State Ex Inf. North Todd Gentry v. American Can Co.

4 S.W.2d 448, 319 Mo. 456, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 510
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 17, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 448 (State Ex Inf. North Todd Gentry v. American Can Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Inf. North Todd Gentry v. American Can Co., 4 S.W.2d 448, 319 Mo. 456, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 510 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*459 WHITE, J.-

This proceeding in quo warranto, begun by the Attorney-General, has for its purpose to oust respondent from its corporate franchises and to declare the same forfeited, the petition alleging non-user.

The petition of relator was lodged with the clerk of this court December 2, 1925, but for some reason was not marked “Filed” until December 11, 1925. The respondent, March 10, 1926, filed return, denying the allegations of the petition, except such as it specifically admitted to be true; alleged compliance with the statute in filing reports ; that the State of Missouri is estopped to visit any penalties upon it; that, the relator is “being imposed upon and was induced to institute this proceeding by the cunning, sophistry, selfishness and subterranean machinations of a foreign corporation, the American Can Company of New Jersey, whose purpose is to drive out of this State all competitors.”

Further, it is alleged in the return that since the American Can Company of New Jersey entered the State and conducted a similar business it has been engaged in a systematic and frantic effort “to *460 secure the ownership of all the capital stock of respondent, with a view to exercising a monopoly of the business which respondent is authorized to conduct under its franchises. ’ ’ The relator filed a reply to the return, putting in issue a number of facts alleged, and averring in detail many facts affecting the situation, including misuser as well as non-user.

The petition, return, and reply are of considerable length, containing many allegations of facts and denials about which finally there was no dispute, and other facts disputed which it is more convenient to consider in connection with the report of the special commissioner.

Hon. Frank Hollingsworth, of Mexico, Missouri, was appointed by this court, March 10, 1926, to take testimony in the case, with full power for that purpose, “and to report such testimony to the court, together with his findings of fact and conclusions of law therein.”

The‘commissioner accordingly took evidence, and August 3, 1927, filed his report, finding in the main the disputed facts in favor of relator; that the respondent by reason of non-user and misuser of its corporate powers had forfeited its rights to them; he recommended that the charter of the American Can Company of Missouri be forfeited. Respondent filed exceptions to the findings of fact and conclusions of law. The matter was argued before Court en Banc and submitted.

The respondent was incorporated in 1889, as a manufacturing company, under the name of The St. Louis Can & Canning Company, with a capital stock of twenty thousand dollars, divided into two hundred .shares of one hundred dollars each, and the purpose was to engage in the manufacture and sale of tin cans, tinware and packers’ supplies. In April, 1891, the name of the corporation was changed to the American Can Company.

It failed to comply with the statute passed in 1891, which required incorporated companies to report annually to the Secretary of State the location of its principal office, the name of its principal officer, amount of earnings, cash value of its personal property, etc., under penalty of a fine of not less than a hundred nor more than a thousand dollars for a failure.

This act was repealed and an act similar in import passed in 1893. No report under that act was filed by respondent for fourteen years. The last meeting of its board of directors under its then management, was held in 1894. In 1896 the Circuit Attorney of St. Louis, filed suit against the American Can Company to recover the penalties provided by statute for failure to make reports to the Secretary of State, and the sheriff found no one upon whom to make service. It had no plant, no office, no assets, no credit.

*461 In 1908, all the stock of that corporation was bought by Frederick L. Westerbeck. At this point the Columbia Can Company comes into the play. It was incorporated in 1902 for the purpose of manufacturing tin cans, packers’ supplies, etc., with a capital of sixty thousand dollars, divided into six hundred shares of the par value of one hundred dollars each. Mr. Frederick L. Westerbeck owned five hundred and twenty shares, and his two sons, Emil J. Wes-terbeck and Frederick H. Westerbeck, owned the remaining eighty shares. The Columbia Can Company was doing a prosperous business when Westerbeck, in 1908, purchased the stock of the American Can Company. The way in which he came to buy the stock was this: Charles B. Emmerich was employed by the Columbia Can Company and working at its plant. He was the last elected president of the American Can Company of Missouri, and owned all the stock. One Mr. Rudolph was vice-president of the American Can Company of New Jersey, a corporation with a capital of a* hundred million dollars and doing business in many cities. He came to Mr. Emmerich at the Columbia Can Company plant for the purpose of buying the stock of the American Can Company of Missouri. The New Jersey company, in April, 1908, had applied to the Secretary of State, then John E. Swanger, to obtain license to do business in Missouri under; its name, the American Can Company. Mr. Swanger’s letter is in the record, in which he said that under the statute he was prohibited from issuing a license because another corporation of the same name appeared, meaning the American Can Company of Missouri. Mr. Swanger further suggested in the letter that if it could be shown by affidavit of the president or secretary of the American Can Company of Missouri that it had ceased to do business and no longer was a corporation, he would admit the American Can Company of New Jersey to do business in the State under its own name. Thereupon Mr. Rudolph sought out Mr. Emmerich for the purpose of buying the stock of the American Can Company of Missouri. What occurred at their conference was related in Mr. Westerbeck’s account of what Mr. Emmerich told him, to the effect that Mr. Rudolph offered Emmerich five or perhaps ten dollars for his franchise and stock, and Emmerich got mad about it, threw his hat on the floor, swore he was not a beggar, and offered to give the stock to' Westerbeck. Wester-beck declined the offer and finally paid Emmerich $250 for that stock. Afterwards the American Can Company of New Jersey attempted several times to buy the stock of the American Can Company of Missouri from Mr. Westerbeck, beginning with an offer of two thousand dollars and gradually raised the price to three thousand, five thousand, fifteen thousand, and finally to twenty thousand dollars in 1925. Those offers were refused.

*462 In tbe meantime the American. Can Company of New Jersey had incorporated a subsidiary company in Missouri, operating under the name of the Missouri Can Company, and was .a competitor of the Columbia Can Company in the same line of business. The purpose of the American Can Company of New Jersey was to buy the American Can Company of Missouri, forfeit its franchise, dissolve the subsidiary, the Missouri Can Company, and obtain a license to do business in Missouri in its own name. From its immense capital and its extensive business we may infer that its corporate name was a valuable asset.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 448, 319 Mo. 456, 1928 Mo. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-inf-north-todd-gentry-v-american-can-co-mo-1928.