Ollesheimer v. Thompson Manufacturing Co.

44 Mo. App. 172, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 120
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 44 Mo. App. 172 (Ollesheimer v. Thompson Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ollesheimer v. Thompson Manufacturing Co., 44 Mo. App. 172, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 120 (Mo. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Thompson, J.

This was a proceeding for execution against a stockholder under the provisions of Revised Statutes, 1879, section 736. R. S. 1889, sec. 2517. There-were three defenses set up by an amended answer. The first was a general denial. The other two were as follows :

“For another and further defense this defendant says that he subscribed about the-day of May, 1888, for one hundred (100) shares of stock in the Thompson Manufacturing- Company, which subscription was made, not for himself but for the Scott Investment Company, a corporation ; and that said Scott Investment Company was the real party in interest, and subscriber for said one hundred (100) shares of stock ; and this defendant subscribed for, and held the same in trust for, said Scott Investment Company.
“That said stock was subscribed for by the said Scott Investment Company by virtue of a contract in, writing for the purchase of the certain lot and building known as the Old Cotton Mill building, by the terms of which contract the said Thompson Manufacturing Company was to pay for said building and lot by issuing to-said Scott Investment Company, or to its trustee, the-defendant herein, or to anyone whom said Scott Investment Company should name, one hundred (100) shares-of paid stock in said company of the par value of fifty dollars (§50) each, and paying to said Scott Investment Company the sum of five thousand dollars (§5,0J0) in cash.
[174]*174“That, by'the terms of said contract between the said Scott Investment Company and said defendant and said Thompson Manufacturing Company, the said stock was to be fully paid for by the conveyance of said land, but that tlie said Thompson Manufacturing Company refused to fulfill and perform all the terms, conditions .and agreements in said contract contained or any one of them, and never did at any time complete and carry out its said contract, or any part thereof, and the said subscription was by the consent of all parties canceled and annulled, and béfore the company became indebted in any amount whatever.
‘ ‘ That, afterwards and long before any indebtedness of the said corporation accrued, by a contract and agreement made between the Thompson Manufacturing Company and the said Scott Investment Company, other and different solvent subscribers were substituted for the Scott Investment Company, and for the defendant as trustee thereof, for the amount of said five thousand dollars ($5,000), subscribed as aforesaid, and certificates for said stock were issued to said subscribers as aforesaid.
“And the said subscribers substituted as aforesaid for said Scott Investment Company, and to whom the said stock was issued, have been at all times recognized by the said Thompson Manufacturing Company as its stockholders in lieu of this defendant and the said Scott Investment Company ; and this defendant has never been recognized by the said Thompson Manufacturing Company as a stockholder therein.”

Analyzing these two defenses, they appear to be as follows : That the only shares of stock of the defendant company subscribed for by the stockholder, who is the defendant in the motion, were subscribed for by him in pursuance of a contract beween another corporation, the Scott Investment Company, and the defendant corporation, by which the Scott Investment Company were to convey to the defendant corporation certain real [175]*175estate in consideration of $20,000, of which $5,000 were to be paid in shares in the defendant company ; and that the defending stockholder subscribed for these shares, not for himself, but as a trustee for the Scott Investment Company. Second. That afterwards, and before any indebtedness of the defendant corporation accrued, by a contract between the defendant corporation and the Scott Investment Company, other solvent subscribers were substituted in the place of the subscription thus made by the defending stockholder for the Scott Investment Company, and certificates were issued to such subscribers.

I. At the trial of the issues thus framed the plaintiff put in evidence the execution against the corporation with the return of nulla bona thereon. The defendant objected to this on the ground that it was 'incompetent and irrelevant, and that no judgment had been shown to authorize the execution. This was idle. The proceeding for execution against a stockholder is not an independent suit in such a sense that the court hearing the motion cannot notice judicially the judgment from which the execution issues. On the contrary, it is a proceeding in the case, in which the judgment against the corporation was rendered in such a sense as enables the court to notice its own judgment without the formality of its being offered in evidence. The objection was not made on the ground, that there was a variance between the execution and the judgment; and if such had been the objection, it would be incumbent on the appellant, in order to sustain it, to bring the judgment entry here as a part of his abstract.

II. The plaintiffs then introduced in evidence'the articles of association of the defendant corporation. Prom these it appeared that the capital stock was to be $50,000, one-half of which was to be paid up, divided into shares of $50 each. Of these, seven hundred shares were subscribed by persons residing in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and the other three hundred were subscribed [176]*176by persons residing at Springfield, Missouri, to-wit. James Abbott, the defending stockholder, one hundred shares-; E. E. Atwood, one hundred shares; and E. G. H. Kirst, one hundred - shares. The purpose •of the incorporation was stated to be to manufacture •children’s carriages, willow ware, etc., and also to sell any kind of merchandise at wholesale or retail. These articles were filed in the office of the recorder of deeds of Greene county on the seventeenth day of May, 1888. Two days later, on tire nineteenth day of May, the •secretary of state issued to the company a certificate of incorporation, which the plaintiffs also put in evidence. The plaintiffs also proved by the defending stockholder that his signature to the articles was genuine, and that he had never paid his subscription, or any part of it, either in money or in property, unless the matter set up in his special defenses constitutes such payment. The plaintiff then rested.

The defending stockholder introduced a mass of. evidence in support of the two special defenses set up in his amended answer, as already quoted. Seasonable and appropriate objections were made to this evidence when offered, and at the close of the hearing the court, on motion of the plaintiff, struck it all out, and. then made an order awarding execution against the defendant stockholder in accordance with the motion and the statute. In reviewing, on appeal, a proceeding by a motion against a stockholder for execution, where, as in this case, we have all the evidence before us which war heard in the trial court, we are possessed of the case for the purpose of dealing with the facts as .fully as we should be in a case in 'equity. If, therefore, we can see, irrespective of any rulings which the trial court may have made, that the judgment is for the right party, we must affirm it. Coquard v. Prendergast, 35 Mo. App. 237, 241. If, then, after reading the defensive evidence which the court struck out, we are of opinion, looking at it as a chancellor would, that the trial court [177]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Shelby County Railway Co. v. Crow
119 S.W. 435 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1909)
Newland Hotel Co. v. Lowe Furniture Co.
73 Mo. App. 135 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1898)
Newland Hotel Co. v. Wright
73 Mo. App. 240 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1898)
M. D. Wells & Co. v. Thompson Manufacturing Co.
54 Mo. App. 41 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 Mo. App. 172, 1891 Mo. App. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ollesheimer-v-thompson-manufacturing-co-moctapp-1891.