Ryan v. Old Veteran Mining Co.

218 P. 381, 37 Idaho 625, 1923 Ida. LEXIS 197
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 218 P. 381 (Ryan v. Old Veteran Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan v. Old Veteran Mining Co., 218 P. 381, 37 Idaho 625, 1923 Ida. LEXIS 197 (Idaho 1923).

Opinion

McNAUGfHTON, District Judge.

— This suit was commenced September 30, 1919. It is an action by plaintiff, a shareholder of Old Veteran Mining Company, against F. IT. Harper and the directors of the company charging Harper *629 and the directors with unlawfully conspiring and agreeing together to do, and doing, certain acts and things therein set forth for the purpose of cheating and defrauding plaintiff out of certain mining claims and rendering his stock in the corporation worthless, and cheating and defrauding the corporation out of a large amount of money and a large number of its shares of corporate stock. Plaintiff asks that a receiver be appointed, that 300,000 shares of the stock issued to Harper and the directors be declared to have been issued without consideration and canceled and surrendered to the company, or that plaintiff have judgment for the par value of the same with interest for the use of the corporation; that the directors be ousted from office and that all defendants be required to account to plaintiff, for the company, for all moneys collected by them as such officers.

Defendants demurred generally, and on the ground that the cause was barred by the statute of limitations, also specially on the ground that the complaint is indefinite and uncertain.

The pleadings, both complaint and demurrer, are voluminous, setting forth matter relied upon with much particularity, but the gist of plaintiff’s claim is that on January 6, 1915, plaintiff and Charles Eckel were the owners of certain mining claims hereinafter referred to, together with cabins, fixtures, mining machinery and tools situate thereon, upon which claims there was on said date more than $15,000 worth of development work performed; that on said date plaintiff and Eckel entered into an agreement with F. H. Harper, wherein, after describing the seven mining claims and reciting that first parties were desirous of selling same and second party was desirous of purchasing them, it was agreed that party of the second part would form a corporation with a capital stock of $150,000 divided into shares of the par value of ten cents each; that upon the organization of the corporation first parties would convey to the corporation said mining claims in consideration of 200,000 shares of non-assessable stock in said corporation, and $4,140 payable in *630 instalments, said payments to :be secured by mortgage on the claims.

That on February 25, 1915, defendant Harper, together with defendants M. J. Farrell and L. L. Brainard, executed articles of incorporation of Old Veteran Mining Company, which were shortly thereafter duly filed. The articles are made a part of the complaint, and it appears that G. H. Harper, M. J. Farrell, Allan G. Kennedy, Bert Farrell and L. L. Brainard were stock subscribers, each subscribing for one share of stock.

Article 8 of the Articles of Incorporation is as follows: “The said corporation is formed upon the basis of a conveyance to it by the owners thereof of the following named lode mining claims, situate, lying and being in the Lalande Mining District, County of Shoshone, State of Idaho, to wit: ‘Idaho/ ‘Knocker/ ‘Never Miss/ ‘Release/ ‘Curry/ ‘Gopher/ and ‘Lifter’ lode mining claims. And in consideration of the conveyance as above set forth it is expressly stipulated, understood and agreed, and the board of directors of this corporation may, by proper resolution, declare any of the capital stock of said corporation, issued in payment of said lode mining claims, or for any services rendered by others in securing title to said property, fully paid and non-assessable, and when issued, such certificates shall be so endorsed and shall thereafter be and are non-assessable.”

The complaint sets forth that in furtherance of the conspiracy charged, defendants Kennedy, M. J. Farrell, Harper and Brainard, at a meeting on March 23, 1915, as stockholders representing four shares of the par value of ten cents each of the capital stock of the company, no other stock or person interested being represented and no other stock or person interested having been notified, adopted by-laws and elected themselves and B. J. Farrell directors; that they adjourned as stockholders and reconvened as directors, elected M. J. Farrell president, Allan G. Kennedy vice-president, L. L. Brainard secretary-treasurer, and M. J. Farrell manager, and received a proposal of F. H. Harper wherein he agreed to assign all his right, title and interest *631 in the agreement between himself and Ryan and Eckel, dated January 6, 1915, a copy of which was attached to the proposal, for 250,000 shares of fully paid nonassessable stock of the company, the company to assume an account due the United Stores Company for supplies advanced in the sum of $182, and to reimburse him for cash advanced to Ryan and Eckel in the sum of $100 and $100 advanced for labor, and agreeing in consideration of the acceptance of this proposition by the board to contribute 150,000 shares of the stock received by him for the purpose of defraying the expenses of incorporation and flotation of said corporation.

That thereupon as directors and as stockholders, defendants accepted said offer; that said defendants directed the president and secretary to carry out, on behalf of the corporation, the Ryan and Eckel agreement; that they also caused 250,000 shares of stock of the company, denominated as fully paid and nonassessable, to be issued to Harper, and agreed to and with each other that 150,000 shares thereof should not be returned to the treasury of the company by said Harper, but that the same should be and was divided among themselves, 50,000 shares each, to Allan G. Kennedy, M. J. Farrell and L. L. Brainard; that certificates of the company evidencing such stock were issued, and the said defendants assumed, and still assume, to be the owners and holders thereof.

The complaint charges that no part of the stock so issued to F. H. Harper and by him retained, or any part of that transferred by Harper to Kennedy, Farrell and Brainard, was issued for labor, services, property, money or other thing of value whatever flowing to the corporation or to plaintiff.

The complaint sets forth that after this meeting, but without knowledge of said acts of defendants, plaintiff and Eckel conveyed the property set forth in the original agreement to the corporation, and that he and E'cbel received a mortgage and stock in the company as provided in the agreement, believing that the only outstanding fully paid and nonassessable stock was this 200,000 shares issued pursuant to said *632 agreement. That after the transfer of the mining claims the defendant Ehrenberg, with knowledge of said acts complained of by plaintiff relating to the issuance to defendants of the 250,000 shares without consideration, entered the conspiracy and procured an additional 50,000 shares denominated as fully paid and nonassessable, on the pretext that it was in payment of services rendered, and to be rendered to the corporation, but stating the fact to be that Ehrenberg had rendered no services whatever of value to the corporation, and that any services rendered by Ehrenberg were in behalf of the defendants other than the corporation and for the purpose of aiding himself and his co-conspirators.

That thereafter on February 7, 1916, defendants M. J. Farrell, Allan G. Kennedy and It. L.

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Bluebook (online)
218 P. 381, 37 Idaho 625, 1923 Ida. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-old-veteran-mining-co-idaho-1923.