Royal Casualty Co. v. Puller

186 S.W. 1099, 194 Mo. App. 588, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 241
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 6, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 186 S.W. 1099 (Royal Casualty Co. v. Puller) 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
Royal Casualty Co. v. Puller, 186 S.W. 1099, 194 Mo. App. 588, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 241 (Mo. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

ALLEN, J.

/This is an action by an insurance company organized under what is now article 6 of chapter 6.1, Revised . Statutes 1909, to recover from defendant the sum of $7280.24, being monies alleged to have been wrongfully received and retained by defendant as salary while a member and chairman of an organization committee, for attorney’s fees, and as commission on stock subscriptions, prior to compliance by the corporators of plaintiff company with the provisions of sections 7002 and 7003, Revised Statutes 1909, and the obtaining of a license to do business as an insurance company. The trial below, before the court without a jury, resulted in a judgment for plaintiff for $1923.75, with interest from the institution of the action, and from this judgment both plaintiff and defendant have appealed.

It appears that on February 18, 1908, the corporators of plaintiff company, thirteen in number, met in the city of St. Louis, having in view the organization [591]*591of an insurance company under the provisions of the article and chapter of the statutes above mentioned. Among other things, they selected an organization committee composed of the defendant, one Pickrell and one Sutton, of which committee defendant was chairman and Pickrell secretary, and authorized this committee to ta-ke all steps that might appéar to be necessary to bring about the organization of the proposed company, and to “purchase necessary supplies, and furniture, employ clerical help and engage solicitors to solicit subscriptions to the capital stock of the company and to pay therefor such sums as they may deem proper, not to exceed eight per cent, of the total amount of the subscription to the capital and surplus.” It was resolved that each corporator was “authorized to act as solicitor to obtain subscriptions to the capital stock and to receive as commission therefor a sum equal to the maximum rate paid other solicitors for the same kind of service.” Defendant and Pickrell were authorized to perform the office work pertaining to the organization at a salary of $25 per week ea'ch. And the organization committee was authorized and directed to “pay all bills, salaries, commissions and express from time to time,” as they might approve, out of the “organization fund.”

After'due publication of the notice required by section 999, Revised Statutes 1909, the corporators duly filed the declaration provided for by section 7000, and obtained the certificate of incorporation mentioned in section 7001. The amount of the authorized capital stock was $100,000, divided into one thousand shares of the par value of $100 each; no surplus being provided for in the charter. However, subscriptions to the stock were taken on the basis of $125, per . share in order to create a “voluntary surplus” for the purpose, in the main, of defraying the organization expenses ; which expenses were expressly limited to fifteen per cent, of the amount subscribed — this appearing in the subscription blanks used.

[592]*592It appears that the organization committee was unable to secure solicitors on a basis of eight per cent, of the subscriptions obtained, for the reason, it is said that such solicitors ordinarily receive larger commissions; and that at a'meeting of the corporators on March 21, 1908, the organization committee was authorized “to use fifteen per cent, of the subscriptions to capital and surplus in payment of organizing expenses:” And the corporators provided by resolution that all solicitors, including corporators, would be allowed $15 per share “for each share of stock subscribed by or through them.” Some solicitors, were thereafter employed, but it seems that the subscriptions, for the most part, were either made by or procured through the efforts of members of the organization committee.

During the year 1908 and the early part of 1909 subscriptions were procured to all of the capital stock; and such subscriptions, less commissions allowed in accordance with the resolution of the corporators of March 21, 1908, were duly paid to the organization committee, and that committee, out of the “voluntary surplus” paid all organization expenses incurred. In due course the organization of the company was perfected, and it was duly licensed to do the business contemplated by its charter. The first meeting of its stockholders was held on January 16, 1909, at which meeting directors were elected, nine in number — the number having been reduced from thirteen to nine; and thereafter the officers of the company were duly elected by the board of directors. Thereafter, on March 10, 1909, defendant, as chairman of the organization committee, delivered to the president and treasurer the net amount of easli, certificates of deposit and securities remaining in the hands of the committee after defraying all organization expenses, including the payment or allowances of commissions on subscriptions as aforesaid; such net balance amounting to $106,231.96.

In the total amount disbursed by the committee, or allowed by it as commissions, were included the items here sued for. That is to say defendant was [593]*593paid $932.12 as salary for office work performed while a member of the organization, committee (said to be for forty-seven weeks), $200 as attorney’s fees for incorporating the company, and $6148.12 as commissions on stock subscriptions. In the last-mentioned item of $6148.12, was included the amount of $1923.75 —the amount of the judgment helow — as commissions on stock subscribed by defendant himself; the remainder of this item being commissions on subscriptions to two hundred and sixty-nine shares of stock procured by defendant from eleven different subscribers.

During the trial below,-however, counsel for plaintiff in open court withdrew “its claim against defendant for $200 paid him for legal services in incorporating the company.”

On March 22, 1909, a meeting of the board of directors was held, at which were present eight directors, among whom were the three members of the organization committee. Defendant’s testimony and that of certain directors goes to show that at this meeting defendant, as chairman of the organization committee, made full report concerning the expenditures of the committee, and the commissions allowed on stock subscriptions, including the commissions received by defendant on subscriptions procured by him and- on his own subscriptions as well; that the books kept by the committee covering all such items were before the board, and that the board unanimously approved the report and the acts of the organization committee in the premises. And defendant offered evidence relative to the vote taken, and to show that no member of the organization committee voted on the matter mentioned; but this was excluded. No record of such action by the board appears in the secretary’s minutes of the meeting' of March 22, 1909, aforesaid, but parol evidence was admitted, over the objection of plaintiff, to this effect. • This evidence is clear and convincing, and nothing appears to contradict it. One director, testifying for plaintiff, said that reports were made by Mr. Puller, hut that he did not remember the details [594]*594thereof. He did not undertake to say that the proceedings as testified to by defendant’s witnesses were not in fact had.

It was shown that defendant’s right to receive the monies here sued for was at no time questioned prior, to the institution of this action; and that defendant received no notice concerning the matter other than, through the filing of the suit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
186 S.W. 1099, 194 Mo. App. 588, 1916 Mo. App. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-casualty-co-v-puller-moctapp-1916.