Ramsey v. Thompson Manufacturing Co.

22 S.W. 719, 116 Mo. 313, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 289
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMay 30, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 719 (Ramsey v. Thompson Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramsey v. Thompson Manufacturing Co., 22 S.W. 719, 116 Mo. 313, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 289 (Mo. 1893).

Opinion

Burg-ess, J.

This is an action by plaintiff against defendant company, a corporation, to recover back $200, paid by him in money, and to reinvest in him the title to a lot in the city of Springfield, Missouri, which he conveyed to one Gr. A. Frizzell, trustee, for the use and benefit of the corporation in payment of stock which he had subscribed to it, and which subscription, the payment of the money, and the execution of the deed to the lot in payment thereof, he alleges, were obtained by fraud and fraudulent misrepresentations. The allegations in the petition, leaving out the formal parts, are as follows:

“Plaintiff for amended petition states that the defendant, the Thompson Manufacturing Company, is a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Missouri.”

That the defendants, Willis H. Thompson, J. H. Pomeroy, GL A. Frizzell, E. Gr. H. Kirst and J. M. Phillips, on or about - day of-, 1888, entered into and formed a conspiracy for the purpose of organizing a bubble company, whose ostensible and nominal purpose was to establish, in the city of Springfield, Missouri, a manufacturing plant and manufacture children’s carriages, children’s wagons, wooden [318]*318and willow ware,.hobbies, swings, jumpers, hammocks and so forth; • but for the real purpose of cheating and defrauding the plaintiff and other citizens of the said city of Springfield. That in pursuance of their fraudulent scheme and design, as aforesaid, the defendants made and presented to the plaintiff a contract and agreement of subscription to the said company, which contract and agreement is in words and figures as follows, to-wit:

We, the undersigned representatives of the Thompson Manufacturing Company, propose to establish in the city of Springfield, Missouri, a manufacturing plant for the purpose of manufacturing children’s carriages, children’s wagons, wooden and willow ware, hobbies, swings, jumpers, hammocks, etc., etc. Anri we further propose to locate the said manufacturing-plant in the city of Springfield, Missouri, on the following terms and conditions, to-wit:

“ ‘We propose to file articles of incorporation of the Thompson Manufacturing Company, with a capital stock of $100,000, divided into two thousand shares of the uniform par value of fifty dollars ($50) each, with a paid capital stock of fifty per cent, of the entire capital stock in accordance with the laws of the state of Missouri, and we further propose to the citizens and business men of the city of Springfield, that in consideration of their subscription for stock in the said plant to the amount of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000), or four hundred shares of fifty dollars ($50) each, payable as follows, to-wit: Ten per cent, of said subscription payable on or before thirty days after date of obligation, and ten per cent payable four months after date of obligation, and ten per cent, payable seven months after date of obligation, ten per cent, payable ten months after date of obligation, and ten per cent, payable thirteen months after date of obligatioa, [319]*319and the balance of said subscription to be paid in upon call by the board of directors of the said' Thompson Manufacturing Company, in assessments pro rata with the payments hereinbefore provided for, not to- exceed at any one time ten per cent, of the total amount of said subscriptions.

“ ‘In consideration of the above, we, as representatives of the Thompson Manufacturing Company, agree to purchase the building known as the old cotton mill building, situate in the city of Springfield, Missouri, and to equip it and put the said works into operation within ninety days after date of the purchasing the said building; and we further agree to locate in and direct all our interests toward the city of Springfield, Missouri.

“ ‘Witness our hands, this twenty-second day of March, A. D. 1888.’

“That the said contract of subscription was duly signed and executed by said Willis H. Thompson, president of said corporation, J. H. Pomeroy, and E. Q-. H. Kirst, who constitute the majority of the board ■of directors of said'corporation.

“That the said defendants, in further pursuance of their fraudulent scheme and design to defraud the plaintiff, represented to the plaintiff that they were men of large means, and that they had in their possession and under their control a large sum of money, to-wit: Fifty thousand dollars ($50,000).

“That the capital stock of said corporation of the amount of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) had been fully paid up by them, and that the said sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) was then in the hands of the board of directors of said company.

“All of which statements were false and fraudulent, and known to be so by the defendants at the time they were so made, and were for the purpose of inducing [320]*320'the plaintiff to subscribe for stock in said corporation.

“That the plaintiff, relying upon said statements and representations, and upon the promises of the said defendants and the said company, to carry out and fulfill the terms and conditions set forth in said contract of subscription, was induced to subscribe by the terms in said contract, in said company, for ten shares of the stock of the par value of fifty dollars ($50) each.

“That defendants afterwards, to-wit: on or about the--— day of June, 1888, in further pursuance of their fraudulent design to defraud the plaintiff, represented again to the plaintiff that their said company had been organized, and that the full amount of capital stock, to-wit: fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) in said company had been paid up by said defendants, and that the said defendants and the said corporation had already purchased machinery for the purpose of equipping the building mentioned in said contract of subscription as the ‘Old Cotton Mill’ building and that the said company would be soon in operation, in accordance with the terms in said contract of subscription.

“The plaintiff, believing said statements to be true, and relying in good faith upon the purpose of said company and its said promoters and originators to carry out the terms of said contract of subscription, paid to the said corporation and its said officers the amount of his subscription, as follows, to-wit: two hundred (200) dollars in cash, and conveyed to said Erizzell in trust for said corporation under the direction of the officers and board of directors of said company, in payment of the balance due on his said subscription, a lot of land of the value of three hundred (300) dollai’S, which lot of land is situated in Greene county in the state of Missouri, and described as follows, to-wit: Lot twenty-one (21) in Orchard’s addition to the city of Springfield, Missouri.

[321]*321“That the said statements and each and all of them made by the said defendants to the said plaintiff, concerning the capital of said company, and concerning the wealth and means of its said promoters and originators were false and fraudulent, and made with the intention to deceive the plaintiff, and for the purpose of inducing him to subscribe for and purchase a portion of the stock of said company.

“That at the time the said defendants made the false and fraudulent statements, as aforesaid, they had no property whatever, and no part of the said capital stock of fifty thousand (50,000) dollars had been or was thereafter paid up by the said defendants or any one of them.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 719, 116 Mo. 313, 1893 Mo. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsey-v-thompson-manufacturing-co-mo-1893.