Ontjes v. Harrer

227 N.W. 101, 208 Iowa 1217
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 15, 1929
DocketNo. 39959.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 227 N.W. 101 (Ontjes v. Harrer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ontjes v. Harrer, 227 N.W. 101, 208 Iowa 1217 (iowa 1929).

Opinion

De G-raee, J.

The plaintiff-appellee is a minority stockholder in Jacob E. Decker & Sons, a corporation. The petition filed is in conformity to the requirements of Section 12448, Code of 1927. The prayer of the petition is for an alternative writ of mandamus, directing and commanding the defendants (appellants) to exhibit to the plaintiff, for inspection, examination, and copy, the original stock records, stock ledgers, and stock' transfer books of both preferred and common stock of the said corporation, and to submit to the plaintiff, for inspection and examination, the books and records of the corporation, showing the financial condition of the corporation, or to show cause why such stock records and records of the financial condition of the corporation have not been exhibited to the plaintiff (prior demand having been made and refused), and that the plaintiff may have judgment for the damages sustained by him, and for the costs of this action. The order and decree entered by the trial court adjudged and decreed that a writ of mandamus issue, directing the defendants and each of them to exhibit, during office hours, to plaintiff, for inspection, examination, and copy, forthwith, at the offices of the corporation, the original stock records, stock ledger, and stock transfer books of both the preferred and common stock of said corporation, and to submit at its corporate offices, at convenient times and during office hours, or after office hours on Saturday afternoons, at the election of defendants, to the plaintiff, for inspection and examination, the following books and records which show the financial condition of the corporation, to wit: such books and records as show the financial condition of the corporation, as per the audit of October 31, 1928, and such books and records as show all trial balances since October 31, 1928, together with the general ledger and the customers’ ledger of said corporation; but such books and records, except the stock books and records, need not be opened to the inspection, examination, and copy of the plaintiff prior to May 18, 1929.

The petition in this cause was filed on April 29, 1929. It may be well to note the answer filed by the instant defendants, which, in substance, denied the allegations of the petition, except *1219 that it is admitted that Jacob E. Decker & Sons is an Iowa corporation, and that the other appellants named in the petition are the officers of the corporation, and that written requests for the examination and inspection of the books had been made, as shown by letters attached to plaintiff’s petition. The answer also specifically denies that, under the statutes of Iowa, there is any legal obligation or duty on the appellants to comply with the request of the plaintiff, and alleges that whatever right plaintiff might have was only to have a list of stockholders prior to an annual meeting, as determined by Section 8384, Code of 1927: and that, if plaintiff was the actual owner of any stock in the said corporation, it was a relatively small and insignificant minority interest; and that his requests were unreasonable, improper, unjust to the corporation, and an infringement upon its affairs; and that compliance therewith was inconvenient. Such are the issues and the decree entered.

Before entering the field of legal principles, it may be well to recite briefly some of the record facts. The capital stock of the said corporation is divided into preferred and common stock, each of the par value of $100 per share. The plaintiff-appellee is the owner and holder of record of 140 shares of common stock and 3 shares of preferred stock in the appellant corporation. It further appears that, on or about March 1, 1929, a New York corporation known as Adolph Gobol, Incorporated, with its principal place of business at Brooklyn, New York, acquired more than a majority of the outstanding capital stock in the said Iowa corporation, and consequently the New York corporation acquired the dominant voting control of the Iowa corporation.

The Iowa corporation is engaged in the operation of what is commonly known as a packing plant, handling pork products and processing and selling the same. The fiscal year of the corporation ends October 31st each year, and it is shown that independent certified public accountants are employed, to examine and make a balance sheet of the business, and that the audit thus made is given to the stockholders at the stockholders ’ meeting each year. It may also be pointed out that the Iowa corporation is not a subsidiary of Adolph Gobel, Incorporated, of New York; but the record discloses that some of the officers and *1220 directors of the Iowa corporation own stock in said New York corporation.

We now turn to the legal principles involved in this cause, and it may be observed, in the first instance, that two demands were made by the plaintiff in his petition: (1) That the plaintiff be furnished, in conformity to his prior written request, a list of the stockholders, both common and preferred; and (2) that the plaintiff be permitted to inspect certain books and records of the corporation which would show the financial status of said corporation.

I. With respect to the first proposition, there is little occasion on our part to comment. It is a matter of statutory regulation. Section 8384, Code of 1927. By the terms of said section, the secretary of any corporation, upon a written request, shall furnish to a stockholder of said corporation a printed or typewritten list, giving the names of the stockholders, their post-office address, and the number of shares owned by each stockholder. Other matters contained in said section are not material in the determination of this case. It may be further observed that a corporation must keep its books so as to show the original stockholders, their interest, the amount paid on their shares, and all transfers thereof, which books, or a copy thereof, shall be subject to the inspection of any person desiring the same. Section 8385. The instant plaintiff had a personal interest in the subject-matter; and the statutes to which reference has been made, give in general terms the absolute right to any person to examine the stock and transfer books of a corporation organized under the laws of this state. Drennan v. Central Nat Fire Ins. Co., 200 Iowa 931; Ellsworth v. Dorwart, 95 Iowa 108. It follows, therefore, that the plaintiff, as to Proposition I, was entitled to the relief demanded.

II. Was the plaintiff entitled to the right to inspect and examine such books and records, which showed, or tended to show, the financial status of the corporation? In Drennan v. Central Nat. Fire Ins. Co., supra, the order or decree entered permitted the plaintiff to inspect the records other than the stock books, and it is said in the opinion: ‘ ‘ The order goes beyond the scope of the statute.” This was undoubtedly said by reason of the language used in the petition and the prayer for relief. We have examined the original record in the Drennan *1221 case, supra. There was but one thing sought by the plaintiff, and. that was the right to have access to the • stock records oí the defendant corporation, in order to ascertain the very things which the statute in express terms granted him.

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Bluebook (online)
227 N.W. 101, 208 Iowa 1217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ontjes-v-harrer-iowa-1929.