Perkins v. Leviness

106 A. 705, 134 Md. 252, 1919 Md. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 106 A. 705 (Perkins v. Leviness) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perkins v. Leviness, 106 A. 705, 134 Md. 252, 1919 Md. LEXIS 76 (Md. 1919).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing a bill of complaint of the receiver of the Maryland Insurance Agency Company against the appellees to recover what the bill alleges to be unpaid subscriptions to the capital stock of the company. The printed record contains 440 pages and is very confusing, owing to a great extent to the fact that much of it is taken up with objections, and arguments of solicitors and the rulings of the Court during the taking of the testimony. As the ease is presented by the record, it is. difficult to understand what some of the rulings, were, but thei important questions are fow and comparatively free from difficulty. One peculiarity about the case is that Mr. LeViness, named as a defendant, seems, to be more or less affiliated with the plaintiff, and the other five appellees, are the real defendants. He filed a separate answer and had no solicitor representing him. So when we speak of the defendants, we will generally mean the five. The defendants and several others gave their notes to the company in March or April, 1910, for $3,000 each, and the plaintiff claims that they were given for stock subscribed by them, and that inasmuch as. the company was insolvent the directors, had no power to cancel those notes and release them from the subscription. The five defendants contend that they gave the notes as loans to the company for the purpose of securing a building in Baltimore City and *254 further developing the business of the company, and while they admit that they were to have the option of taking stock,, they claim that they did not subscribe to it.

The minutes of a meeting of the directors held January 26, 1911, contain, among other things, the following: “Upon motion duly seconded and earned it was resolved that the president be authorized and directed to take up and return the notes held by the company issued for stock, and cancel the stock if issued therefor, as soon as practicable, according to the proper legal methods.” W. Harry Haller is the only one of the defendants, excluding Mr. LeViness, who was-present at that meeting. LeViness testified in answer to the question by the plaintiff, “What did you do, if anything, to-carry out the minute of that meeting?” “We entered into-this agreement which was finally signed by all of the defendants in this case.” The agreement referred to was executed on the-day of March, 1911, between various parties,. including all of the defendants, by which the parties to it entered into various covenants and agreements, amongst them that the parties of the first part, who were Thomas H. Haller, Emory L. Coblentz, W. Harry Haller, William A. Hahn, John O. Hendricks, William T. Griffith and Motter Brothers. & Co., should sell their stock to Mr. LeViness, and he agreed, to pay the notes of the other defendants in this case, which had been given to the company. There is nothing in that agreement to suggest that those notes were given as subscriptions to the capital stock of the company, but on the contrary a recital in it is, “And whereas the parties of the second and sixth parts have loaned to the said Maryland Insurance Agency Company promissory notes for sundry sums of money,” and that it was understood and agreed that the notes were to be discounted by the company and that the company would pay on account of each of them, semi-annually, the sum of $250 and interest until they were paid. “The parties of the second part” were those who are now defendants in this case, excepting Mr. LeViness, and he was the party of the *255 sixth part. The stock of the parties of the first part which was to he sold and transferred is specifically set out—showing that each of five of them had five shares and each of the other two had three shares of the stock of the Agency Company, for which they had paid.

Without deeming it necessary to refer to all of it, we are convinced by the evidence in this record that neither of these five defendants made subscriptions for thirty shares of stock. The understanding was that the proceeds of the notes given by them to the company were to he used in erecting a building in Baltimore for the company, and for some other purposes, and that the parties who gave the notes were to home the option of taking thirty shares of the stock of the company after the building wm erected, but it never was erected. W. H. Haller testified, “When the building was completed and the other agreements were carried out I was to have the option of taking thirty shares of the capital stock of the Agency Company for that note. It was said and understood by everybody in the concern that there was no obligation on my part to take the capital stock if the buildings were put up or the obligations carried out.” Dr. Fahrney said, “I was to have an option on the stock in case the building was put up.” After the agreement of March, 1911, a certificate for thirty shares of stock was presented to him by Mr. LeViness and someone else and he told them that he did not subscribe for any stock, that he had an option on the stock if the building went up. They told him they wanted to take up his note, and asked him to endorse the certificate so that they could resell it and he did so. The certificate in his name was No. 4-5, was cancelled and certificate No. 50 was issued to Joseph L. Stafford for the thirty shares which the stub shows were transferred from Harry P. Fahrney and Stafford paid the company for them. It would, therefore, he impossible to hold Dr. Fahrney for1 them, and there could be no recovery against him. The evidence of Mr. Newman also shows that he gave his note to help in getting a lot and putting *256 up a building “and it was optional to me whether I should in the future take stock or not.” The evidence shows that there was the same understanding with Messrs. Nicodemus and Hahn, who were sick and unable to testify. The entries in the books of the company tend to sustain that condition.

The company never erected the building and if there was no other defense it might well be urged that the company or its receiver could not recover for the stock by reason of the fact that the subscriptions, if made at all, were made for the specific purpose which was never carried out. A good deal has been said about these defendants being in a pool, so that they could control the company, and Mr. LeViness, who was one of the principal witnesses for the plaintiff said, “in view of the fact that they had subscribed to such large sums of the capital stock we were to give each member of the pool an equal voice in the management, but that pool agreement was never carried out, never entered into.” He was then asked: “The pool agreement was never carried out? A. No, sir; never entered into.” There can be no possible doubt, therefore, that the record shows beyond all reasonable controversy that the thirty shares of stock alleged to have been subscribed by each of these defendants was never unconditionally subscribed. We might refer to other parts of the record in support of the conclusions we have reached as to the facts, but deem it unnecessary to do so, and will now consider the important question remaining, whether in view of the decisions of this Court in Peninsula Trust Co. v. Johnson, 128 Md. 535, and Perkins v. Peninsula Trust Company, 130 Md. 220, the defendants are precluded from taking advantage of the defense relied on.

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

Related

Ugast v. Lafontaine
55 A.2d 705 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1947)
Holt v. Moxley
147 A. 596 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1929)
State v. Fidelity & Casualty Co.
145 A. 182 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 A. 705, 134 Md. 252, 1919 Md. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-leviness-md-1919.