Schmidt v. Pritchard

112 N.W. 801, 135 Iowa 240
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 3, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 112 N.W. 801 (Schmidt v. Pritchard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmidt v. Pritchard, 112 N.W. 801, 135 Iowa 240 (iowa 1907).

Opinion

Deemer, J.

The case is overburdened with abstracts, amended abstracts, and three large volumes of a typewritten transcript; each and all containing a great deal of immaterial and irrelevant matter. Primarily, the entire controversy is over the control of a corporation known as the Le Febure Ledger Company; most of the stockholders being divided into two hostile camps. It has been with great difficulty that we have extracted what seems to be the material and controlling facts, and, if any mistake be made in the statement of these, it is due to the confused state of the record. The case was argued orally, but from that we received no help whatever, and in turning to the printed briefs we find quite as much to confuse as to assist in untying the legal knots involved.

The Le Febure Ledger Company ivas incorporated October 28, 1897, with an authorized capital of $20,000, divided into shares of $25 each, and the articles provided that each share should be entitled to vote at all stockholders’ meetings, whether special or annual. Emil Le Febure was the promoter of the company, and he exchanged a patent which he held for $10,000 worth of stock. But $7,500 more of the stock was issued prior to March 10, 1905, and on or about that date it Avas voted to issue the remainder of the stock to the amount of $2,500, to be sold for cash or given [243]*243in exchange for bankable paper due three, six, nine, or twelve months after date. In August of the year 1902, the articles of incorporation were amended, increasing the capital stock from $20,000, to $30,000, and on March 10, 1905, the board of directors voted to issue the $10,000 increase of the capital stock, and that the secretary notify the stockholders of their pro rata of this issue, and that any pro rata not taken and settled for by March 20, 1905, at ten o’clock a. m. should be sold by the board of directors on the open market, le Febure was managing officer of the company until March, 1904, when trouble arose in its affairs, and he resigned; defendant Achter being selected in his place. March 16, 1904, Le Febure sold $4,500 of his stock in the company to Achter, and he (Achter) gave Le Febure a contract whereby he (Achter) undertook'to resell the same to Le Febure within one year at an advance of eighteen per cent, on the face value thereof. About the time this controversy arose, Le Febure was anxious to repurchase the stock from- Achter, and was endeavoring to borrow the money with which to do so. Achter, however, was seeking to control the corporation, and did all thát he could to prevent Le Febure’s getting the money with which to secure the return of the stock. But on March 13, 1905, Le Febure either repurchased the stock from Achter, or had it taken up by one Eluss. This stock does not seem to be in controversy in the first case now before us.

Pursuant to the action of the board; plaintiff in the first case, who held certain shares of stock in his own name, applied for his pro rata of the $10,000, being one and one-half shares, and for twenty-eight shares ón account of stock issued to Mrs. Le Febure and one Tamblyn, and by them transferred to Emil Le Febure, Jr., and by him transferred to plaintiff Schmidt; and W. B. Beid applied for twenty shares on account of stock issued to Mrs. Le Febure and by her transferred to Emil Le Febure, Jr., and by him transferred to Beid. These applications were all made prior to [244]*244ten o’clock, March 20, 1905. It is claimed that at a meeting held March 20th the board extended the time for receiving applications until ten o’clock a. m., March 21, 1905, and it is also claimed that various stockholders, including plaintiff and Mrs. Le Febure, applied for more shares prior to ten o’clock a. m., March 21, 1905. Plaintiff undoubtedly did on that day apply for twenty shares on account of stock issued to Mrs. Le Febure, by her transferred to Emil Le Febure, Jr., and by him transferred to plaintiff Schmitt. Whether or not these are the same shares applied for by Reid does not very clearly appear. Mrs. Le Febure also applied for six shares in her own right. The record of the meetings of the board at one time showed an extension of time for closing the sale of the pro rata stock until March 21, 1905; but these were expunged by subsequent action of the-board, according to the minutes kept by the secretary, which were written up as he had time to do so. Defendants claim that no extension of time for applying for the pro rata issue of stock was ever made, and this presents the principal fact issue in the main case.

It is conceded, however, that the board of directors did not immediately insist upon the closing up of the contracts for these pro rata issues of stock, and, resting in the belief that he had made timely application for his stock, plaintiff on May 27, 1905, went to the secretary of the company and delivered him a check for $1,700, receiving from the secretary a receipt which, so far as material, shows that the check was to cover the purchase price of the following stock, to-wit: “ Twenty-eight shares on account of Mrs. Bertha T. Le Febure and W. FI. Tamblyn and transferred by them to Emil Le Febure, Jr., and retransferred by him to Geo. R. Schmidt, applied for by 10 o’clock a. m. 3-20-05. Twenty shares on account of Mrs. Bertha T. Le Febure transferred by her to W. B, Reid, applied for by 10 o’clock a. m. 3-20-05. Twenty shares on account of Mrs. Bertha T. Le Febure transferred by her to Emil Le Febure, Jr., and re-[245]*245transferred by him to Geo. R. Schmidt, applied for by 10 o’clock a. m. 3-21-05. Sixty-eight shares Le Febure Ledger Company.”

The check was returned to Schmidt by the secretary May 31, 1905, by registered letter; the secretary insisting that he had no authority to receive it, and that plaintiff was not entitled to any shares subscribed for after March 20, 1905, at ten o’clock a. m. There were issued to plaintiff forty shares of stock of the par value of $1,000, for which he paid; but twenty-eight shares of the value of $700 were withheld from him, because it is claimed his application therefor came too late, and that these twenty-eight shares were sold on the open market going into the hands of the defendants, or some of them. It is these twenty-eight shares which are the subject of controversy herein. If we get the facts from the record, defendants were mistaken in withholding twenty-eight shares, for at most plaintiff had applied for but twenty shares on March 21st. His application on March 20th, including the one put in by Reid, which he now claims to hold, amounting, excluding his own personal stock which has already been issued and settled for, to forty-eight shares. In this connection, it may be noted that one Hume made application for all unsold stock March 20, 1905 and being advised, or claiming to have been advised, of an extension of the time to March 21st, he renewed his application for all unsold stock at that time. Under any version of the record, plaintiff did not get all the stock to which he was entitled, for he had applied for all save twenty shares of the value pf $500. before ten o’clock a. m. March 20, 1905.

There can be no doubt under the record that defendants were endeavoring to prevent both plaintiff and Einil Le Febure from getting their just proportion of the $10,000 increase in the capital stock in order to keep the control of the corporation in their own hands,- and they so manipulated the ‘ affairs of the corporation that if unsuccessful they could withdraw $2,500 subscribed by them to that amount, to [246]*246make up the original capital of the organization.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 N.W. 801, 135 Iowa 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-pritchard-iowa-1907.