South Penn Collieries Co. v. Sproul

52 F.2d 557, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3739
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 1931
Docket4550
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 52 F.2d 557 (South Penn Collieries Co. v. Sproul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Penn Collieries Co. v. Sproul, 52 F.2d 557, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3739 (3d Cir. 1931).

Opinion

DAVIS, Circuit Judge.

This was a suit in equity by the receiver of the South Penn Collieries Company, hereinafter called the South Penn Company, to recover from the defendants, administrators of the estate of William C. Sproul, deceased, and Newton P. Jackson, over a million dollars, and for a further accounting. Sproul and Jackson were the promoters of the South Penn Company. The claim was based upon (a) the receipt of alleged secret profits by the promoters and (b) upon the alleged negligent payment of certain debts of the Kresge Coal Company out of. the funds of the South Penn Company by them as officers and directors of that company. The District Court dismissed the complaint on the ground that neither fraud nor negligence had been shown, and the plaintiff appealed to this court.

The appellant does not dispute the findings of fact which are based on substantial evidence. He says that the court reached an erroneous conclusion from undisputed facts. It is necessary, therefore, to summarize the facts and consider the conclusion.

From the facts found by' the court, it appears that:

In June, 1924, the Kresge Coal Company was known to be insolvent by a wide margin by all those who participated in its management. The company’s liabilities were in excess of $550,000. Its assets consisted of a few culm banks, equipment, and the lease of a certain coal mining property. The culm banks were unprofitable except during serious coal shortages, and as a consequence the condition of the Kresge Company was becoming increasingly hopeless.

William C. Sproul and the several other stockholders who owned the 5,000 shares of capital stock concluded that the company could be saved if new capital should be provided to enable it to acquire additional coal properties so as to keep it profitably in the coal business during the periods when the culm banks could not be worked. The plan designed to achieve the purpose was to form a new corporation to take over the properties of the Kresge Company and acquire others. Sproul and Jackson undertook to promote the new company, known as the South Penn Collieries Company. As a part of the plan, the stock of the Kresge Company was to be exchanged share for share for the common stock of the South' Penn Company.

In addition to owning 1,200 shares of the capital stock of the Kresge Company, Sproul *559 was the owner o£ bonds of the company to the extent of $183,000 out of the $300,000 outstanding.

Shortly after July 1, 1924, the stockholders of the Kresge Company turned their certificates of stock over to Sproul to be exchanged for stock of the South Penn Company, which had then come into existence. The offer of exchange of stock was accepted in August, but the certificates were not actually issued until February, 1925.

On August 4, 1924, the hoard of directors of the South Penn Company bought the first of the coal properties which it had been organized to acquire. This was the “Katherine Property,” for which Sproul and Jackson paid the owners $384,000 and which they resold to the South Penn Company for $700,000, thus making a net profit of $316,-000.

On November 7, 1924, the South Penn Company bought all of the stock of the Randolph Coal Company and the Middleport Coal property from Sproul and Jackson for $825,000 in cash and 50,000 shares of the common stock of the South Penn Company. This consideration, however, included payment to the promoters, who apparently controlled the board of directors, for their services in connection with the purchase of two other properties by the South Penn Company. The promoters realized from these transactions an apparent profit of $533,666.-67, without considering the 50,000 shares of the South Penn Company, for they paid only $291,333.33 for the Randolph and Middleport properties.

The lower court expressly found that in purchasing the above properties from the promoters there had been a full and fair disclosure of the profits to be realized by them to all of the stockholders of the Kresge Company, who, .excepting Sproul and Jackson, were the only stockholders of the South Penn Company.

On November 13, 1924, the capital stock of the South Penn Company was increased by the authorization of an issue of $4,000,000 8 per cent, cumulative preferred stock. This resulted from a plan to finance completely the South Penn Company. Sproul and Jackson obligated themselves to take the entire issue of the preferred stock at par upon the following conditions: That they would turn in the Randolph and Middleport properties at a price giving them a profit in excess of $400,000; that the South Penn Company would allow them to credit $400,000 of the purchase price of these properties against their obligation to pay par value of $1,000,-000 for the entire issue; and that they would in turn sell the stock to the public or take it themselves at 90 per cent, of the par value.

They interested various persons in this preferred stock and sold a block of it to B. Dawson Coleman, John P. Crozer, and T. Coleman Du Pont. Their stock was thus secured as purchasers from Sproul and Jackson and not as original subscribers. At the time of purchasing the stock, Crozer and Du Pont were advised as to the methods by which the profits of the promoters were to be used to make the stock fully paid. Coleman was apparently under the impression that he was merely making a loan, but it is found “that in reality the transaction was as has been found above.”

On November 7, 1924, while the hoard of directors was still under the control of the promoters, payments amounting to $405,422-77 were authorized for the benefit of the creditors of the Kresge Company. This was paid out in different amounts over the period from August 8,1924, to March 17,1925.

The court below expressly found that Sproul and Jackson acted in good faith and without negligence in authorizing the payment ,q£ the various obligations of the Kresge Company by the South Penn Company.

An independent board of directors was elected, and it determined after April 1,1925, to spend no more money in attempting to keep the Kresge Company going. Thereafter the Kresge stock was returned by the South Penn Company to its original owners. The Kresge Company subsequently went into bankruptcy and its assets were sold for $600. Its bonds and notes, amounting to $400,000, which the South Penn Company acquired and held, are entirely worthless.

Final payment was made to Sproul and Jackson on March 13, 1925, for the Katherine, Randolph, and Middleport properties, at which time the promoters, by agreement with the company, remitted $190,000 of the balance due.

The first question raised on this appeal, as above stated, relates to alleged “secret profits” made by the promoters of the South Penn Company by means of the purchase of coal properties and the resale of them to the company at an advanced price. These involve the Katherine, the Randolph, and the Middleport properties.

The question of secret profits has caused endless discussion in the courts, text-hooks, and legal periodicals, and the only safe statement that can he made is that hardly any two authorities have been in absolute accord. The *560 term “promoters” has a suspicious sound, and the courts have gone far to protect a careless public.

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Bluebook (online)
52 F.2d 557, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-penn-collieries-co-v-sproul-ca3-1931.