Rice v. Thomas

211 S.W. 428, 184 Ky. 168, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 32
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 28, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 211 S.W. 428 (Rice v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rice v. Thomas, 211 S.W. 428, 184 Ky. 168, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 32 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

The appellee, Shelby County Telephone Company, is a Kentucky corporation, organized on November 16, 1906, with an authorized capital stock of $120,000.00. It owns and operates a local telephone system with its central office in Shelbyville and its lines extend out from that town, mostly in Shelby county, with other exchanges at different places to meet the necessities and convenience of its patrons. Prior to October 16, 1906, a telephone company by the same name, but incorporated under the laws of West Virginia, owned and operated the plant.

That company had succeeded another West Virginia corporation, the name of which was Shelbyville Home Telephone Company, which had constructed the plant. On the last date mentioned a number of gentlemen contracted to purchase all of the stock and assets of whatever nature of the West Virginia Shelby County Telephone Company, which at that time was capitalized at $180,000.00, $80,000.00 of which was preferred stock and $100,000.00 common stock. The purchasers were divided into ten units, and each unit, some of which were composed of more than one individual, agreed to take and pay for1 one-tenth of the purchase price, which was $60,000.00. ’ This amount was not paid at the time, but was evidenced by notes signed by all the individuals composing the ten units and the notes were to become due and payable some time in the following February. When they became due they were paid and the payors received, according to agreement among themselves (they being the only ones interested) bonds of the newly formed corporation to the amount of $60,000.00, that being the agreed ■purchase price of the West Virginia corporation. Prior to that time and when the Kentucky corporation was [170]*170formed, the members ■ composing the ten units who purchased the West Virginia corporation subscribed the ‘ articles of incorporation for stock to the amount of ¡$57,000.00, but no stock was issued upon the formation (of the Kentucky corporation; the subscribers who turned over to that corporation all of the assets of the purchased West Virginia corporation took only the bonds of the newly formed corporation. The stock of the former corporation was by mutual agreement placed in the hands of a trustee and stock certificates were issued to-the ten units who purchased that corporation, and these certificates and the bonds were the only securities which they held until something near a year after the Kentucky corporation was formed, when by unanimous con'sent the charter of that corporation was amended so as 'to permit it to issue $60,000.00 of its stock as preferred 'and $60,000.00 as common, the preferred stock being so ¡only as to dividends. It was further provided in the ¡amendment that the corporation was authorized to take ¡up its bonds with preferred stock at the option of the 1 holders, and this, according to the testimony, was agreed ¡to by all parties interested. Following that amendment ¡the members of the ten units to whom bonds had been ¡issued presented them, and in lieu thereof received preferred stock."

In (October, 1907, shortly after the issuing of the preferred stock in lieu of the bonds, by a vote of the directors, and we think, according to the testimony, with the consent of all of the stockholders, it was agreed and so resolved at a meeting of the directors that the voting trust which had been formed by a deposit of the stock of the purchased West Virginia corporation should be dissolved, and that the secretary of the corporation should, on the presentation of the trust certificates, which had been issued to the members of the purchasing units, issue to the holders of such certificates, as a bonus, common stock in proportion to the amount of preferred stock which the holders of such certificates held. Most of the holders of preferred stock availed themselves of that offer and obtained their proportion of common stock, while as to others the common stock seems to have been issued but not delivered, and perhaps in other cases the common stock was never called for, since the trust certificates were not presented, but no one denies that the 'proposition was open to all alike, and each one holding [171]*171trust certificates and preferred stock could have obtained their bonus common stock by presenting their trust certificates and demanding the stock. The charter of the Kentucky corporation as amended empowered it to issue bonds up to the amount of its authorized capital stock, but for some time no bonds were issued except the original $60,000.00 representing the purchase price of the "West Virginia corporation, and which was authorized by the original articles. Afterward, as the plant was enlarged, other bonds were issued, the exact amount of which is not shown, but at the time of the filing of this suit there were outstanding bonds to the amount of $28,500.00, none of which were due. When the suit was filed the company was also indebted for reconstructing its plant which had burned, and other necessary expenses, in the sum of about $5,000.00, making its total indebtedness in the neighborhood of $33,000.00.

Shortly before the suit was filed the company, with the consent of more than two-thirds of its stockholders, and pursuant to the provisions of the Kentucky Statutes, amended the articles of incorporation so as to reduce the •capital stock from $120,000.00 to $60,000.00, and proposed to cancel all of the bonus common stock which had been issued and authorized to be issued in 1907. When that reduction was about to be made and the common stock cancelled, this suit was filed by appellants, Cale Young Rice, Alice H. Rice and Fannie C. Macauley, holders of preferred stock, against the corporation, the surviving members of the ten units who purchased the West Virginia corporation, and the personal representatives of such as had since died, seeking to restrain the corporation and the individual defendants who were stockholders, and some of whom directors and officers of the corporation, from cancelling any of the common stock pursuant to the last amendment to the charter, and to recover of each of them except the corporation their part of the subscription price of the original $57,000.00 of stock which it is claimed they subscribed for in the original articles of incorporation, and whch it was alleged they had never paid. Other injunctive relief against what plaintiffs claim to be mismanagement of the affairs .of the corporation was also •sought. Afterward appellants, A. G. Elliston, P. M. Elliston and Mrs. Badie McIntyre Guthrie, who are •creditors of the corporation, owning some of its un[172]*172matured bonds, came into the case and sought practically the same relief as did plaintiffs.

The allegations of the pleadings of all these parties were denied by the defendants, and in their pleadings they sought to justify the last amendment to the articles of incorporation by having complied with the law and obtained the consent of the necessary number of stockholders and pleaded estoppel against plaintiffs upon the ground that they or their transferors had consented to all that had been done in regard to the matters complained of. Appropriate pleadings made up the issues, and after the taking of a great deal of testimony, the court discharged the restraining order which had been issued by the clerk upon the filing of the suit, after which an order was made by the directors cancelling all of the common stock. Following that, plaintiffs filed an amended petition asking a mandatory injunction requiring the directors to rescind that order of cancellation.

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Bluebook (online)
211 S.W. 428, 184 Ky. 168, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-v-thomas-kyctapp-1919.