Shaffer v. Buxbaum

352 P.2d 83, 137 Mont. 397, 1960 Mont. LEXIS 31
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 22, 1960
Docket10090
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 352 P.2d 83 (Shaffer v. Buxbaum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaffer v. Buxbaum, 352 P.2d 83, 137 Mont. 397, 1960 Mont. LEXIS 31 (Mo. 1960).

Opinion

HONORABLE NAT ALLEN, District Judge, sitting in place of MR. JUSTICE BOTTOMLY,

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff sued to foreclose a mechanic’s lien. Defendants Buxbaum answered alleging fraud between the plaintiff and defendant Plains Construction Company, who defaulted. Defendants Buxbaum counterclaimed for damages. The lower *398 court found fraud and awarded defendants Buxbaum the relief sought in the counterclaim. Plaintiff appeals. The plaintiff joined the owners (Buxbaums) and the contractor (Plains Construction Company, a corporation) as defendants. The plaintiff was employed by the defendant corporation as a carpenter and was brought from another job in the same employ at Baker, Montana, to assist in the construction after it had been commenced at the Buxbaums’ property under the direction of the corporate defendant’s secretary-treasurer, E. S. (Buzz) Bryant.

Plaintiff’s work was performed under an oral understanding or agreement of employment with E. S. Bryant of Plains Construction Company that he was to be paid wages of $25 per day. The plaintiff proved, and the defendants Buxbaum did not deny, that he performed forty-four days work at $25 per day, or a total of $1,100, complete non-payment thereof and due filing of his mechanic’s lien and claim.

The total remodeling* work was performed under a written construction contract which was executed on Plains Construction Company form by the defendants Buxbaum, and on the part of the corporate defendant by E. S. Bryant, signed as “salesman”. Shaffer’s name was not on the contract; he was simply a laborer on the job.

The position asserted by the defendants Buxbaum (who are the only appearing defendants) and the findings of the trial court, finding fraud, puts the plaintiff squarely in the position of the contractor himself in relation to the construction contract herein concerned and charges him with the obligation of the construction contract, and as stated in appellant’s brief, “about this fundamental point revolves all the issues of this appeal.”

The evidence showed that the articles of incorporation of Plains Construction Company, who defaulted in this case, were dated May 16, 1952, and filed in the office of the County Clerk and Recorder for Yellowstone County, Montana, on May 19, 1952. Incorporators were C. E. Shaffer, plaintiff and appellant *399 in this action, his wife, and his daughter-in-law, Ruth Bryant, the wife of E. S. (Buzz) Bryant, (the “salesman” on the contract) who, by deduction, was probably a son of Mrs. C. E. Shaffer and foster son of the plaintiff.

On May 4, 1953, C. E. Shaffer and his wife gave their stock, one share each, in said corporation to E. S. Bryant, their son, the “salesman” herein. This was followed by their resignation as directors and acceptance thereof in two letters signed by Ruth Bryant, their daughter-in-law, as President of Plains Construction Company.

Annual corporation reports for Plains Construction Company, signed by E. S. Bryant and Ruth Bryant, his wife, son and daughter-in-law respectively of the Shaffers, for the years 1953 and 1954 were filed, the last one being filed on March 15, 1955, and no annual corporation reports for said corporation were filed thereafter.

The contract between Plains Construction Company and Jake Buxbaum and Viola Buxbaum was dated April 15, 1955; work was commenced on an addition to a dwelling and continued except for certain interruptions until on or about September 21, 1955, at which time the plaintiff stopped work, and there was conflict in the evidence as to whether the contract was completed or whether it was uncompleted. But the lower court found plaintiff “left said building incomplete and in a dangerous condition.” The defendants Buxbaum made a down payment of $1,236 required by the contract, which check was made out to Plains Construction Company by Jake Buxbaum and was endorsed by Plains Construction Company, by E. S. Bryant, but was deposited in a bank to the credit of C. E. Shaffer, plaintiff herein, in an account denominated “C. E. Shaffer, Special Account”. Plaintiff Shaffer testified that he spent such money for materials on the building-, but exactly what he bought with it, or who he bought it from, is not clear in the transcript.

*400 In addition to the down payment, the defendants were required to and did pay for labor, lumber, supplies and materials to other persons threatening to file mechanics’ liens on the building in the amount of $3,586.95, and obligated themselves to pay another $215 to complete the building and put the same in a satisfactory condition. The Buxbaums have paid and obligated themselves to pay $5,038.48 for the addition which, according to the contract, should have cost $3,736 as the total price. The trial court found that the plaintiff caused the contract to be made in the name of Plains Construction Company with the intent to cheat, wrong and defraud the defendants Buxbaum, and that the contract was in truth and in fact in the contract of the plaintiff, C. E. Shaffer. The trial court therefore found the mechanic’s lien null and void because of fraud and gave judgment to the defendants Buxbaum for damages in the amount of $1,302.48.

As stated by the appellant, the fundamental point in this ease revolves around whether the corporate entity be recognized or not. Appellant contends that there was no evidence in the record to show fraud or estoppel, and that the corporate entity should be recognized and upheld.

While, as said in Hanson Sheep Co. v. Farmers’ & Traders’ State Bank in 53 Mont. 324, 163 P. 1151, 1155, ordinarily a corporation in “Its legal capacity cannot be inquired into collaterally or questioned by a private citizen in a controversy between it and him. This can be done only by the state through its proper officer, * * * and for one of the causes prescribed by the statute (section 6944) [R.C.M.1907, now R.C.M.1947, § 93-6402], But this rule does not preclude an examination into the facts to ascertain the identity of the person who uses the name of the corporation for his own purposes and to fix liability for the ostensible corporate acts upon him. In the language of the Court of Appeals of New York in Seymour v. Spring F. C. Assn., 144 N.Y. 333, 39 N.E. 365, 26 L.R.A. 859: ‘The abstraction of the corporate entity should *401 never be allowed to bar out and pervert tbe real and obvious truth.’ ”

In addition to the above facts, the plaintiff herein was not only the organizer of Plains Construction Company, a family corporation, but when he divested himself of the stock he and his wife gave, their one' share each, to their son, which left only two stockholders in the corporation, which, as we shall discuss later, put the corporation in abeyance and its functions for the time being ceased. The annual report of the corporation, dated March 1, 1955, just a few months before the contract was entered into, showed that the authorized capital stock of the corporation actually paid in was $300, and that existing debts on that date were $5,948.77. Plaintiff Shaffer in his testimony admitted he knew the corporatoin was “broke”.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hando v. PPG Industries, Inc.
771 P.2d 956 (Montana Supreme Court, 1989)
Little v. Grizzly Manufacturing
636 P.2d 839 (Montana Supreme Court, 1981)
Flemmer v. Ming
621 P.2d 1038 (Montana Supreme Court, 1980)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
352 P.2d 83, 137 Mont. 397, 1960 Mont. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaffer-v-buxbaum-mont-1960.