Picture Plays Theatre Co. v. Williams

78 So. 674, 75 Fla. 556, 1 A.L.R. 1, 1918 Fla. LEXIS 475
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 18, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 78 So. 674 (Picture Plays Theatre Co. v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Picture Plays Theatre Co. v. Williams, 78 So. 674, 75 Fla. 556, 1 A.L.R. 1, 1918 Fla. LEXIS 475 (Fla. 1918).

Opinion

Browne, C. J.

T. Williams, the appellee, brought a suit in chancery in the Circuit Court of Hillsborough County against the Picture Plays Theatre Company to have the action of the Board of Directors of the company forfeiting and cancelling his stock declared null and void, and that the thirteen shares of stock be declared valid outstanding stock of the company, and that he be declared the owner thereof and entitled to all rights and privileges of a stockholder. That the corporation be required to bring its books into court for examination, [558]*558that an accounting be had, and that the corporation be required to pay him his dividends.

The defendant answered, and the complainant filed a general replication, and after the expiration of the time for taking testimony the defendant set the cause down for hearing on bill, answer and replication.

The chancellor rendered a decree granting the prayer of the complainant, and the defendant appealed.

The case presented on the assignments of error and the record involves the application of the settled rule that “When a cause is heard on bill, answer and replication, after the time for taking testimony has expired, every allegation in the answer responsive to the bill will be taken as true.”

The bill in substance charges that the complainant became seized and possessed and the absolute owner of thirteen shares of the. capital stock of the defendant company of the par value of $100 per share which was fully paid and non-assessable; that he by the issuance of such stock certificate was duly recognized as the owner of such shares of stock, until on or about the 5th day of April, 1911; that on or about that date a meeting of the board of directors of the defendant company was held in the city of Tampa, and that a copy of the minutes of said meeting is attached to the bill, marked exhibit “B” and “prayed to be taken and made as much a part thereof' as if set forth herein, m haec verba;” that by a resolution adopted at such meeting,— a copy of which is set forth in the minutes, — the directors attempted to cancel tlie complainant’s stock and deprive him of it, and all right, title and interest therein; that since the date when the resolution was adopted the corporation has contended that his stock was- forfeited and cancelled, and refuses to recognize him as a [559]*559stockholder, and claims that he has no right, title or interest in the shares and no interest in the company; that all the acts of the company and its directors are absolutely null and void; that at the time of the passage of the resolution the stock was and is now of great value; that he never committed any act which would entitle the company to cancel liis stock, and that the action of the company and its directors was entirely without any foundation of right; that the business of the company has been carried on for profit, and dividends declared oh the capital stock, but no dividend has been paid or offered to him; that he has never been permitted to see the books of the company; that the company has refused and prevented him from being present at any ■of its corporation meetings and refused to disclose to him the financial condition of the company, the amount ■of its earnings or its net profits, -or any statement of the affairs of the corporation; that the company has sufficient money available for such purposes to pay him his proportionate share of the dividends; that on or about the 3rd day of April, 1911, he made an assignment of his stock to one E. H. Calley, and that he made it for the purpose of giving Calley authority to represent him in obtaining a settlement with the company or authority to sell his stock, and that Calley was informed of and fully understood the purpose of the assignment, and received the assignment solely for such purpose, that no interest in the stock Avas conveyed to Calley Avho never claimed it and never had any title or interest in it, and that Calley returned the stock certificate to the complainant and ceased to represent him, and that by mutual understanding between him and Calley the authority or power given to him by such assignment has been wholly terminated. The certificate of stock is [560]*560attached to the bill. Answer under oath was expressly waived.

Exhibit “B” to the complainant’s bill purports to be a copy of the minutes of the adjourned meeting of the board of directors of the Picture Plays Theatre Company held on the 5th of April, 1911, and contains a resolution setting out at length and in detail the organization of the Picture Plays Theatre Company, and all the facts and transactions connected with the issuance of its stock, and the acquisition by T. Williams of the thirteen shares of capital stock of the company which he is seeking to have recognized as valid and bona fide outstanding stock of the defendant company. .The matters stated in the resolution if true make out a case of fraud in the issuance of seventy-jive shares of the stock of which the complainant claims to hold thirteen shares.

The defendant’s answer which was not under oath denied “that the complainant on or about the 10th day of June, 1910, became seized and possessed and the absolute owner of thirteen shares of capital stock” of the defendant company, and “avers the truth to be that a certificate for (13) shares of stock was procured to be issued to the said complainant through fraud, covin and deceit * * * and although said certificate was issued to the complainant, he never did become in equity and good conscience the owner of the stock represented thereby;” “that it admits Certificate No. 5, of which Exhibit 'A’ attached to the bill is a substantial copy was issued to the complainant, but says that said certificate was procured through fraud, covin and deceit, as hereinafter set forth, and denies that it ever recognized the said complainant as the owner of the shares of stock represented by said certificate after it discovered the said fraud;” it admits that a meeting of the board [561]*561of directors of the defendant company was held in Tampa, Florida, on April 5th, 1911, and that Exhibit “B” attached to the amended bill is substantially a correct copy of the minutes of such meeting, and that ever since the resolution adopted at the meeting became effective it has'declined to recognize the complainant as the owner of the stock represented by Certificate No.

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Bluebook (online)
78 So. 674, 75 Fla. 556, 1 A.L.R. 1, 1918 Fla. LEXIS 475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/picture-plays-theatre-co-v-williams-fla-1918.