Rugger v. Mt. Hood Electric Co.

21 P.2d 1100, 20 P.2d 412, 143 Or. 193, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 122
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 1100 (Rugger v. Mt. Hood Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rugger v. Mt. Hood Electric Co., 21 P.2d 1100, 20 P.2d 412, 143 Or. 193, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 122 (Or. 1933).

Opinions

BAILEY, J.

On May 19, 1928, articles of incorporation of Mt. Hood Electric Company were filed with the corporation commissioner of this state. The capital stock was divided into five hundred shares of common and twenty shares of preferred, of the par value of $100 per share, and four hundred eighty shares of *195 stock of no par value. On May 31,1928, when the first meeting of the stockholders was held, the following number of shares had been subscribed for: John S. Shute, eight shares of common and twenty shares of preferred stock; J. W. Myers, three hundred eighty shares of common and twenty shares of stock of no par value; and one share each of common stock was subscribed for by two other individuals.

At this meeting of the stockholders a resolution was passed providing for a board of seven directors, which provision was incorporated in the by-laws, and the four stockholders above mentioned were elected as members of the board, leaving three vacancies. Another resolution was adopted, authorizing the filing of supplementary articles of incorporation increasing the preferred stock from twenty shares to two hundred fifty shares of the par value of $100 a share, and reducing the stock of no par value from four hundred eighty shares to two hundred fifty shares. The original articles of incorporation provided that the amount of capital which was required to be paid in, either in cash or property at its fair cash value, before the corporation could begin doing business, should be $10,000, and the supplementary articles of incorporation, authorized at this meeting, reduced that amount from $10,000 to $1,000. The directors were also authorized to fix the price at which the stock of no par value could be sold by the corporation, but at not less than $25 per share. Thereafter and on or about July 31, 1928, supplementary articles of incorporation were filed making the changes authorized at the first meeting of the stockholders.

The principal object of this corporation appears to have been to take over, complete and operate a partly constructed electric transmission and distributing sys *196 tern from the east boundary of the town of Sandy to Rhododendron and adjacent territory, occupied largely by summer homes. J. W. Myers was the moving spirit in the organization of the company and in the subsequent development of the transmission and distributing system. Prior to the incorporation of the defendant company he and others had been interested in the Loop Electric Corporation, which had commenced the construction of a transmission and distribution system, the one involved herein, from Sandy east along the Mt. Hood highway, had purchased and set in the ground most of the poles from Sandy to Alder Creek, a distance of about nine miles, and had procured and distributed additional poles along the proposed line east of Alder Creek.

In carrying out its program the Loop Electric Corporation had borrowed from one Roy Keagy the sum of $2,700, and upon failure to pay the same action was brought by Keagy against the Loop Electric Corporation. The property of that company was attached, sold on execution and purchased by Keagy for the sum of $250.

Prior to or about the time of the incorporation of the defendant company J. W. Myers had entered into negotiations with Keagy for the purchase of the property which the latter had acquired on execution sale. An understanding was had between the two to the effect that Myers would organize a corporation and would transfer to Keagy twenty shares of preferred and thirty-four shares of common stock in that corporation in payment for this property.

On or about June 1, 1928, John S. Shute, pursuant to an agreement he had with Myers, began to advance money to the defendant corporation for the completion of the electric system to Alder Creek and, according to *197 Shiite’s testimony, did advance in all the sum of $3,319, hut the record fails to disclose how much of that amount was advanced by Shute before August 1, 1928. By that date the line from Sandy to Alder Creek had been completed, with funds furnished by Shute for that express purpose, and was furnishing service to a few patrons, not to exceed ten in all.

On the last mentioned date at a meeting of the board of directors of the defendant corporation Myers offered to transfer to the corporation the property acquired by Keagy on execution sale, the services of his own attorney for two years and certain contracts, in full payment for the $40,000 worth of stock subscribed for by himself, his offer being as follows:

“I hereby offer the property listed below belonging to me and located on the Mt. Hood Loop highway in Clackamas county, Oregon, and being an electric line partly constructed and partly not constructed under a franchise issued by the state highway board of the state of Oregon; the property thus referred to is covered by the list referred to and marked Exhibit A, and I offer same to your company for the amount of stock subscribed to by me, both common and no-par.
“And included with said offer and to accompany same and be transferred to your company should this proposal be accepted is all machinery, tools, equipment and materials now upon the ground and used in the erection of the line now in process of construction; the same to be sold to you as a going concern and also all property being free and unencumbered, and of the reasonable value of $40,000”.

Exhibit A referred to in the foregoing is as follows:

“All light and power poles, standing and down, with all braces and cross arms thereon or on the ground; all easements and easement papers, instruments and rights; all books and papers, records, sta *198 tionery and reports; orders of the public service commission, if any right of way contracts; and all tools and machinery; all wire and wires, braces, ropes, etc., franchises and permits to bnild granted by the state highway commission of the state of Oregon, under which said line is erected; together with renewal rights incident to same, and especially a permit to construct, operate and maintain a power pole line on and along the right of way of Mt. Hood Electric Co. granted by the Oregon state highway commission January 5,1925, and accepted and approved by the former Loop Electric Power Company, December 27, 1927, and which was assigned to the Loop Electric Company heretofore and bought up at public sale by Roy H. Keagy, of Portland, Oregon;
“All contracts with customers'now being served with electric current and all contracts for current and power; all moneys due or accruing, or growing due from customers for current or otherwise; all accounts due and owing and all moneys on hand, if any;
“Also, I offer to accompany this offer the services of my attorney for a period of two years beginning with the 1st of January, 1928, to be rendered this company without further compensation in the way of money from the company.
“ (The above line is erected and in operation from Sandy to Alder Creek on the Mt. Hood Loop highway, at present. All wire for current transmission and for guy wires and guy poles is erected and in place and all in full operation between the points above mentioned.)”

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Rugger v. Mt. Hood Electric Co.
21 P.2d 1100 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 1100, 20 P.2d 412, 143 Or. 193, 1933 Ore. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rugger-v-mt-hood-electric-co-or-1933.