State Ex Rel. Cantley v. Meyer Tailoring Co.

25 S.W.2d 98, 324 Mo. 795, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 561
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 19, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 25 S.W.2d 98 (State Ex Rel. Cantley v. Meyer Tailoring 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 Rel. Cantley v. Meyer Tailoring Co., 25 S.W.2d 98, 324 Mo. 795, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 561 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

The relator brought this action in the Circuit Court of City of St. Louis to enjoin the Meyer Tailoring Company from transacting in said city the business of issuing and selling contracts by which it obligated itself under the conditions set forth in the statement of facts, to give each holder of one of said contracts a suit of clothes. Certain individuals are joined in the petition as parties respondent who are not necessary to the determination of this action and hence are omitted.

The court, upon the filing of this petition, entered a temporary order enjoining the corporation from continuing to issue said certificates and appointed the relator as Commissioner of Finance of the State of Missouri to recover pendente Hie the business assets and property of said respondent. The respondent thereupon filed a demurrer to the relator’s petition alleging that the same did not state a cause of action. The demurrer was by the court sustained and from the judgment rendered thereon the relator has appealed.

*798 The sufficiency of the petition is the determinative question in this case. It is alleged therein that the respondent is engaged in issuing contracts in the nature of certificates which provide for (1) the fulfilling of the contracts therein set foi’th, from the accumulation of funds arising from the contributions made by the holders of such contracts; (2) the maturing of such contracts in an arbitrarily determined order or manner; (3) and a consideration in personal property greater in value than the amount of such contracts together with the net earnings accrued and accumulated thereon.

That said corporation is transacting the business of issuing and selling said certificates or contracts payable in thirty weeks at the rate of $1.50 each week and is obligating itself at the expiration of said time to give each contract-holder a suit of clothes; but that under said contracts the holders thereof have no rights in the event of their failure to pay the full number of their installments to the return to them or any part thereof of the amounts thus paid and deposited with the corporation by them, contrary to the provisions of Sections 10240 and 10241, Revised Statutes 1919.

That said corporation in issuing to each contract-holder a contract or certificate whereby some of such holders may become entitled to have their contracts fully paid op at a time prior to the payment of the required thirty weekly installments; that at the time, of making said contracts none of the parties know what contract holders will become entitled to have his or their contracts fully paid up; that the contract-holders during the lives of their contracts and prior to the selection or allocation of such fully paid contracts, have no knowledge relating to the selection or allotment of such fully paid contracts; that the determination of what contracts shall be declared fully paid is determined by chance, luck, caprice, and fortune; that these selections are sometimes determined by numbers corresponding to numbers occurring in the published weather reports, and at other times by selections made by the officers of said corporation; and that said corporation is thereby maintaining a lottery in violation of the laws of Missouri.

That there are outstanding in excess of 3,000 contracts issued by said corporation in the manner aforesaid, upon which there has been paid more than $10 upon each of said contracts by the subscribers thereto, and that said corporation has obtained and collected in the time and manner set out in the petition a total sum in excess of $30,000, and that said corporation in transacting the business thus described has been carrying on in Missouri the business oE a co-operative company within the meaning and purview of Sections 10237 to 10262 of Article S, Chapter 90, Revised Statutes 1919.

*799 That said corporation has failed to make the $25,000 deposit with the State Treasurer as required by Section 10237, Revised Statutes 1919; that it has not filed with the Commissioner of Finance the certificate from the State Treasurer of such deposit; that it has not filed a certified copy of its by-laws nor any statement of its plans for doing- business or copies of contracts proposed to be used in the conduct of its business; and that it has not procured from relator or any of his predecessors in office a certificate authorizing- it to do business, as required by Section 10238, Revised Statutes 1919.

That said corporation is unable and unwilling to continue in business for the benefit and profit of all of its creditors and contract-holders and certificate-holders, and is refusing- to repay 'sums deposited by said subscribers and contract-holders to which, they are entitled under the laws of the State of Missouri, and has been so refusing after demand made therefor for a long period of time.

That said corporation is conducting- its business in an unsafe, illegal and unauthorized manner; that it is unsafe and inexpedient for it to continue to transact business; that unless relator be authorized and directed to forthwith take charge of the property and assets of said corporation and be appointed as receiver with full power, authority and direction to administer the affairs thereof, convert said assets into cash, and to hear and determine the claims of contract-holders, certificate-holders, subscribers and creditors in the State of Missouri against the said corporation, and to pay and apportion its moneys and property equitably among its said contract-holders, certificate-holders, subscribers and creditors; and unless said corporation is enjoined and restrained from further prosecution of the business of said corporation as now conducted and in removing its assets from the State of Missouri, the said contract-holders or creditors of said corporation in the State of Missouri will have the investments made by them with said corporation dissipated and will lose the moneys they have invested with said eoi’poration in said contracts and certificates.

That the State of Missouri and the relator have no adequate remedj’- at law and therefore have recourse to a court of equity for relief in the premises.

In accordance, therefore, with Sections 10244 and 10245, Article X, Chapter 90, Revised Statutes 1919, relator prays for a temporary injunction restraining said corporation from using or disposing of any moneys or property of said corporation and from further prosecuting its business and from withdrawing' or attempting to withdraw any of its assets from the State of Missouri; and the appointment of relator as receiver of said company and its property and assets with authority to take charge of said assets, business and prop *800 erty, to reduce to possession all assets and dioses in action and property, to convert the property into cash, to hear claims and allow or disallow the same, to bring suits in behalf of said corporation and its contract-holders, to compel said corporation to act for, convey and pay over to said receiver any and all moneys of the corporation received by it and to authorize relator to pay out moneys necessary to carry on the receivership and to employ attorneys to represent relator as receiver with the approval of the Attorney-General of the State of Missouri, pursuant to the provision of Section 10245, Article 10, Chapter 90, Revised Statutes 1919.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W.2d 98, 324 Mo. 795, 1930 Mo. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cantley-v-meyer-tailoring-co-mo-1930.