Sant v. Perronville Shingle Co.

146 N.W. 212, 179 Mich. 42, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 480
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1914
DocketDocket No. 29
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 146 N.W. 212 (Sant v. Perronville Shingle Co.) 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
Sant v. Perronville Shingle Co., 146 N.W. 212, 179 Mich. 42, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 480 (Mich. 1914).

Opinion

Kuhn, J.

This suit was commenced in 1906 by the complainants filing a bill of complaint praying for an accounting of the affairs and property of the defendant company and for its dissolution. The Perronville Shingle Company is a' Michigan corporation, organized in October, 1899. It had a capital stock of $15,000, which was fully paid in, and was divided into 1,500 shares of $10 each, of which 999 shares were owned by the defendant Manizeppe Perron, one share by A. H. Meloche, two shares by Abraham [45]*45Sant, now deceased, and 498 shares by the complainant Amelia A. Sant. Perron, Meolche, and Abraham Sant constituted the board of directors. Defendant Perron is the president and treasurer of the company, and Meloche its secretary. The company engaged in the business of manufacturing and selling lumber, shingles, and other forest products at Perronville, Delta county, in this State.

The bill charges that the defendant Perron conspired with the defendant Meloche to- convert the assets of the company to the use of defendant Perron, and that they had been' selling and disposing of the corporate property without accounting therefor to the corporation. It further charges that Perron and Meloche, holding a majority of the capital stock, did not intend to institute proceedings in a court to wind up its corporate affairs, and intended thereby to deprive complainants of participating in any way in the profits and property of the corporation. The bill also charges that the company has ceased to operate, and is virtually dead, and it prays that the affairs of the company be wound up, and .that a receiver be appointed to take possession of the assets, with power to collect the accounts and dispose of the assets and pay the indebtedness, and for other general relief. No receiver was appointed, but an order of the court was made that such receiver would not be appointed upon Perron filing a bond in the sum of $10,000 for the payment of any decree which might be entered against him or the defendant company. This bond was filed and the case was referred by the court to a special commissioner to take testimony and report. The taking of the testimony before the special commissioner covered a considerable period of time, and when his report was filed the defendants excepted thereto, and in the fall of 1909 the exceptions to the commissioner’s report were argued before Mr. Justice Stone, then judge of the twenty-fifth judicial circuit.

[46]*46The Ford River Lumber Company, in August, 1909, filed a petition, claiming to be a creditor of the defendant company to the amount of over $6,000, and asked leave to intervene and to be paid the amount of its claim before distribution of the assets of the defendant company among its stockholders. This petition was also heard before Justice Stone, and on December 7, 1909, he filed an opinion in which the findings of the commissioner were reviewed and a different determination arrived at than the one had by the commissioner, and the court found that defendant Perron was indebted to the defendant company in the sum of $10,884.26, which indebtedness constituted the sole assets of the company. He also ordered that the case be referred back to the commissioner to take evidence and report upon the claim of the Ford River Lumber Company, and upon such other claims as might be presented. The commissioner gave notice by publication to the creditors of the defendant company to present their claims, and the only claims presented were those of the Ford River Lumber Company and A. L. Sawyer, the solicitor of the complainants, for legal services in the cause. The commissioner refused to entertain the claim of Mr. Sawyer, on the ground that it should be presented direct to the court, but found that the defendant company was not indebted to the Ford River Lumber Company and allowed on a cross-bill the sum of $1,865.42- in favor of the defendant corporation. The finding of the commissioner as to the claim of the Ford River Lumber Company was excepted to, and a hearing on this claim was subsequently had before Hon. Richard C. Flannigan, circuit judge, who allowed the claim of the Ford River Lumber Company at $3,443.88. The circuit judge also allowed the solicitor for complainants the sum of $3,000, and allowed costs to the complainants in the sum of $1,579.80. There is no contest in this court concerning the claim of the Ford [47]*47River Lumber Company, but from the various other provisions of the decree, both complainants and defendants have appealed.

,. The decree of the court provides in part as follows:

“And the court having heard said arguments and considered the same and the proofs and the pleadings herein, and. having filed herein its further opinion and findings upon the remaining issues herein, to the effect that the claim of the Ford River Lumber Company against said defendant Perronville Shingle Company be allowed at the sum of $3,443.88; and that the said claim of A. L. Sawyer against said defendant Perronville Shingle Company for services and disbursements in behalf of said defendant corporation in its "accounting in said cause with the defendant Menasip Perron be allowed at the sum of $3,226.30; and that the costs of the complainants be taxed against the defendants for the following several amounts, to wit:
For disbursements to sheriff, register, court commissioner on original reference, and for printers’ fees according to the items of said bill of costs, aggregating................... $443 70
For witness fees as follows: A. Sant.................... $21 00 D. F. Daley...'.............. 1 10 Fred Leroux ............... 41 00
For expert accountants fees and disbursements ................ 1,100 00 1,336 10
Making an aggregate of complainants’ costs of .............................. $1,579 80
“And it further appearing from the records in this case that the defendant Perron has paid upon the disbursements so allowed to said A. L. Sawyer, pursuant to an order entered herein on the 4th day of May, 1911, the sum of $51.03, thus leaving a balance due said A. L. Sawyer on said allowance of the sum of $3,174.80; and it further appearing from the records and evidence in the case that this action was commenced in behalf of claimants by Messrs. Mills & Cain as their solicitors, and that by agreement between them and the above-named A. L. Sawyer, the said [48]*48cause has been prosecuted by said Sawyer in the place and ste’ad of said Mills & Cain, and on an agreement between them as to a division of a certain part of the compensation to be received therefor; and it appearing that by such agreement said Sawyer is authorized to collect and receipt for such compensation as may be due all said solicitors for said complainants for their services in said cause, and said accounting between the several defendants having been conducted on behalf of the defendant corporation entirely by the said claimant A. L. Sawyer; and it appearing by computation that interest on the amount so owing by said Menasip Perron to said defendant Perronville Shingle Company from August 12, 1909, to date, at 5 per cent, per annum, aggregates the sum of $1,247.14, thus making the aggregate of said indebtedness to date the sum of $12,131.40.

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Bluebook (online)
146 N.W. 212, 179 Mich. 42, 1914 Mich. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sant-v-perronville-shingle-co-mich-1914.