O'Brien v. O'Brien

141 N.E. 236, 246 Mass. 411, 1923 Mass. LEXIS 1186
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 141 N.E. 236 (O'Brien v. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Brien v. O'Brien, 141 N.E. 236, 246 Mass. 411, 1923 Mass. LEXIS 1186 (Mass. 1923).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

After the decision of this court overruling the demurrer, reported in 238 Mass. 403, an amended bill and answers thereto were filed in the Superior Court. The suit was referred to a master to report the facts .and such questions of law as either party might request. Without a report of the evidence the master made and filed his report, with the objections of the plaintiff and defendants appended thereto. The plaintiff and defendants duly filed exceptions [414]*414in the Superior Court based upon the aforesaid objections. On a reservation and report, the case is before this court upon the pleadings as amended, the Master’s Report, and the objections and exceptions of the parties thereto, without . . . any decision thereon.”

The master states, in substance, the case of the plaintiff as alleged in his bill, the essence of the prayers for relief, the denial by all the defendants of any liability, the claim that any liability, if any ever existed, is barred by loches of the plaintiff, and the specific denial by John P. and Margaret O’Brien of allegations of fraud.

In substance, the master then finds the material facts which follow: In December, 1906, John P. O’Brien (hereinafter called John) organized The Otter River Board Company, for the purpose of buying, selling and manufacturing binder boards and kindred products, with a capital stock of $50,000 divided into five hundred shares of a par value of $100 each. The plaintiff, William O’Brien (hereinafter called William), and the wife of John (hereinafter called Margaret), at the request of John acted as incorporators to comply with the laws of Connecticut requiring three incorporators. John was elected president and treasurer; William was elected secretary; and John, William and Margaret were elected directors. John and Margaret continued to hold their respective offices until the organization of the Massachusetts corporation, hereinafter set forth; while William held the office of clerk and director until the annual meeting early in 1913, when another person was elected in his stead. About January 10, 1907, John conveyed to the corporation, for $20,000, payable in stock of the corporation at par, and subject to a mortgage of $10,000, which the corporation assumed and agreed to pay, a plant he had purchased for $10,000 at Otter River, in Templeton, Massachusetts; this plant formerly had been a woolen mill and then consisted of land, water privilege, and buildings. Two hundred shares were issued to John and ten shares each to William and Margaret. As regards the ten shares issued to William the master, upon facts recited, warrantably found that when said shares were issued it was the intention of [415]*415all concerned that they should be the property of the plaintiff . . . and that the plaintiff . . . was the owner of said ten shares.” Soon after the organization, in addition to the aforesaid two hundred and twenty shares, two hundred and twenty-five shares were sold for cash, of which John purchased one hundred and thirty-eight for $13,800. The corporation began business in 1907 and continued until March 28, 1913, when the plant was almost entirely destroyed by fire.

At the time of the fire the real estate was subject to a mortgage of $11,800. The sum of $10,800 was collected as insurance on the buildings and paid to the holder of the real estate mortgage, who thereupon discharged said mortgage, deducting $1,000. About $2,500 was collected in insurance on the machinery, and paid to a firm holding title to said machinery under a lease agreement, leaving still owing on said machinery $7,985. The master describes the real estate and finds that its value immediately after the fire did not exceed $10,000, and probably was very much less.” He finds that the machinery in value then did not exceed $2,000; that the cash and bills then receivable did not exceed $7,000, and that John was not indebted to the corporation. He further finds that “ it is difficult to put any value upon . . . [the] good will ” of the business, and states his reason for such conclusion. The total assets thus shown were approximately $19,000. The master specifically finds that the business of the corporation never had been a financial success, no dividends ever had been paid, and, for the greater part of the time, the corporation had had a hard struggle, financially; ” that after the fire there were no prospective purchasers for the plant and it was felt generally by the stockholders, then eight in number, that the corporation was insolvent and they would get nothing for their stock.

In this state of the financial affairs of the corporation, in the summer of 1913, John interested one Heselton in the business, with the result that John and Heselton agreed to put respectively $5,500 and $5,000 into a new corporation which was to be organized under the laws of Massachusetts to take over and continue the business of the Connecticut [416]*416corporation; and they also agreed that shares in the Massachusetts corporation should be issued, without payment therefor, to certain stockholders of the Connecticut corporation, to wit, to one Daub, one Videon, one J. H. Wallace and one Thomas F. Wallace, respectively, eight, eleven, six and seven shares, those amounts being slightly less in number than one half the number of shares held by them, respectively, in the Connecticut corporation; to James H. O’Brien, who had a claim for labor against the corporation but was not a shareholder, twenty shares; to Bartley O’Brien, who owned fifteen shares and who also had a claim for labor, twenty-one shares. To John one hundred and five shares were issued, which number was arrived at upon consideration of the fact that he owned three hundred and-thirty-eight shares of stock of the Connecticut corporation, that he had paid $10,000 for the plant which he had conveyed to that corporation, that he had also paid either before conveyance into the plant or for its benefit $2,500, for which he received no stock, and upon the further consideration that Heselton was to pay par for the stock which he was to receive in the Massachusetts corporation. John had never drawn any salary from the Connecticut corporation on account of his services and no stock in the Massachusetts corporation was allowed him on account of his salary. In addition to the above shares, it was agreed that Heselton was to receive fifty shares and John fifty-five shares for the payment by them respectively of the aforesaid sums of $5,000, and $5,500. No shares were to be given to Margaret, although she had paid for certain shares in the Connecticut corporation. No shares were allotted to William because John and Heselton considered he had paid nothing for his shares in the Connecticut corporation.

On August 26, 1913, the Massachusetts corporation was organized with an authorized capital of $75,000, which was divided into seven hundred and fifty shares of a par value of $100 each. John P. O’Brien was elected president and treasurer, Heselton, clerk; and they, with said James H. O’Brien, Thomas F. Wallace and Daub, were the directors. All of them, with the exception of Heselton, were officers [417]*417of the Connecticut corporation, the purposes of the Massachusetts corporation being substantially the same as those of the Connecticut corporation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 N.E. 236, 246 Mass. 411, 1923 Mass. LEXIS 1186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/obrien-v-obrien-mass-1923.