Richardson v. Buhl

6 L.R.A. 457, 43 N.W. 1102, 77 Mich. 632, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 788
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by70 cases

This text of 6 L.R.A. 457 (Richardson v. Buhl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richardson v. Buhl, 6 L.R.A. 457, 43 N.W. 1102, 77 Mich. 632, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 788 (Mich. 1889).

Opinions

Sherwood, C. J.

In 1879 the Richardson Match Company was located at Detroit. It was ox-ganized under the laws of this State, and the complainant owned or controlled all of its stock. Its business was manufacturing matches, but for 16 months previous to July 3, 1879, its factory had not been in operation. The capital stock [634]*634of tlie company then was $75,000, consisting of 3,000 shares of $25 each. On the representations of the complainant to defendant Buhl as to the earning capacity of the match factory, the defendants became security for complainant on his bond to the government for $80,000, and indorsed the commercial paper of the company to the amount of about $50,000. To secure the defendants on these liabilities Mr. Richardson assigned to defendant Buhl 1,800 shares of the stock in the Richardson Match Company, and received from him therefor the following receipt and agreement:

Received of Mr. D. M. Richardson one thousand eight hundred shares of the stock of the Richardson Match Company, to be held by me for three years from July 1, 1879, as trustee, for the following purposes:
“1. To vote the same at all stockholders’ meetings, both regular and special.
“3. To receive the dividends paid thereon, and retain the same, except one-sixth portion thereof, which I am to pay to D. M. Richardson.
“At the expiration of said three years, if all the obligations which I or R. A. Alger have assumed for said company are fully paid and satisfied, I am to transfer said stock to said D. M. Richardson.
“Detroit, July 3, 1879. C. H. Buhl.”

The 1,800 shares of stock thus assigned to Buhl gave him and Alger control of the Richardson Match Company, and the agreement that they should retain five-sixths of the dividends made upon that stock gave them, one-half of all the dividends or profits earned by the company. After the receipt was given, Gen. Alger became president of the company and a director, and Mr; Buhl and two of his sons, with Mr. Richardson, were the other directors. Frank Buhl, one of the sons, was made secretary and treasurer, at a salary of $1,200 per year. The Richardson Match Company was conducted under [635]*635the arrangement above stated until December 24, 1880. The paper indorsed by Buhl and Alger was discounted at per cent, at the Detroit National Bank, in which they were interested, and the interest paid by the company in. its ordinary course of business.

The Diamond Match Company was organized December 3, 1880, under the laws of the state of Connecticut, for the purpose of uniting in one corporation all the match manufactories in the United States. Its object was to monopolize and control the business of making all the friction matches in the country, and establish the price thereof; and it became necessary to buy many plants which had become established in the business, or were preparing therefor, and all the property used in connection therewith, and to obtain promises from the owners and manufacturers that they would not engage in the business themselves, or indirectly, through others, for ten or more years thereafter; and, for the purpose of obtaining the control and good-will of such factories and their properties, large powers were given by the legislature to the Diamond Match Company when organized, and under the by-laws by which it was controlled. The extent to which it was allowed to go in this direction in the accomplishment of its purposes appears in the articles of incorporation, in which it is stated, among other things, that the business of the company is—

“To manufacture, buy, sell, and deal in friction matches of all kinds, and all articles entering into the composition and manufacture thereof; to manufacture, buy, sell, and deal in machines and machinery, whether applicable to the manufacture of friction matches or to other purposes; to purchase, own, and sell exclusive, rights under letters patent relating to the manufacture of friction matches, and to machines and machinery, whether applicable to the manufacture of friction matches or to other purposes; to manufacture, buy, sell, and deal in animal pokes, tobacco pipes, curry combs, brushes. [636]*636shoe-blacking, and shoe-dressing, and all articles entering into the composition and manufacture thereof; to purchase, own, and sell exclusive rights under letters patent relating to the manufacture of all the articles herein enumerated, and to machines and machinery applicable to the manufacture thereof; to buy, sell, own, and deal in any real or personal property necessary or convenient to the prosecution of said business, — and generally to do all things incidental to said business, and the proper management thereof.”

The Diamond Match Company, in carrying out its purposes, found it necessary, in many instances, to buy a large quantity of useless material, and to pay large and exorbitant prices for the property purchased, which they could not make available; and in many cases in no other way was it possible to purchase the inactivity of manufacturers, and those who intended to enter into the business, and who would otherwise become competitors of the company in the trade. For the purpose of showing upon the books of the company the amount it was obliged to pay for unnecessary and useless property, and the excess in prices for the property they could use, to silence and prevent all competition, the company opened two accounts, —one headed “Keal Estate and Machinery,” and the other “Purchase Account.” The capital stock of the company consisted of $2,250,000, divided into $1,400,000 of common stock, and $850,000 of preferred stock. For five years the preferred stock was entitled to an annual dividend of 10 per cent, before any dividend was to be paid on the common stock.

All corporations and individuals in the country, engaged in the business of making friction matches, desiring or consenting to transfer their property to the Diamond Match Company, did so upon valuations agreed upon, and received their pay therefor in the stock of the Diamond Match Company at par, and gave a bond to the company of • the tenor and effect of that given by the [637]*637Richardson Match Company when it entered the company, a copy of the condition of which reads as follows:

“And the Richardson Match Co. hereby covenant and agree to and with the said The Diamond Match Company, that it shall not and will not at any time or times, within twenty years from the date hereof, directly or indirectly engage in the manufacture or sale of friction matches, and that it will not aid, assist, or encourage any one else in said business, in the State of Michigan or anywhere else, where its doing so may conflict with the business and interests, or diminish the sales, or lessen the profits, of the Diamond Match Co.; and it is understood by it that the above covenant not to engage in the match business is a valuable and influencing consideration, without which the Diamond Match Company would not have purchased the above property; and for the true and faithful performance of said covenant it hereby binds itself, its successors and assigns, heirs, executors, and administrators, unto the said The Diamond Match Company in the sum of fifty thousand dollars, to be recovered and paid as and for liquidated damages.”

Mr. Richardson’s individual bond is in substantially the same form, in a penalty of $25,000. .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 L.R.A. 457, 43 N.W. 1102, 77 Mich. 632, 1889 Mich. LEXIS 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richardson-v-buhl-mich-1889.