Pettengill, Andrews & Co. v. Rangeley Right & Power Co.

82 A. 697, 109 Me. 87
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 25, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 82 A. 697 (Pettengill, Andrews & Co. v. Rangeley Right & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pettengill, Andrews & Co. v. Rangeley Right & Power Co., 82 A. 697, 109 Me. 87 (Me. 1912).

Opinion

Whitehouse, C. J.

The former of the above named cases is an action to recover for the price of material furnished to the defendant corporation. The defendant has been defaulted for $865.82 and interest.

[88]*88The latter is an action brought to recover the contract price for extra labor and materials and for excavating a pipe trench and building a dam for the defendant’s power station. The defendant has been defaulted for $6,926.61.

The cases are reported to the Law Court upon the same evidence to determine the liability of the trustee upon the disclosure of the trustee, the allegations of the respective plaintiffs and the evidence.

The alleged trustee Charles C. Benson, filed a disclosure in each case alleging that at the time of the' service of the writ upon him in that case, he had not in his hands and possession any goods, effects or credits of the defendant corporation and thereupon submitted himself to examination on oath.

The plaintiff in each case filed a statement alleging that C. C. Benson named as trustee, purchased of the Rangeley Light & Power Company, the defendant corporation, bonds issued by that company of the par value of $30,000 agreeing to pay therefor the sum of $27,000, being at the rate of 90 cents on the dollar; that in pursuance of such purchase Benson took delivery of the bonds and paid the sum of $10,000 on account thereof; that there is still due from Benson to the defendant company on account of the purchase of these bond's, the sum of $17,000; that Benson agreed with the defendant company to purchase on the same terms the remainder of the bonds issued by the defendant company of the par value of $5000 in the event that the sum of $27,000 did not prove sufficient in amount to install and finish the defendant’s plant then in process of construction and “that the said Benson, the alleged trustee has not carried out the agreements or any of them hereinbefore recited.”

The Rangeley Light & Power Company, the defendant corporation, was organized under the general law in 1908 for the purpose of furnishing electricity for light and power in the town of Rangeley and its immediate vicinity. This organization was confirmed and additional powers conferred upon the company by chapter 330 of the Special Laws of 1909. In the summer of that year, Dwight D. Elliott of Rangeley, who was an electrician, having some knowledge of the establishment of electrical plants, became president and general manager of the company, and arranged with Charles C. Benson, a banker and broker in Lewiston, the alleged trustee in these cases, to accept the position of treasurer. Extensive improve-[89]*89merits were in contemplation at that time and it was understood that the treasurer would take a prominent part in the management of the financial affairs of the new. enterprise.

It is not in controversy that Benson had some negotiations with the president of the company with reference to the methods of providing the funds required to make the improvements that had been projected. It appears to have been estimated by the president that this expense would not exceed $22,000; but as the bills then outstanding amounted to $5000, it was deemed necessary to make provision for a total indebtedness of $27,000. It was accordingly arranged to issue bonds to the extent of $35,000 secured by a trust mortgage, in order to procure the required sum of $27,000 if practicable, from the sale of bonds of the par value of $30,000, and to hold the remaining $5000 of the bonds in the treasury for further improvements in the future. In pursuance of this plan the bonds were duly prepared, the mortgage executed and recorded, and the treasurer authorized by vote of the directors to dispose of the bonds. It does not appear that the price at which they were to be sold was fixed by this vote, but it seems to have been understood by all the parties that the price agreed upon by the directors was 90 cents on the dollar; and the plaintiffs in these actions contend, in accordance with the allegations filed by them, that these negotiations between President Elliott and treasurer Benson, who was doing business in Lewiston as a banker and broker under the name of Chas. C. Benson & Co. resulted in an agreement on the part of Benson that he would purchase $30,000 of the bonds at ninety, that pursuant to that agreement the bonds were delivered to him; that \\t paid for $11,000 oí them, and that he was indebted to the Company for the balance of the bonds.

On the other hand Treasurer Benson insists that the negotiations never resulted in an unconditional agreement on his part or on the part of Chas. C. Benson & Co. to buy any part of the bonds; that the bonds were never delivered to Chas. C. Benson & Co., but were in his hands and possession as treasurer of the defendant corporation and were deposited and held in a safety deposit box rented by the corporation; that so holding the bonds as treasurer, and being authorized by the directors to dispose of them at ninety, he took $11,000 of them at that price and paid the amount into the treasury of the corporation; that the balance of the bonds there[90]*90after remained in the safety deposit box of the defendant corporation, and that he never had possession or control of them otherwise than as treasurer of the corporation.

In support of the plaintiffs’ contention that there was an actual sale and delivery to Benson & Co. of the bonds of the corporation of the par value of $30,000, President Elliott testifies that while the question of procuring the necessary funds for the construction of the plant was under consideration, Benson said to him in substance that he would personally “help him out on the bondsthat on another occasion Benson expressly stated that “he would take $30,000 worth of the bonds and pay 90 cents on the dollar; that as he got on the train to return to Lewiston he said, “You understand this time I am only taking $30,000 at $27,000, and that lie “signed and delivered to Mr. Benson $35,000 of the bonds,” and has never seen them since. But he admits that all the conversation he ever had with 'Mr. Benson with reference to the purchase of $30,000 of the bonds for $27,000, took place before the bonds were signed, and that 'he never made any agreement with him in regard to the remaining $5000, in the event that $27,000 should prove insufficient. The plaintiff Kerr and Judson A. Record also gave testimony tending to show that Benson admitted that he was to take $30,000 of the bonds for $27,000.

In his examination on oath Benson states that upon the representation and assumption that $27,000 would be sufficient to pay for the improvements and the outstanding indebtedness of the corporation, he did undertake to aid in providing that amount of capitál and expected to take bonds at 90 cents on the dollar for whatever money he furnished, but he emphatically denies that he ever made any contract with the defendant corporation to purchase any specific number or amount of the bonds of that company, and denies that he ever made any such statement to Mr. Elliott or any other person. He says that at one time President Elliott asked him to sign a contract to take the bonds, and that he refused to sign a contract and told Mr. Elliott that he would not obligate himself in any way to take any stated amount of bonds.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 A. 697, 109 Me. 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettengill-andrews-co-v-rangeley-right-power-co-me-1912.