Smalley v. Bernstein

115 So. 347, 165 La. 1, 1927 La. LEXIS 1879
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 31, 1927
DocketNo. 27654.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 115 So. 347 (Smalley v. Bernstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smalley v. Bernstein, 115 So. 347, 165 La. 1, 1927 La. LEXIS 1879 (La. 1927).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

This suit was instituted by the trustees in bankruptcy of the Tex-LaHoma Oil Corporation, and later prosecuted by one of them, the remaining two having been relieved from duty, to recover of E. R. Bernstein and E. M. Brown, Jr., large sums of money. The suit is based upon allegations showing that the defendants, Bernstein and Brown, entered into a conspiracy with John O.. Mitchell, G. G. Gillette, William Hargiss Walker, and others, pursuant to which the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation was formed under the laws of Delaware, with an authorized capital stock of $10,000,000, divided, into 100,000 shares of preferred stock, of the par value of $100 a share, and 350,000 shares of common stock of no par value.

It is alleged substantially that the purpose of forming the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation was to enable defendants, who as owners of the Mohawk Oil Company possessed and controlled certain oil properties in Caddo parish, La., and John O. Mitchell, who was the owner of similar properties in Oklahoma, and William Hargiss Walker, who was the owner of a number of shares of stock in the Ninety-Nine Oil Company, to sell these properties to the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation at greatly excessive prices; that, pursuant to this conspiracy, defendants granted- to Mitchell *5 an option to purchase said properties owned or controlled by them for $3,150,000, the latter paying $60,000 for the option out of money contributed by Gillette and other promoters of the corporation, of which $10,000 was received back by Mitchell; and that, within a month after the granting of the option, the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation, which had been formed only a few days before under the laws of Delaware, purchased the option from Mitchell for 80,000 shares of the common stock of the corporation and for $60,000 cash. It is also alleged that thereafter, when defendants found that the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation would not be able to pay in money the full amount of the purchase price, contracted to be paid for said properties, and in order to facilitate the sale of the corporation’s stock, they agreed to accept, and did accept, in lieu of payments to be made in cash, amounting to $1,919,000, preferred stock in the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation of the par value of $1,520,000 and 15,200 shares of common stock of no par value, thereby increasing the purchase of said properties from $3,150,000 to $3,SS2,000, and at the same time agreed not to sell the stock to be given them in payment for a period of six months, but that, in violation of their agreement, they did sell a part of said stock.

The petition also shows that the Tex-LaHoma Oil Corporation took advantage of the option it had acquired from Mitchell by purchasing the property from defendants, the latter retaining a vendor’s privilege and special mortgage to secure the deferred payments; that defendants received from the Tex-La-Homa Oil' Corporation, on account of said sale, $635,000 cash; that they obtained $22,500 by the sale of the stock that was sold in violation of the contract not to sell, and that the vendor’s lien and special mortgage, retained by defendants, was later foreclosed, the ■ property sold by defendants passing back to them or to a company owned by them, less certain property, known ás the Fortuna lease, the title to which had failed, for which failure a deduction had been made from the original purchase price.

The petition also shows that, at the same meeting at which the corporation acquired the option granted Mitchell, the defendant Bernstein was elected a member of the board of directors of the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation, and that soon thereafter the defendant Brown was elected a member thereof. It is also alleged that, at this meeting of the board, the corporation, dominated by the conspiracy above mentioned, purchased from Mitchell the oil properties, owned by him in Oklahoma, at a price greatly in excess of their value, and later transferred the property back to him at a loss, and moreover that the directors of the corporation, including defendants, negligently' or pursuant to the conspiracy originally formed, permitted Mitchell to become indebted to the corporation in the sum of $19,172.23, which sum remains unpaid and cannot be collected, due to the insolvency of Mitchell’s estate.

The petition further alleges that the corporation, dominated by said conspiracy, soon after its incorporation, entered into an underwriting agreement with J. R. Sutherlin & Co., a corporation controlled by J. R. Sutherlin, one of the conspirators; that, by this contract, J. R. Sutherlin & Co. bound itself to purchase a very large percentage of the corporation’s stock on the basis of 80 cents on the dollar, the corporation to issue for every share of preferred stock two shares of its common stock, the common stock to be offered by Sutherlin & Co., who were stockbrokers, to purchasers of the preferred, as. a bonus; that in fact said preferred stock, or large blocks of it, was sold to Sutherlin & Co. on the basis of $65 per share; that defendants, together with Gillette, Mitchell, Walker, and others, permitted Sutherlin & Co. to retain large sums of money for its *7 own use and benefit, derived,from the sale of said stock, and to receive and appropriate from the treasury of the corporation large sums of money, so that, at the time of the bankruptcy of the corporation, J. R. Sutherlin & Co. was indebted to it in the sum of $673,585.68 and J. R. Sutherlin in the sum of $10,000.

The petition also shows that, dominated by a conspiracy in which defendants were participants, the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation acquired by an exchange of stock the Globe Oil Company; that, upon the taking over of the Globe Oil Company, Gillette, a man of bad reputation, was elected operating manager and financial agent of the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation; that defendants and the remaining directors negligently and wrongfully permitted Gillette to have access to the notes, 'securities, and bank accounts of the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation and its subsidiary, the Globe Oil Company, with the result. that Gillette appropriated to his own use large sums of money and securities belonging to the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation and its subsidiary, by reason of which the Tex-LaHoma Oil Corporation lost said assets, and, as a consequence, Gillette became indebted to it in the sum of $67,557.

The petition further alleges that, influenced by said conspiracy, the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation entered into an agreement with Sutherlin & Co. to pay quarterly dividends .of 2 per cent, on the preferred stock issued by it and outstanding; that, at that time and thereafter, the directors of the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation, the chief among whom were defendants and Mitchell and Walker, knew that'the corporation had no net profits, or, as the petition states, surplus, out of which to pay dividends, but was heavily indebted to its promoters and others; that, notwithstanding this knowledge, the directors- of the corporation, including defendants, authorized to be. paid out of the treasury of the corporation dividends amounting to $242,334.67; that said payments were made for the purpose of promoting the sale of stock and moreover were made by the directors negligently, carelessly, willfully, and without regard to the obligations which they owed as directors to the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 347, 165 La. 1, 1927 La. LEXIS 1879, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smalley-v-bernstein-la-1927.