Sloan v. Clarkson

66 A. 18, 105 Md. 171, 1907 Md. LEXIS 21
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 28, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 66 A. 18 (Sloan v. Clarkson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sloan v. Clarkson, 66 A. 18, 105 Md. 171, 1907 Md. LEXIS 21 (Md. 1907).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court of Bal *177 timore City passed on the 13th day of November, 1906, overruling a demurrer of F. Eugene Sloan, trading as Frank B. Sloan & Co., one of the defendants, to the plaintiff’s amended bill of complaint.

The original bill was filed by the appellee against the appellant and the Norris Sash Pulley Company, a West Virginia corporation transacting business in this State.

The Court below sustained the demurrer to the original bill, with leave to the plaintiff to amend, and also held that the plea of the Norris Sash Pulley Company, “be and it is hereby allowed to stand as the answer of the company.”

Thereupon the plaintiff amended the bill of complaint, and a demurrer and plea were filed to the amended bill. The demurrer being overruled, the defendant, Frank B. Sloan & Co., has appealed.

The bill avers' that the plaintiff and the defendant, F. Eugene Sloan, are citizens and residents of the city of Baltimore, Maryland, and that the defendant, the Norris Sash Pulley Company, is a West Virginia corporation, but having its place of business and principal office in the city of Baltimore; that the plaintiff and the defendant Sloan are practically the substantial owners of all the stock of the Norris Sash Pulley Company, towit, nine shares being held by the Sloans and three shares by the plaintiff.

The bill further alleges that on the 14th of May, 1899, by an agreement between the parties, the firm of Frank B. Sloan & Co. was constituted managing and selling agents of the Pulley Company, the contract providing that as such agents, they should pay all expenses of manufacture and of conducting the business, including a commission, as compensation for their services, on all sales, and to pay over the residue to the Sash Pulley Company.

Subsequently, in September, 1905, Frank B. Sloan & Co. failed and made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and the plaintiff, who had been employed as bookkeeper and salesman in connection with the business of the company, *178 was notified by the trustee that his services would no longer be required in this capacity.

Thereupon the plaintiff engaged in the sash pulley business with another house in the same line of work.

Afterwards, E. Eugene Sloan, a son of Frank B. Sloan, was elected by the votes of the nine shares of stock held by them, president, secretary and treasurer of the company, and conducts the same business under the trade name of F. B. Sloan & Co. And on the 19th of Jannary, 1906, a contract was made between F. B. Sloan & Co., the appellant here, and the Norris Sash Pulley Co., whereby the former was appointed agent for the latter, upon the identical terms in all respects as those herein mentioned formerly had with his father, except with an increased commission on sales.

The bill also charges that the plaintiff was elected one of the five directors of the Pulley Company', the remaining four directors being chosen by the Sloan family, and that as stockholder and director of the company, he requested the right to inspect the books, records and accounts of the company, but was only shown a minute book containing reports of the meetings of stockholders and directors,' it being stated that the company had no other books, and that all other books, accounts, &c.,are the property not of the company but of the agents.

The bill then charges that F. Eugene Sloan, trading as Frank B. Sloan & Co., is the agent of the Pulley Company, and as such is bound to render a true and accurate account of the business so conducted by him as agent and these accounts, when submitted to the company, should be open to the inspection and consideration of the board of directors and of each member thereof; that the relationship existing between the majority of the directors of the company and the agent of the company, ( F. Eugene Sloan being not only the agent but a director, president, secretary, treasurer and chief stockholder of the company,) makes it necessary that the Board of Directors should be fully advised of the business conducted by the agent of the company; that the company controlled by F. *179 Eugene Sloan has been called upon by the plaintiff, both as a stockholder and as a director, to require from its agent, F. Eugene Sloan, doing business as F. B. Sloan & Co., an accounting, but this the company has refused to do ; that this refusal is due to improper and fraudulent motives and is based upon the fact that the agent and the president, secretary and treasurer of the company are one and the same person.

The bill further charges that the action of the defendants herein, and of the majority of the directors of the company, is fraudulent, Oppressive, and in violation of his legal rights.

The prayer of the bill is, first, that the defendant, F. Eugene Sloan, trading as Frank B. Sloan & Co., be required as agent to render to the Norris Sash Pulley Company, a full and detailed report and account of his transactions as such agent, accompanied with all vouchers, etc., relating to such transactions. Second, that the defendant, the Norris Sash Pulley Company, may be required hereafter at proper times to exact of its agent such due and proper accounts, and then follows, the usual prayer for general relief.

The defendant, Frank B. Sloan & Co., demurred to the amended bill, based upon the following grounds :

(1) That the Court lacks jurisdiction, because to grant the relief prayed, would involve interference with the internal management of a foreign corporation, the Norris Sash Pulley Company.

(2) That the plaintiff has not stated in his bill such a case as entitles him to any relief in equity against this defendant.

(3) And for other causes to be assigned at the hearing.

We have set out the averments in the bill, which cover thirteen pages of the record, in greater detail than usual, so as it may clearly appear what are the real questions involved on this appeal between the parties, and we will now proceed to consider them.

The relief sought under the second (b) prayer of the bill, that the'Norris Sash-Pulley Company.be required hereafter to exact of-its agents a proper accounting, is not urged in this Court, it being practically conceded by the appellee that this *180 prayer of the bill would be beyond the jurisdiction of the Court and within the rule re'ating to the internal management of a foreign corporation. Condon v. The Mutual Reserve Fund Association, 89 Md. 99.

The real and substantial question presented on the record is whether the facts alleged in the bill and admitted by the demurrer to be true entitled the plaintiff to the relief, under the' first, (a) prayer of the bill, and that is, that the agént, F. Eugene Sloan, be required to account to the company his principal, and that the plaintiff be permitted to inspect the books of the corporatio'n.

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Bluebook (online)
66 A. 18, 105 Md. 171, 1907 Md. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sloan-v-clarkson-md-1907.