Reyburn v. Bennett

158 S.W. 474, 176 Mo. App. 451, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 34
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 5, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 158 S.W. 474 (Reyburn v. Bennett) 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
Reyburn v. Bennett, 158 S.W. 474, 176 Mo. App. 451, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 34 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit on a contract -and because of a breach of it. A jury was waived and the trial had before the court, where the finding and judgment were for defendant. From this judgment, plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.

It appears the two defendants, Ell C. Bennett and G. Valle Bain, were copartners doing business under the firm name of Ali Baba Post Card Company, in St. Louis, and desired to enlarge and incorporate their business. It is said the business of this partnership, together with contracts and supplies, was of the value of $3000. Defendants desired to enlist about $6000 additional capital and put in their partnership property at $3000, to the end of organizing a corporation of [454]*454$18,000 capital stock, to consist of 180 shares of the par value of $100 each, ninety shares of which stock were to be preferred and the remaining ninety to be common stock. With this end in view, plaintiff became interested in the venture and the parties entered into a written contract whereby plaintiff subscribed for $2000 of the preferred stock and $1000 of the common stock. Plaintiff paid $2000 cash into, the treasury of the proposed company at once and accepted the position of secretary and treasurer at a salary of sixty dollars per month. During the interim, defendant Bain devoted his entire time to the business and drew a salary therefrom at $100 per month while Bennett devoted a portion of his time thereto and drew a salary of fifty dollars per month. At the time plaintiff paid his $2000 into the treasury for the stock to be thereafter delivered, the partnership, consisting of Bennett and Bain, had sixty dollars on hand. The books kept by the parties show a credit to cash, stock of Valle Reyburn, $2000; cash, stock subscribed, E. C. Bennett, $1500; cash, stock subscribed, G-. V. Bain, $1500. The $1500 stock to Bennett and Báin each represented their interest in the business at the time plaintiff went into it. The $2000 paid in by plaintiff and the sixty dollars on hand under the old partnership constituted the entire cash oh hand.

Though the contract in plain terms stipulated that the parties affiliated to the end of forming a corporation and with a view of enlisting $6000 additional capital, it appears no other subscription to the capital stock was obtained. Plaintiff’s $2000 stood alone together with the property of the prior partnership but awaiting $4000 to be subscribed and introduced by others, which defendants undertook to enlist. Prom June first, the date of the contract, until some time in August, plaintiff continued as secretary and co-operated with defendants in managing the business which employed the money paid in by him in liquidation of the [455]*455prior debts of tbe partnership and the current expenses. Immediately after paying the $2000 subscribed and becoming secretary of the proposed company, which changed its name at the time' as if preparing for incorporation, plaintiff and defendant Bain, on checks signed by both, paid out $1032 of the $2000 put in by plaintiff on old debts of the prior partnership existing between Bennett and Bain. The remainder of the $2000 paid in by plaintiff, it seems, was likewise paid out on account of current expenses during the time he was secretary; that is, something less than three months.

By the fourth and concluding paragraph of the contract, it is provided between the parties—that is, the two defendants and the plaintiff—that, “the party of the second part—that is, plaintiff here—shall have the option of withdrawing the full amount of his investment of $2000 if the full amount of $6000 additional capital is not subscribed within sixty days from date hereof.” The additional $4000 was not subscribed and the proposed corporation was not formed. Therefore, after the expiration of sixty days from the date of the contract, plaintiff withdrew (some time in. August) and demanded that defendants repay to him the $2000 paid into the treasury of the proposed company and for which no corporate stock had been issued. Defendants declined to do this and asserted that plaintiff had become a partner with them by thus going into the business on the first day of June and that the $2000 paid in by him had been fully consumed in the conduct of the partnership business. Thereafter, in September, plaintiff instituted this suit on the contract to recover his $2000 on the theory that, as no corporation- had been formed and no stock had been issued therefor, he was entitled to step out and be repaid.

By the instructions given, it appears that the court, through construing the contract and considering the conduct of the parties thereunder, found the [456]*456fact to be that the prior partnership of Bennett and Bain was to be conducted with the plaintiff as a member thereof and the $2000 paid by him to be utilized as a part of its capital until the new corporation was formed. The court therefore declared that the words of the contract giving plaintiff the right to withdraw his $2000 must be construed to mean that the plaintiff had a right only to withdraw such money from the assets of the partnership and as there were no assets of the partnership at the time plaintiff withdrew therefrom, of course, no recovery could be allowed.

We believe this view of the contract and the conduct of the parties thereunder to be an erroneous one, for it is obvious the parties did precisely as the contract contemplated in the matter of conducting the business—that is, plaintiff paid in the $2000 as he agreed and took a position in the company which defendants had covenanted to incorporate and for which amount stock was to issue to him. The contract pro.vides in plain terms that plaintiff should have the option of withdrawing the full amount of his investment of $2000 if the full amount of $6000 additional capital was not subscribed within sixty days from the date of the contract. If the contract reveals anything, it is an agreement to enlist $6000 additional capital and organize a corporation and issue stock therefor to those who subscribed and to Bennett and Bain for the $3000 represented as the alleged value of the prior business. It is obvious that such was the inducement to plaintiff on entering into the arrangement and it appears over the signature of all of the parties that if such was not accomplished within sixty days he might withdraw the “full amount” of the $2000 paid in by him. The contract in full is as follows:

“CONTRACT.

“St. Louis, Mo., June 1, 1910.

‘ ‘ This agreement made and entered into this first day of June, 1910, by and between Ell C. Bennett and [457]*457G-. Valle Bain, parties of the first part, and Valle Reybnrn, party of the second part, both of the city of St. Lonis, State of Missouri, witnesseth:

“Whereas, it appearing that the said Ell C. Bennett and Gr. Valle Bain are the sole owners of a co-partnership business known as the Ali Baba Post Card Co., that said business is composed of and represents a cash investment by said E. C. Bennett and Gr. Valle Bain, of three thousand dollars and certain contracts and agreements of value, by and between said Bennett and Bain and other firms and individuals, especially one contract with the National Invisible Print Co., a Missouri corporation, which contract does give the said Bennett and Bain, through one Prank I. Woesthaus, assignor to said Bennett and Bain, sole rights to have manufactured and to sell cards for correspondence purposes under the Morse Patent, 1908. Said business being further composed of outstanding accounts, stock on hand, fixtures, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
158 S.W. 474, 176 Mo. App. 451, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reyburn-v-bennett-moctapp-1913.