Ross Transport, Inc. v. Crothers

45 A.2d 267, 185 Md. 573, 1946 Md. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 9, 1946
Docket[No. 61, October Term, 1945.]
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 45 A.2d 267 (Ross Transport, Inc. v. Crothers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ross Transport, Inc. v. Crothers, 45 A.2d 267, 185 Md. 573, 1946 Md. LEXIS 160 (Md. 1946).

Opinion

Marbury, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a derivative suit by a stockholder of a Maryland corporation, acting on his own behalf as well as for other stockholders who might join and be made parties, brought after demand had been made on the corporation *576 to institute such a proceeding, which demand was neglected and refused. The original plaintiff was Charles T. Crothers, and he was subsequently joined by another stockholder, his brother Edmund W. Crothers, who was made an additional party plaintiff by order of Court. The defendants (appellants here) are the corporation, Ross Transport, Inc., Wallace Williams, F. DuPont Thomson, James W. Hughes and William B. Ross, directors, and Elizabeth B. Williams, Lois Williams Young and Corrine Williams, stockholders. The purpose of the suit is to set aside the issuance of 40 shares of stock to Elizabeth B. Williams, 100 shares of stock to Corrine Williams, 100 shares of stock to Lois Williams Young and 125 shares of stock to William B. Ross. The defendants all answered, testimony was taken and the Court passed a decree granting the relief prayed, and directing the four stockholders named to repay to the corporation the dividends received by them on the stock declared to be illegally issued, and ordered cancelled. From this decree, all the defendants appealed.

It appears from the record that the corporation was organized on January 19, 1942, to operate a fleet of buses to transport employees of Triumph Explosives, Inc., to and from its plant at Elkton, Maryland. The incorporators were Wallace Williams, William B. Ross and Gervase R. Sinclair who later died. These three and F. DuPont Thomson and James W. Hughes were the directors. At the organization meeting of the directors, Williams was named as President and Ross as General Manager. The authorized stock was 5000 shares of no par value. At the organization meeting a resolution was passed authorizing the sale of this stock at $20 a share, and providing that stock to the value of $30,000 be offered for sale. This limited the stock to be issued to 1500 shares. The stock records of the company showed the original subscriptions to stock, all in March and April, 1942, to be as follows:

*577 March 25th—To Wallace Williams 50 shares
“ “ Wallace Williams, Jr. 100 “
“ “ Elizabeth B. Williams 200 . “
“ “ Edmund W. Crothers 100 . “
“ ' “ William B. Ross 25
“ “ James W. Hughes 150 ' “
April 2nd “ F. DuPont Thomson 150 “
“ “ Bessie F. Whitelaw 10
April 20th “ Charles T. Crothers 50 “
April 27th “ Gervase R. Sinclair 50 “
“ “ Jean W. Sinclair 150
Total 1035 ...

In the latter part of July, 1942, after the Meath of Mr. Sinclair, Charles T. Crothers purchased the Sinclair stock, 200 shares, at $20 and 5% interest from the date of issuance. This did not, of course, increase the amount of stock outstanding. On August 26, 1942, the stock complained of was issued to the wife and daughters of Wallace Williams and to William B. Ross, totaling 365 shares in all, and increasing the outstanding stock to 1400 shares. All of this stock was issued at the set price of $20.00 a share. The stock issued to the Williams family was paid by Mr. Williams’ check for $4800. Mr. Ross paid the company $2500 for his stock.

As a result of these purchases by Williams and Ross the stock books showed that the Williams family had 590 shares, Ross had 150 shares, Hughes had 150 shares, Thomson had 150 shares, Whitelaw had 10 shares, Edmund W. Crothers had 100 shares and Charles T. Crothers had 250 shares. Williams and Ross, therefore, had the controlling interest in the company. Mr. Williams testified that all of the stock in the company was sold by him personally under the directors’ resolution. He said that all the stock in dispute was definitely promised in the beginning, except 40 shares to Mrs. Williams. This, he said, he put in to round out an even 1400 shares, holding back 100 shares which he thought Hughes or Thom *578 son might like to take. He never called any other directors meeting to authorize any of the sales made after the original subscriptions and none of the other stockholders were given an opportunity to buy. He told Mr. Ross and Mr. Hughes how he was going to divide it. Mr. Ross did not testify.

The sale of this additional stock to a director and to the family of the president and director without any further authority than the original resolution, and without opportunity to buy given to other stockholders, is sought to be justified on the ground that it was originally planned, and that the money was needed to purchase additional buses at a cost of about $16,000. The facts, however, show no such need. The company was an immediate financial success. It was engaged in a special business, of which it had a monopoly, and in which it could not help making money so long as Triumph Explosives continued to operate its large plant, employing the workmen the Transport Corporation hauled. The loan of $3000 by Triumph Explosives, made in March, was paid in June. The record shows the following figures during the first five months of its existence:

Outstanding obligations Cash

Surplus above liabilities on conditional sales and invested capital contract Bank balance

April 25 $ 8,459.77 $50,372.22 $ 9,092.65

May 23 13,295.38 45,712.34 13.811.80

June 21 20,214.53 42,144.63 14,154.62

July 19 26,414.74 31,154.69 12.842.81

Aug. 16 25,057.73 28,997.68 8,970.83

On August 7th, the directors authorized salary payments dating back to February 1, 1942, $3915 to Mr. Williams, $2875 to Mr. Ross and $2025 to Mr. Hughes who was Secretary and Treasurer of the company which had started business a few months before with a paid in capital of $20,700, and which had bought its operating equipment, i.e., the buses, on conditional sales con *579 tracts, and had borrowed $3000 to pay for its licenses. Prosperity continued. On November 27, 1942, a dividend of $5 a share was declared. On December 17, 1942, one of $15 (called a return of capital, but not authorized by the stockholders, Code, Article 23, Sec. 32). On the same date, another dividend of $5 a share was declared payable June 30, 1943. The defendants, Williams and Ross, who were operating the company, knew on August 26, 1942, that they were about to receive large sums in dividends in addition to the salaries they were getting. The benefit of these dividends would not only increase the value of the stock, but the first two would pay back all the subscribers had invested, leaving any future earnings and distributions pure profit.

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45 A.2d 267, 185 Md. 573, 1946 Md. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ross-transport-inc-v-crothers-md-1946.