Overlock v. Jerome-Portland Copper Mining Co.

243 P. 400, 29 Ariz. 560, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 196
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1926
DocketCivil No. 2388.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 243 P. 400 (Overlock v. Jerome-Portland Copper Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overlock v. Jerome-Portland Copper Mining Co., 243 P. 400, 29 Ariz. 560, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 196 (Ark. 1926).

Opinions

ROSS, J.

— This is an action brought by appellants, plaintiffs below, against appellees, defendants below, to ..compel the defendant, Jerome-Portland Copper Mining Company, to recognize plaintiffs’ certificates of stock, and to require that company and its receiver to transfer such certificates on the books of the company and thus give plaintiffs a standing as stockholders of such company.

According to the pleadings and agreed statement of facts plaintiffs are bona fide owners of such certificates of stock, having bought in the open market and paid a valuable consideration therefor. The defendants contend that such certificates are not valid because they were issued in violation of constitutional provisions of this state; and they cite and rely upon two decisions of this court, upon the question of the validity of such stock, as sustaining their contention, to wit: Frame v. Mahoney, 21 Ariz. 282, 187 Pac. 584, and Ettlinger v. Collins, 25 Ariz. 115, 213 Pac. 1002. The learned trial judge decided the issues in favor of defendants, and plaintiffs appeal. By a single assignment they question the correctness of the court’s *562 ruling, insisting that, upon the pleadings and the facts, they were entitled to judgment.

The Frame case was an action by minority stockholders of the Jerome-Portland Copper Mining Company, brought in behalf of the company and themselves for the purpose of having canceled. 469,960 shares of its stock, appearing upon its books in Frame’s name, on the grounds that the same were fraudulently issued to Frame, and issued in violation of section 6, article 14 of the state Constitution. That suit resulted in a judgment canceling and annulling the 469,960 shares of stock: First, because they were fraudulently issued to Frame, “whereby he obtained a secret profit as a promoter of the corporation”; and, second, because the property conveyed to the corporation by Frame in consideration for said stock was “worthless and valueless,” and he therefore “was not a bona fide subscriber” as provided in section 6, article 14, supra. It appears that, although an effort was made in the Frame case to impound the 469,960 shares of stock involved, the effort was unsuccessful. The certificates being in the possession of Frame, he paid no attention to the restraining order forbidding him to transfer, sell, or assign any of such stock but proceeded secretly, in violation thereof, to transfer said shares, through a registrar and transfer agent of the company in the state of New York, to one Berry Hopkins. Subsequently, and while the injunction was pending, Frame placed the certificates issued to Hopkins in the hands of brokers for sale, and the brokers (according to stipulation), in good faith sold to plaintiffs, and plaintiffs in good faith bought, for value, without notice of any defect and without knowledge that such stock was a part of the stock involved in the Frame case. It is also stipulated that;

*563 “Plaintiffs’ certificates were issued without the knowledge or consent of the company, its stockholders or officers with the exception of Frame, who was the president of the company; that no consideration was received by the company for the issuance of the certificates held by plaintiffs.”

It is obvious from the above facts that the stock of the plaintiffs was only indirectly involved in the Frame case, as it was a reissue or reissues of the stock that was canceled and annulled by the decree in that case. Because of this difference, however, it is the contention of plaintiffs that their rights were not passed upon or adjudicated in the Frame case, and that their position as stockholders is unaffected by the ruling or decision therein. They claim, under the generally well-recognized rule, that, since the defendant corporation permitted said stock, regular and proper in form, to be issued and sold in the open market to bona fide purchasers for value, it is es-topped to deny the validity .of such stock.

If we were unhampered by any former construction of the decision in the Frame case, we would be inclined to adopt a construction thereof in accord with plaintiffs’ contention. We there said, after sustaining the trial court’s order canceling the Frame stock for fraud:

“We are also of the opinion that the issuance of the stock to Frame was in violation of section 6, article 14, of the Constitution of this state, which provides: ‘No corporation shall issue stock, except to bona fide subscribers therefor or their assignees. . . . All fictitious increase of stock or indebtedness shall be void.’ ”

We gave, as the reason why the stock was issued in violation of the constitutional provision, the fact that it was issued without consideration or for a worthless and valueless consideration.

*564 The Frame stock was not an overissue, and therefore not a “fictitious increase of stock” and void on that ground. A proper construction of the language quoted doubtless would be that the stock in the hands of Frame should be annulled, since he paid nothing for it and was not a bona fide subscriber. So eon.strued it would have been in harmony with the language and spirit of the Constitution. The evident purpose of the clause, which says, “No corporation shall issue stock, except to bona fide subscribers therefor or their assignees,” was to prevent the issuance of stock except to parties who paid for it at its face value, and was intended more for the protection of creditors of the corporation than otherwise. This same provision is found in the Constitutions of Washington and Utah, and, if we rightly understand their courts, that is their view. Gordon v. Cummings, 78 Wash. 515, 139 Pac. 489; Rolapp v. Ogden etc. Co., 37 Utah, 540, 110 Pac. 364. And under a constitutional provision of very similar import a like construction has been given by the Texas Court of Civil Appeals. Houston Fire etc. Co. v. Swain, 114 S. W. 149.

In the Ettlinger case plaintiff had sued Collins & Bretherton, brokers, for damages in selling him stock of the defendant, Jerome-Portland Copper Mining Company, knowing at the time, as he alleged, that such stock “had been adjudged to be fraudulent and void” by the superior court of Yavapai county, in Mahoney v. Frame, and affirmed by the state Supreme Court. It was there contended by the defendants that the decree in the Frame case did not annul or cancel the reissue of the Frame stock, so it cannot be said the matter decided by the court was not in issue or not necessary to a disposition of the case. The question of the validity of such reissue was raised by the pleadings, and was presented by argument and *565 briefs. In that case some of the stock here involved (Ettlinger’s) was the subject of litigation, and we there said:

“If the stock involved in this case were a part of the stock condemned by this court in the Frame Case, then the stock involved is invalid and worthless. ...”

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243 P. 400, 29 Ariz. 560, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overlock-v-jerome-portland-copper-mining-co-ariz-1926.