Smith v. Stone

128 P. 612, 21 Wyo. 62, 1912 Wyo. LEXIS 15
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1912
DocketNo. 694
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 128 P. 612 (Smith v. Stone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Stone, 128 P. 612, 21 Wyo. 62, 1912 Wyo. LEXIS 15 (Wyo. 1912).

Opinion

Potter, Justice.

This action was brought by John Smith, who alleges in the petition that it is brought on behalf of the Bear River Land & Stock Company, a corporation, and on his own behalf as a stockholder of said corporation, and on the behalf of all other stockholders who may desire to come in and be made parties to the cause and bear the expenses incurred therein. The defendants named in the petition are Charles Stone, John H. Ward, George E. Pexton, John R. Arnold, Otto Arnold, A. E. Bradbury, James Smith, J. C. Riley, Crawford Land Company, a corporation, Bear River Land & Stock Company, a corporation, and Bear River Development Company, a corporation. The petition alleges as a reason for joining James Smith and J. C. Riley as defendants that the plaintiff has been unable to procure their consent to be made plaintiffs in the cause. Each of the defendants, except James Smith and J. C. Riley, filed a separate general demurrer to the petition, and said demurrers [76]*76having been argued and submitted to the District Court they were each sustained, the plaintiff excepting thereto.' Thereupon the further order was made in the case that the petition be dismissed with costs assessed against the plaintiff. The case is here on error, and the general question to be determined is whether or not the petition states a cause of action against the defendants or either of them.

The object of the action, stated generally, is to avoid a sale of the property and assets of the Bear River Land & Stock Company which may have been made and which the petition seems to assume was made to the Crawford Land Company, a corporation, pursuant to a resolution adopted at the annual meeting of the stockholders of the Bear River Land & Stock Company held on the 2nd day of October, 1906, and a like resolution adopted on the same day at a meeting of the trustees of said corporation, and' also a sub1 sequent sale of said property and assets alleged to have been made by the Crawford Land Company to the Bear River Development Company, and to require an accounting by the defendants and each of them, except James Smith and J. C. Riley, of the money received by them or either of them from the 'sale of the assets of the said Bear River Land & Stock Company and the amounts expended, and the payment of alleged debts of said corporation.

, The petition alleges that'at all the times mentioned therein each of the companies above named was a corporation 'existing and doing business under the laws of the State of Wyoming; that The plaintiff is a stockholder in the 'Bear River Land & Stock Company, owning 98 shares of its capital stock; that said capital stock consists of $150,000, divided into 1,500 shares of the par value of $100 each,, of which 765' shares have been issued and were outstanding oil the 2nd day of October, 1906, the-,defendant Charles Stone holding 228 shares, the defendant Otto Arnold 1 share, the defendant John R. Arnold 1 share,- the defendant George E. Pexton 56 shares, the defendant John H. Ward 57 shares, the defendant A.‘ E. Bradbury 115 shares, the de[77]*77fendant James Smith 97 shares and the defendant J.' C. Riley 112 shares. That on said 2nd day of Octoher, 1906, the Bear River Rand & Stock Company was indebted to North & Stone, a co-partnership, doing a banking business in Evanston, Wyoming, in about the sum of $76,500. That the said co-partnership of North & Stone constitute, as plaintiff is informed and believes, all of the defendants, except James Smith and J. C. Riley, although in another paragraph of the petition in stating the names of the members of that firm the name of John R. Arnold is omitted. That on the 2nd day of October, 1906, the annual meeting of the stockholders of said Bear River Land & Stock Company was held in the town of Evanston, County of Uinta and State of Wyoming, “for the election of trustees for the ensuing year, and for no other purpose, and there were present at said meeting said Charles Stone, Otto Arnold, John Smith, James Smith, John R. Arnold and George E. Pexton; that the notice calling said meeting contained no notification that any other business than the election of trustees of said corporation for the ensuing year would be transacted, except that said notice stated that said meeting was called ‘for the transaction of all other business as may properly come before the meeting,’ and at said time the following named parties were elected as trustees for the ensuing year, to-wit: Charles Stone, John H. Ward, George E. Pexton, John Smith and John R. Arnold.” That at said stockholders’ meeting all the' stockholders present other than John Smith and James Smith “wrongfully and against the rights of said corporation and the stockholders thereof, and with intent to defraud the same, and as plaintiff is informed and believes, and therefore alleges the fact to be, by reason of prearrangement between themselves, attempted to adopt a resolution authorizing the president and secretary of said company to sell all of the assets of said corporation, both real and personal, to the said defendant, the Crawford Land Company, for the sum óf $76,500.00; that all the stockholders of the said Bear River Land & Stock [78]*78Company were not present at said stockholders’ meeting, John H. Ward and A. E. Bradbury not being present thereat, and the said plaintiff John Smith and the defendant James Smith objected to said resolution and to the attempt of the stockholders present at said meeting to pass any such resolution, or to undertake to dispose of the assets of said corporation for any such price as that mentioned in said resolution, and notified said trustees that the price at which they were undertaking to sell the assets of said corporation •was not the fair “or market value thereof, nor the reasonable value of the same, and that a price far in excess of that could be procured for said property if an endeavor were made so to do.” That immediately following the adjournment of said stockholders’ meeting the said Charles Stone, John R. Arnold and George E. Pexton “wrongfully and against the rights of said Bear River Land & Stock Company and the stockholders thereof attempted to hold a meeting of the newly elected trustees of said Bear River Land & Stock Company, and this notwithstanding the fact that no notice of the holding of the same or the business to be transacted thereat had been given, and there was not present at said pretended meeting said trustee John H. Ward; that at said pretended meeting the said Charles Stone, John R. Arnold and George E. Pexton wrongfully and against the rights of said corporation and the stockholders thereof attempted and pretended to adopt a resolution authorizing the sale of all of the assets of said corporation, both real and personal aforesaid, for the sum of $76,500.00 to said Crawford Land Company, and attempted to authorize the president and secretary of said corporation to make, execute and deliver to said Crawford Land Company deeds and bills of sale and all other and further instruments necessary to convey said assets to said latter company; that said John Smith ■and James Smith being present at said pretended meeting objected to said resolution and to the attempt of said trustees to dispose of the assets of said corporation, and notified said -trustees that the price at which they were undertaking [79]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 P. 612, 21 Wyo. 62, 1912 Wyo. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-stone-wyo-1912.