Redmond v. Republic Steel Corp. of New Jersey

186 S.W.2d 51, 238 Mo. App. 647, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 322
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 6, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 186 S.W.2d 51 (Redmond v. Republic Steel Corp. of New Jersey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Redmond v. Republic Steel Corp. of New Jersey, 186 S.W.2d 51, 238 Mo. App. 647, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 322 (Mo. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinions

This is a suit in equity in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis by which the plaintiff seeks a decree of court compelling the defendant corporation to deliver to him certain bonds and shares of its own stock, with earned interest and dividends thereon, in lieu of stock he had owned in a corporation absorbed by defendant corporation, or, in the alternative, awarding him the sum of $3000 as damages for the alleged unlawful and wrongful conversion and appropriation of his property without due compensation.

The plaintiff is one S.D. Redmond, while the defendant is The Republic Steel Corporation of New Jersey, a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of New Jersey.

The facts of the case, as charged in the petition, show that plaintiff, at the inception of this controversy, was the owner of 100 shares of the common stock of The Newton Steel Company, an Ohio corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of steel and steel products in the State of Ohio and elsewhere.

On June 30, 1932, without plaintiff's knowledge, and without notice being given him, and with the alleged intent of concealing the transaction from him, The Newton Steel Company, through its officers and directors and the holders of more than 67% of its stock, conceived a plan and entered into an agreement to merge and consolidate said corporation with, and transfer all of its assets to, The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company, likewise an Ohio corporation, and likewise engaged in the manufacture and sale of steel and steel products in the same immediate territory as that which was served by The Newton Steel Company.

By the agreement in question, or plan of affiliation as it was called, The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company purported to offer to such of the stockholders of The Newton Steel Company as might desire to accept its offer, certain shares or proportionate shares of its own stock in exchange for the shares of stock of The Newton Steel Company. However, such purported offer was not conveyed to plaintiff, nor did he know anything of it until 1942. It was provided by the agreement or plan that the stock certificates of those stockholders desiring to accept the offer should be deposited with a designated bank in Cleveland, Ohio, by a fixed date in 1932, and that the plan should not become operative unless certificates in the amount of at least 67% of the outstanding stock of The Newton Steel Company should be so deposited. By the date fixed in the agreement the requisite number of shares had been deposited, whereupon The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company became the owner of the same, and proceeded to exchange its own shares of stock therefor, though at a rate of exchange which plaintiff claims was unfair to the stockholders of The Newton *Page 650 Steel Company, inasmuch as the stock of the latter company was allegedly equal in value to that of The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company, so that the exchange should have been made on an equal basis of share and share alike.

Prior to the effective date of the affiliation agreement, and in furtherance of the alleged conspiracy to consummate a pretended sale and liquidation of the assets of The Newton Steel Company, the directors of such company adopted a resolution attempting to authorize the pledging of its bonds with The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company as security for the existing indebtedness of the former to the latter in twice the amount of the existing indebtedness, and subsequently entered into a finance agreement that the company's future indebtedness should likewise be secured by such pledged bonds. A majority of the board of directors of The Newton Steel Company resigned, and persons who were directors of The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company were elected in their stead, thus effectually surrendering the control of the assets, business, and property of The Newton Steel Company to The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company.

All such facts were fraudulently concealed from plaintiff; and in further pursuance of the conspiracy, The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company, and the directors, officers, and assenting stockholders of The Newton Steel Company, conspired to cause pretended loans and credits to be extended to the latter so as to make it appear that financial assistance was being given to maintain The Newton Steel Company, when in truth and in fact the purpose was to create a form of mortgage secured bonds under which a form of foreclosure could be instituted, the result of which would tend to indicate that the assets then apparently belonging to The Newton Steel Company were lawfully disposed of upon its failure to discharge its obligations apparently existing, although all money and property belonging to The Newton Steel Company was actually in the hands of The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company.

Beyond the above, The Newton Steel Company was loaded with excessive charges for materials furnished by The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company; false loans were granted at excessive rates of interest; excessive provisions were made for depreciation; new equipment was charged as expense to The Newton Steel Company, although such company had in fact become a part of The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company — all with the intent that The Newton Steel Company should finally become and appear insolvent upon the assumption that it was an independent, existing corporation, so that it would be futile for plaintiff or other similarly situated stockholders to resort to the courts for relief upon discovery that there had been such a pretended sale, merger, and consolidation.

On August 27, 1934, The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company, after it had acquired all of the assets of The Newton Steel Company by *Page 651 virtue of what amounted to the merger and consolidation above described, entered into a similar agreement of merger and consolidation with defendant, The Republic Steel Corporation of New Jersey, which also was engaged in the manufacture and sale of steel and steel products in the state of Ohio and elsewhere. Provision was made in such agreement for the exchange of certain of defendant's bonds and shares of stock for the shares of stock of The Corrigan, McKinney Steel Company, with the further provision that the bonds thus exchanged, aggregating some $15,000,000, should constitute a first lien upon the plants and other properties taken over from the latter company. Plaintiff, however, received no part of said securities, nor any other compensation, for his shares of stock in The Newton Steel Company.

Subsequent to the consummation of such agreement, substantially the same sales organization was maintained for both defendant and The Newton Steel Company, and the latter's principal customers were diverted to defendant, all with the view of eventually causing The Newton Steel Company to appear and become insolvent upon the assumption that it was still an independent, existing corporation. As a further part of such agreement, The Newton Steel Company issued bonds in the amount of $4,000,000 secured by a mortgage upon its physical assets, with the bonds being purchasel by defendant, which thereafter instituted two foreclosure suits, as the result of which, in 1937, it became the purchaser at judicial sales of all the properties, plants, and equipment of The Newton Steel Company.

Plaintiff's theory of his cause of action, as set forth in the petition, is, in short, that the entire agreement, as participated in by the three corporations, was fraudulent from its inception, and was designed to make it appear that The Newton Steel Company had become insolvent, all to the end of bringing about the confiscation of plaintiff's property and interest in The Newton Steel Company under color of legality so as to deprive him and other stockholders similarly situated of any remedy at law.

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.W.2d 51, 238 Mo. App. 647, 1945 Mo. App. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/redmond-v-republic-steel-corp-of-new-jersey-moctapp-1945.