Nicholson v. Kingery

261 P. 122, 37 Wyo. 299, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 87
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1927
Docket1353
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 261 P. 122 (Nicholson v. Kingery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nicholson v. Kingery, 261 P. 122, 37 Wyo. 299, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 87 (Wyo. 1927).

Opinion

Brown, District Judge.

Defendant, Investors Guaranty Corporation, is a Utah Corporation, authorized to do business in this State, having its principal place of business in this State at River-ton, in Fremont County. It has seven directors, one residing in Utah, one in Omaha, Nebraska, and five at Riverton and Worland in this state. On January 7, 1924, and for a long time prior thereto it owned 183 shares of the capital stock of the Farmers State Bank at Worland, which was more than two thirds of the authorized capital stock of this bank. This 183 shares of stock was carried in the name of the defendant H. W. Kingery who was a director of and the president of both corporations. Defendant W. 0. Gray was also a director of each corporation. On or about January 7, 1924, the Investors Guaranty Corporation entered into a contract with Farmers State Bank of Worland, W. H. Kingery, W. 0. Gray, J. W. Pulliam, J. W. Pulliam Company, and L. E. Laird, by the terms of which the Investors Guaranty Corporation sold its 183 shares of stock, accepting in payment therefor $36,600.00 in notes from the note ease of the Farmers State Bank. The purchasers of said stock, Gray, Laird, Pulliam, J.W. Pulliam Company, paying $200 per share in cash to said bank for same. On January 7, 1924, the board of directors of the Investors Guaranty Corporation ratified the sale of said stock. There were present at this meeting of the board, Kingery, Gray, Oscar Rohlff and Keating, a bare majority of the board. This was the only time this question came before this board, and we have found no evidence of sale by any one on behalf of the corporation at any other time, so whatever sale of said stock was made, *304 was made at this meeting. Plaintiffs are minority stockholders of the Investors Guaranty Corporation.

As soon as plaintiffs learned of the sale of this stock, they served a notice upon each corporation, upon each member of the board of directors of the Investors Guaranty Corporation and upon each of the alleged purchasers, alleging that the sale was fraudulent and void and demanding that the sale be rescinded or that proceedings be immediately instituted by the Investors Guaranty Corporation for the cancellation of said sale. The Investors Guaranty Corporation failing to bring suit as requested to do, the plaintiffs bring this action alleging that the defendants conspired together for the purpose of defrauding the plaintiffs; that some of the notes accepted in payment of said stock were worthless and all of them greatly less in value than the said stock; that the alleged sale and transfer of said stock was fraudulent and void, and praying for the cancelling and setting aside of said sale and the return of said stock. Defendants answered, admitting the sale, denied the conspiracy, denied that they acted wrongfully or fraudulently, denied that the notes taken in payment for the stock were worthless. Defendants also allege that plaintiffs ought not to maintain its said cause of action for that there is a substantial defect of parties defendant herein, in that D. J. Hundahl, E. Y. Booker, G. B. Kirkpatrick, E. Y. Bowen, Bay F. Bower, Earl T. Bower, purchasers of a portion of the 183 shares of stock in controversy in the action have not been made parties defendant or sued in this action. Plaintiffs in their reply deny the new matter in the answer, admit some matters, deny on information and belief the sale of a part of the 183 shares of stock to D. J. Hundahl, E. Y. Booker, G. B. Kirkpatrick, E. Y. Bower, Bay F. Bower and Earl T. Bower, or that they have any right to or any interest in said stock, and allege that any right to or in *305 terest in said stock was bought with full knowledge of the alleged fraudulent sale.

In the trial of the ease below plaintiff failed to show conspiracy or any actual fraud, or that D. J. Hundahl, E. Y. Booker, G-. R. Kirkpatrick, E. Y. Bower, Ray F. Bower and Earl T. Bower or either of them had any knowledge of any fraud, actual or constructive or any unfair dealings on the part of the purchasers of said stock from the Investors Guaranty Corporation. At the close of plaintiffs’ case, defendants moved for judgment in their favor on the ground that plaintiffs had failed to prove the allegations of their petition. This motion was sustained, and judgment entered accordingly.

The case comes to this court on direct appeal.

The plaintiff rely in this court for a reversal of the judgment of the trial court upon the ground of constructive fraud; that because of the fact that Kingery and Gray were directors in 'both corporations, and Gray was purchasing part of the 183 shares of stock sold and Farmers State Bank of Worland of which Kingery was president was profiting by receiving the cash for the sale of the stock in exchange for notes that were admitted to be “slow,” and both Kingery and Gray were necessary to constitute a quorum of the Board of directors of the Investors Guaranty Corporation on January 7, 1924; that the meeting was without a legal quorum and the sale presumptively fraudulent, and should be set aside by a court of equity in a suit by the Investors Guaranty Corporation, or on its failure or refusal to act in a suit by the non-consenting stockholders.

This proposition readily divides itself into two questions : Whether the vote of an interested director can be counted on a matter before the board in which he has an interest adverse to the company, and whether an interested director can be counted in making up a quorum to act on such question.

*306 The directors of a corporation are its agents, and in their dealings with and for the corporation are held to the same strict rule of honesty and fair dealing between themselves and their principal as other agents. They may contract with their principal where the dealings are open, known to the principal and above suspicion.

We understand the better authority to be that a director may contract with his corporation when the corporation is represented by a majority of its other members of the board, and he acts honestly and fairly in the matter. There is a wide divergence of opinion on the question, extending from the proposition that a contract made by a director with the corporation where he acts both for the corporation and himself is absolutely void, to the proposition that it is valid. When this range of authority is carefully digested, the better view, and perhaps sustained by the weight of authority is that such a contract is not void but voidable in a suit by the corporation, or in case of the neglect or refusal of the board of directors to bring such a suit in a suit by the non-consenting stockholders. Wainworth v. H. P. & F. M. Roots Co., 97 N. E. 8. In such a suit a court of equity will carefully scan the whole record in search of fraud and unfair dealings by the director, and if any evidence, though slight, is found of fraud or inadequacy of the consideration, the contract will be set aside. The converse of the above also is true: That if upon a careful scrutiny of the record it appears to a court of equity that the director has been open, fair and honest in his dealings with the corporation, and has secured no advantage by his contract to the detriment of the corporation it will be upheld. Bently v. Zelma Oil Co., 184 Pac. 131. The court in the above case says: “While there is a seeming divergence of opinion on the point as to whether such contracts are absolutely void or merely voidable, (10 Cyc.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 P. 122, 37 Wyo. 299, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nicholson-v-kingery-wyo-1927.