Newberry v. Detroit & Lake Superior Iron Manufacturing Co.

17 Mich. 141, 1868 Mich. LEXIS 48
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 17 Mich. 141 (Newberry v. Detroit & Lake Superior Iron Manufacturing Co.) 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
Newberry v. Detroit & Lake Superior Iron Manufacturing Co., 17 Mich. 141, 1868 Mich. LEXIS 48 (Mich. 1868).

Opinions

Graves J.

The defendant is a corporation organized under the act of February 5, 1853, authorizing the formation of corporations for manufacturing and other purposes. On the 21st of November, 1861, there were standing on its books, in the name of George B. Bussell, 480 shares of stock. On the 27th of the same month he was largely insolvent, and made to Henry H. Le Boy a general assignment for the benefit of creditors. At some time before this, however, he had assigned to Julius A. Austin 200 shares of said stock, and to Philo Parsons the remaining 280 shares, as security for debts which he owed them, and which have never been paid. It does not appear that these transfers were entered on the books of the company, but it is admitted that the corporation had' notice of them before the 21st of January, 1862. Before the assignment to Le Boy, an indebtedness had accrued from Bussell to the company for a1 large amount, and alleged by the latter to exceed $9,000, for which the company claimed to have and retain a lien upon the stock. On the 11th of November, 1861, Henry W. Newberry and Walter C. Newberry, as executors of the last will of Oliver Newberry, obtained a judgment in the Circuit [149]*149Court for the County of Wayne against Bussell for $13,-400.14 damages and costs, and on the 21st of November, 1861, caused an execution to be issued on the judgment to the sheriff of Wayne County, returnable on the first Monday of February following.

On the 21st of January, 1862, the sheriff called on the secretary and treasurer of the corporation, and received from him a certificate that there was standing on the books of the company, in the name of Bussell, 480 shares of stock, against which the company had a lien for indebtedness of Bussell to the company’ of about $9,000. The sheriff thereupon levied the execution on said stock, and took the steps required by the statute to effectuate a formal levy on property of that description. On the 17th of February, 1862, the sheriff, after regular notice, sold the stock pursuant to the levy to the complainant for $5, and, on the first day of March following, left with the proper officer a copy of the execution and the requisite return, and at the same time the complainant demanded of said officer a certificate of the shares of stock so purchased, and offered to pay the fees therefor, and for recording the shares, but the officer refused to give any such certificate. At the time of the purchase by complainant, he had no notice of the transfer by Bussell to any one, except by assignment to Le Boy. On the 3d of April, 1862, the directors of the company ordered the treasurer to notify Bussell that unless his indebtedness to the company was paid within sixty days after service of the notice, the company would advertise and sell the stocjc according to the act under which the corporation was organized. Such notice was accordingly given on the oth of April, 1862. Bussell failing to make payment within the time, the directors, on the 18th of June, 1862, resolved that the stock should be sold at public auction, at the office of the company, after giving thirty days previous notice by publication in the Detroit Daily Tribune, and that the treasurer should bid not to exceed eighty cents [150]*150oil the dollar of the nominal par value of said stock. A notice was accordingly published in said paper, for the sale of the stock on the 24th day of July, 1862, at 12 o’clock at noon, at the office of the secretary of the corporation, and at such time and place the directors offered the stock at public auction, and it was struck off to the treasurer for the use of the company at eighty cents on the dollar of the par value, that being the highest sum bid, and he being the highest bidder; and shortly after, a certificate for the stock was issued to the President of the company.

This sale was made in good faith, and without collusion with Russell, but with his knowledge and assent, and the price mentioned was more than the stock was then actually worth. At the time last mentioned the whole amount of stock was $69,000, and the par value Was $25 per share. Soon after said proceeding, the stock so purchased, amount- ■ ing to $12,000, was cancelled, and in about a year thereafter a sufficient additional amount was purchased and cancelled to reduce the Alióle stock to $53,550. In 1864 the stock was raised to $100,000 by dividends of stock and new issues, when the old stockholders sold to persons from a distance $50,500 of said $100,000.

Subsequently thereto, and before July 27th, 1866, there were many transfers, and most of the stock passed into the hands of parties who had purchased after the Russell stock was cancelled. On the 20th of July, 1865, a dividend of fifteen per cent, was made, and on the 11th of June, 1866, another of twenty per cent, but both of them were in stock.

The dividends before mentioned are all which have'been made.

On the 27th of July, 1866, the complainant demanded of the proper officer of the company an account of the stock bid off on the execution in February, 1862, of dividends, increase and profits on the same, and the issue to him of a certificate of said stock, and then offered to pay any lawful lien the company had thereon.

[151]*151This request' being refused, the present bill was filed. It is claimed, on the part of the complainant, that at the time of the levy and sale in 1862, the defendant in the execution, Bussell, had an interest in the stock, which was subject to seizure and sale under the execution, notwithstanding any lien of the company, and which was susceptible of discrimination and protection, without injury to the interests of the company,-or embarrassment to its operations;' that, by the purchase on the execution sale in February, 1862, the complainant acquired a perfect title to the interest of Bussell in the stock, notwithstanding his transfer to Austin and Parsons, and his subsequent general assignment for the benefit of creditors; that the asserted foreclosure of the lien of the company was ineffectual, for the reason that the corporation could not become a purchaser at such sale, and that the complainant has not lost his right to have certificates of the stock issued to him by his delay in offering to discharge the lien upon the stock held by the corporation.

The defendant insists that the stock sought by complainant has been so disposed of that it can not be traced and recovered; but if that could be done under any circumstances, the present suit is ineffectual for that purpose, since none of the innocent holders are parties, and the power of the company to issue more stock is not shown; that Bussell had no title which the complainant, with knowledge of the assignment to Le Boy, could acquire under the execution; but that if he had, the proceedings by complainant were not such as to give him any title, as he failed to discharge or offer to discharge the defendants’ lien within the time required by law, that .is, fourteen days; that if the complainant acquired anjr title by his purchase, it was lost by his delay to perfect it, and by the subsequent proceedings of defendant to enforce its lien; that as the complainant purchased for a nominal sum when the stock was not worth the amount of defendant’s lien, and neglected to assume the responsibilities of a stockholder, and [152]*152allowed the stock to pass into the hands of innocent holders without evincing any purpose to insist upon his right as purchaser for more than four years, and until after the stock was much increased in value, the equities are all against him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 Mich. 141, 1868 Mich. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newberry-v-detroit-lake-superior-iron-manufacturing-co-mich-1868.