Nebraska Mausoleum Co. v. Matters

188 N.W. 231, 108 Neb. 618, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 289
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 17, 1922
DocketNo. 19707
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 188 N.W. 231 (Nebraska Mausoleum Co. v. Matters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nebraska Mausoleum Co. v. Matters, 188 N.W. 231, 108 Neb. 618, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 289 (Neb. 1922).

Opinion

Flansburg, J.

This was an action by the plaintiff corporation to recover from defendant Matters alleged secret profits, made by him while he was acting as promoter for the said corporation. The judgment was in favor of defendant, and the plaintiff appeals.

A corporation of Iowa was the owner of certain patent rights for the erection of mausoleums, and, desiring to sell its rights for territory in Nebraska, eiftered into a contract with the defendant Matters, of date October 8,1910, whereby Matters was to undertake the incorporation and organization of a Nebraska company, which it was proposed should purchase such patent rights. Defendant Matters accordingly organized the Nebraska Mausoleum Company, the plaintiff in this case, with a capital stock of $200,000. By the agreement of October '8, referred to, the Iowa company was to receive, as payment for its patent rights, corporate stock of the Nebraska company to the extent of $101,000, face value, and defendant Matters further agreed that he would, within 90 days, sell $150,000 of the stock of the Nebraska company at par. Stock of the amount of $101,000 was to be first transferred to the Iowa company for its patents and then sold by Matters for that company, and the proceeds of the remainder, $19,000, was to be paid into the treasury of the Nebraska company, to be used as working capital. The remainder of the total corporate stock, $50,000, was to be retained by the Nebraska company as treasury stock and not sold. The contract did not directly specify that the defendant Matters was to receive any compensation or promoter’s profits from the Iowa company, but did contain this rather ambiguous [620]*620and indefinite declaration: “The question of commission for the sale of said stock is to be made-by E. E. Little, representative of the party of the second part (the Iowa company), and the party of the first part (defendant Matters).” • ■

The findings of the lower court weíh ;-that, in the organization of the Nebraska company, an independent board of directors was elected, and that this board was not controlled by, nor did it have any secret agreement Avith, Mr. Matters," but that it did have full- knowledge of the terms and provisions of the written contract of October 8, above mentioned, the contract haAdng been referred to in the minutes of its meetings. Defendant Matters and the man Little had a further agreement or’ dhderstanding with the Iowa company, not set out in the written agreement of October 8, nor made knoAvn to the directors or subscribers for stock in the Nebraska corporation, covering the amount of ■ compensation to be received by them, and, although the total amount- of profits to be made was not perhaps fully known to Matters in the beginning, It appears that by this agreement, as ultimately transpired, Matters was to pay to the Iowa company, from the proceeds of the sale of the $101,000 of stock, only $50,000, and that the balance was to be retained as expenses and for the services of Matters and of'Little, the latter being the representative of the Iowa company and really acting as a copromoter Avith Matters. It appears that defendant undertook the sale of the stock and paid commissions of 10 per cent, to his agents for securing subscriptions. The trial court found that he and his copromoter Little had received in all, as compensation under the contract, a total of $30,000. Their profits-had been reduced below what was contemplated by them by the fact that some of the stock subscriptions were not paid.

This suit was instituted by the Nebraska corporation to recover these profits, made by the defendant Matters, charging that he had sustained- a -confidential relation to the corporation,-since he was acting as promoter for it, [621]*621and that the profits so made were secret profits, he not having made a full and fair disclosure of the facts with reference thereto to the board of directors, nor to the subscribers for stock in the corporation. .The defendant’s answer to this contention is, since the board of directors was an independent board, not acting under defendant’s influence, nor under any agreement with him, that his disclosure to the board of the contract of October 8 was a sufficient disclosure to apprise the corporation that he was to make a profit, that the only matter which was not set ■forth in the contract was the amount which he was to receive, and, since the directors and subscribers of stock were, or must have been, aware of this provision in the contract, they could, had they desired, have learned what the amount of his profit was to be by making inquiry.

A promoter of a corporation stands in a fiduciary or confidential relation toward the corporation, and must act with the utmost good faith in his dealings with the corporation, to the end that the corporation, shall receive the greatest possible benefit that can come to it from his services. This does not mean that in a transaction, in which the corporation is interested, the promoter is precluded from making profits or from receiving compensation, but that, Avhen the promoter has an interest which is in any way adverse to that of the corporation, it is his duty to make a full and fair disclosure of all the facts in relation thereto, so that the corporation may have an opportunity of determining whether or not it is willing that he should make the profit, or whether it should.desire to decline to allow the profit to be made. Defendant, in view of his relation to the Nebraska company, does not contend that he was not required to make a full and fair disclosure to the company of his personal interests concerning it, and of the fact that he was to receive promotion fees and compensation from the Iowa company out of sales of the Nebraska company’s stock, but he does contend that he has made such a disclosure as is sufficient to meet the requirements of the law.

[622]*622It is very questionable whether the provisions in the contract, which declared that “the question of commission for the sale of said stock is to be made by” E. E. Little and defendant Matters, would fully apprise the board of directors of the Nebraska company of the fact that either Mr. Matters or Mr. Little was personally to receive that commission or any promotion profits. The clause in the contract states that the “question of commission” “shall be made” by these parties, which is perhaps no more than to say that the question of the amount of commission for the sale of stock shall be decided upon by these parties. Neither does this clause nor does any other express provision in the contract specifically declare that either of these parties is to receive any commission or compensation whatsoever. It is, however, fairly inferable from the contract, taken as a whole, that Mr. Matters, since he was to sell $150,000 of the corporate stock of the Nebraska company, was to receive the broker’s commission which is mentioned, and that the amount of that commission was to be determined by Mr. Little, acting for the Iowa company, and Mr. Matters, acting for himself. But would the declaration in the contract that Mr. Matters was to receive a commission for the sale of this stock be any indication to the Nebraska company that he was to receive more than the usual and customary commission fees made by stock-sales agents? Certainly, in the sale of this amount of stock, it is not customary to agree that the agent shall retain $51,000 of the proceeds of such sale. The retention of that amount would not be a commission, in the ordinary sense in which the term “commission” is used, but would be a promoter’s profit .under the guise of a commission.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 N.W. 231, 108 Neb. 618, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebraska-mausoleum-co-v-matters-neb-1922.