Savage v. Monarch Royalty Corp.

64 F.2d 650, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4181
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 6, 1933
DocketNo. 726
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 64 F.2d 650 (Savage v. Monarch Royalty Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Savage v. Monarch Royalty Corp., 64 F.2d 650, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4181 (10th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

McDERMOTT, Circuit Judge.

The appellant filed his claim for $37,-716.60 with the Receiver of the Monarch Royalty Corporation. The Receiver protested its allowance on the ground that the claim [651]*651was founded on a scheme to defraud the stockholders of the corporation, was ultra vires and contrary to public policy. The issues were referred to a master who made a report which includes a summary of the testimony, a running comment thereon, some observations on the applicable law, two short conclusions of fact, and a conclusion of law that the claim, should be disallowed. To this report exceptions were filed in most general term?. They are that the findings “are against the substantial weight of the evidence”; “unsupported by any evidence”; “'the Special Master erred in the conclusions of law,” and his recommendations are “against the law and the evidence.” The trial court denied the exceptions, confirmed the report, and entered judgment against the claimant.

These exceptions are not sufficient to challenge any part of the report. No proper exceptions having been filed, Equity Rule 60 (28 USCA § 723) directs that the report shall stand confirmed. The practice of referring causes or issues to a master is a device to conserve the time of the court. The master hears the evidence, sifts the wheat from the chaff, and then reports the facts as he finds them to the court, with or without liis conclusions of law or recommendations as to a decree, as ho may be directed. The duty then devolves upon the dissatisfied party to point out specifically the facts found by the master which he asserts are not in accord with the evidence, or the error in the conclusion of law. The court’s task is then narrowed to an examination of so much only of the record as bears upon the specific exception. Nothing of the kind was done here. A general challenge was made to all of the report; yet much of the report deals with facts that are not in dispute. Neither the trial court, nor- this court, can pass on these exceptions without a line-by-line study of the entire proceedings before the master. Such exceptions undo all the benefit which is supposed to be derived from the expease of a reference. The law has long been settled that such general exceptions are unavailing. In Sheffield, etc., Ry. Co. v. Gordon, 151 U. S. 285, 34 S. Ct. 343, 38 L. Ed. 164, the matter is elaborately discussed and the earlier cases cited. Later cases may be found in Thomson Mach. Co. v. Sternberg (D. C.) 55 F.(2d) 715; Sandford v. Embry (C. C. A. 6) 151 F. 977; and Foster’s Fed. Pr. (6th Ed.) p. 1927. That the master’s report did not separately set out the facts found with precision and certainty does not justify a further violation of the rules governing a reference; the remedy is by a request to the master to comply with his duties, or -a motion to the court to re-eommit for that purpose.

In Sheffield, etc., Ry. Co. v. Gordon, supra, the Supreme Court states that if the report of the master is clearly erroneous, the court may, in its discretion, correct the error. We have therefore examined the evidence, and have come to the conclusion that there is no occasion to disturb the conclusion of the master and the trial court. The record leaves no clear trail of just what went on in the large scale operations between Currier, the President of the corporation, and appellant, a stockbroker, except that Currier, for the corporation, was playing the market on the corporation’s stock-; and that most, if not all, of appellant’s claim is to recover profits on the drop in the market.

The first claim of appellant is for $22,-950, which appellant states arose in this wise: Prior to March 33, 3.930, Currier sent to Savage a Hock of Monarch stock to be sold, the amount of which is not disclosed by the record. Savage sold this stock for 66$ a share and remitted 60$ a share. Currier then came to New York, bringing with him another block of stock of an unknown amount. The stock theretofore sold, and the stock brought to Now York, together amounted to 60,000 shares. Savage sold the stock brought to him for 66$ a share, all of which was remitted to the company. It is thus seen that Savage sold 60,000 shares at 66$ a share and paid the company 60$ a share for part of it, and 66$ a share for the balance. He lost no money in the transaction. His claim is predicated on a letter Currier wrote him on March 31, 1930, which refers to the entire 60,000 shares, and says in .part:

“This stock is loaned to you with the positive understanding that this stock must be returned to us on or before August 15th, 1930, at which time we will return to yon your 66 cents per share deposited against this loaned stock. This constitutes an agreement between Monarch Royally Corporation, and James A. Savage & Company as evidenced by the signatures below.”

It will be observed that this letter purports to apply not only to the stock delivered about that time, but to an unknown amount of stock which had been sent to Savage and sold by him prior to the date the letter was written. Savage also testifies that Currier authorized him to sell the balance of the stock promptly after receipt of the letter, which lie did. It is, therefore, a misnomer to speak of the transaction as a “loan.” Savage sold [652]*652the, stock and accounted to the corporation for the net proceeds; the balance of the agreement is nothing but a wager as to the quoted price of the stock on a day some ■months in the future. If the market went up in the succeeding four months, the corporation won; if it went down, it lost. By August 15th the market had dropped from 66$ to 26$ a share. Savage did not buy or tender the stock in August; he simply charged the corporation with the drop in the curb quotations of the stock, and now seeks to recover it.

There is no occasion for any close scrutiny into the powers of the corporation, or Currier’s power as President; nor to enter into the troublesome question of when a corporation may sell its stock with an agreement to repurchase it. Allen v. Commercial Nat. Bank (C. C. A. 6) 191 F. 97; Fleitmann v. John M. Stone Cotton Mills (C. C. A. 5) 186 F. 466. This record presents no case of a bona fide contract to repurchase from a stockholder if he becomes dissatisfied; Savage expected to and did promptly sell this stock without conditions attached; Savage did not return, nor expect to return, the stock sold or loaned to him. The agreement concerns itself with the quoted price of a listed stock on a specific date in the future. Although an leffort is made to camouflage the transaction, in essence it is but a wagering contract to which Currier could not obligate his stockholders. The corporation was not organized to play the stock market, and Currier was not authorized to gamble on the market with the moneys of his stockholders.

The second claim arose in this manner, according to the testimony of Mr. Savage: Some time “possibly in the month of June, 1930,” Mr. Currier asked Mr. Savage to advance some money for pressing corporate needs on 130,000 shares of treasury stock. After part of the advancements had been made, Mr. Savage testified “the market was falling and falling rapidly, and we [Currier and Savage] decided it was time to have some contract regarding the 130,000 shares. * * * It was a' dangerous situation to touch at that time.” Because of the rapidly falling market, and to protect appellant from the danger attendant upon his situation, Mr. Currier, purporting to act for the corporation, gave Mr. Savage a letter, the important part of which is:

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Bluebook (online)
64 F.2d 650, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/savage-v-monarch-royalty-corp-ca10-1933.