statutes of the state of Maine and proceedings in the Supreme Judicial Court of that state dissolving the National Clay Works and through a receivership transferring its assets to the National Clay Products Company. Defendants allege depression in the industry and in the business of the National Clay Works and deny that the assets of the National Clay Works were worth more than its obligations. They allege full knowledge on the part of minority stockholders and opportunity to purchase stock; deny ownership by the other corporations of any stock in National Clay Works; and tender back to the persons who were the stockholders of the National Clay Works all remaining property transferred by it to the National Clay Products Company on payment of obligations, expenditures, etc., with the purpose of placing the stockholders of the National Clay Works substantially in statu quo.

Plaintiffs filed motion to strike from the answer, which does not appear to have been ruled upon. Plaintiffs filed a petition for production of books and papers, naming (besides defendants) in the caption to it Mason City Brick and Tile Company, which filed resistance, and naming in the caption other corporations and F. E. Keeler, president, director and officer of them, and F. E. Keeler as executor of Estate of B. C. Keeler, none of whom *965 ■are shown to have been served with notice or to have been made parties to the action or to have appeared. The petition for production alleges “that books, papers and writings of defendants hereinafter particularly mentioned are in the possession and under the control of the defendants, and contain evidence material to the issues”, etc., and is verified. It asks production of “(a) The Stock Record Book or Stock Registers of the Mason City Brick and Tile Co. * * * Dennison Brick & Tile Co. # * # Dennison Sewer Pipe Co. * * * Mason City Clay Works * * * American Brick & Tile Co. - * * * North Iowa Brick & Tile Co., showing all the preferred and common stock of said companies issued and outstanding between the first day of January, 1915, and the first day of July, 1926. * * * (b) The general ledgers, and the journals of the individual books of F. E. Keeler, Mrs. F. E. Keeler, and B. C. Keeler, and the general ledgers of Mason City Brick & Tile Co., Dennison Brick & Tile-Co., Dennison Sewer Pipe Co., of the American Brick & Tile Co., of the Mason City Clay Works, and of the North Iowa Brick &

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Bluebook (online)
243 N.W. 727, 214 Iowa 960, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-clay-products-co-v-district-court-iowa-1932.