State ex rel. Donnell v. Foster

125 S.W. 184, 225 Mo. 171, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 6
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 2, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 125 S.W. 184 (State ex rel. Donnell v. Foster) 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. Donnell v. Foster, 125 S.W. 184, 225 Mo. 171, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 6 (Mo. 1910).

Opinion

FOX, J.

This is an original proceeding by which it is sought to have this court issue its writ of prohibition against the judge of the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, Division No. 3, James A. Watkins, Rudolph C. Carssow, Oscar C. Carssow and John PL Hol-liday, prohibiting said court, as well as the other defendants, from enforcing certain judgments and decrees entered by said circuit court.

This application for a writ of prohibition is the outgrowth of a suit filed by one James A. Watkins, Rudolph C. Carssow and Oscar 0. Carssow, in behalf of themselves and other stockholders of the Donnell Manufacturing Company, against John W. Donnell, Fannie M. Donnell, Thomas Maher and the Donnell Manu[177]*177facturing Company, in which the plaintiffs alleged among other things that the defendant John W. Donnell was the owner of 364 shares of the capital stock of the Donnell Manufacturing Company, Fannie M. Donnell the owner of four shares, Thomas Maher the owner of one share. That the plaintiff, James A. Watkins, was the owner of 107 shares, Eudolph C. Carssow was the owner of 72 shares and Oscar C, Carssow the owner of 10 shares. That for several years last past the company had carried on its business at a large and increasing annual loss. That the capital stock had become largely impaired and that the corporation was insolvent. That the reputation, credit and good will of the Donnell Manufacturing Company had been destroyed and its assets had been wasted until it had become insolvent by the incompetent, dishonest and fraudulent mismanagement of its business by said John W. Donnell and his codirectors.

We do not deem it essential to burden the statement of this case with a reproduction in full of the petition in the original suit of James A. Watkins et al. v. John W. Donnell ét al., but it will suffice to briefly make reference to the features of such petition which are applicable to the questions involved in the present proceeding by which a writ of prohibition is soug’ht.

Said petition avers that John W. Donnell, in the latter part of 1906 and the first part of 1907, devised and put into execution a certain plan or scheme by which a large number of individuals were induced, through means of certain printed forms and circular letters, to enter into a form of contract with the said Donnell Manufacturing Company under which they did each deposit with said company one thousand to two thousand dollars in cash, and they were .thereupon furnished certain goods for sale which had been manufactured or purchased by the said Donnell Manufacturing Company. Plaintiffs do not know the exact sum [178]*178of money so received by the said Donnell Manufacturing Company under these contracts, but allege that it exceeded the sum of one hundred thousand dollars.

It is next alleged that some of the parties from whom the Donnell Manufacturing Company had received money under the scheme as indicated, complained to the Postmaster-General of the United States, and upon a hearing of said complaints an order was made by the Postmaster-General denying to said defendant the right thereafter to use the mails. It is then alleged that by reason of the operation of the scheme and plan devised by said John W. Donnell and his co-directors, to which reference has been made, a large number of suits have been filed against the Donnell Manufacturing Company by parties who had made cash deposits in pursuance of the plan and scheme heretofore mentioned, for the purpose of recovering-said deposits and damages for alleged frauds practiced upon them in procuring same. It is then alleged that the Donnell Manufacturing Company has sustained and will hereafter sustain great loss, expense and damage through said litigation, even if all said suits should be decided in favor of the Donnell Manufacturing Company.

It is also alleged that ever since the fraud order issued by the Postmaster-General, referred to, was issued against the Donnell Manufacturing Company denying to said company the right to use the United States mails for the transaction of its business, defendant John W.. Donnell, unmindful of his duties as a director and a trustee of the Donnell Manufacturing-Company, has been carrying on, and attempts to- carry on, the business heretofore conducted by the said Donnell Manufacturing- Company in his own individual name, in the name of the “Donnell Specialty Company” and of the “Donnell Supply Company,” and in other names, and has been thereby trying to induce the customers and patrons, who formerly did business [179]*179with the Donnell Manufacturing Company, to transfer and hereafter carry on such business with John W. Donnell as an individual or with copartnerships or companies organized by him with the intent and purpose thereby to transfer and take over the good will and other assets of the corporation to himself or to companies or partnerships controlled by him, to the loss and damage of the corporation and its stockholders.

There were other allegations in said petition as follows:

“(3). Plaintiffs further aver that said John W. Donnell has been guilty of reckless, fraudulent and extravagant mismanagement in his conduct of the business of said company in that be has paid an agent, named Scritzmeier, whom he employed to devise and operate the aforesaid scheme of contracts heretofore referred to, the sum of four hundred dollars out of every one thousand dollars deposited with it or paid to the Donnell Manufacturing Company under said scheme, and the aggregate of the sums so paid to said agent is more than forty thousand dollars. Plaintiffs further say that the services rendered by said agent Scritzmeier in procuring said contracts did not extend' over or cover a period of more than four months, and the said services are well known by the said John W. Donnell not to be worth more than one hundred or-two hundred dollars per month at the time he paid the said sum .of forty thousand dollars therefor. Plaintiffs further aver that said John "W. Donnell also employed other agents to assist the said Scritzmeier in operating said scheme and in inducing the people to make'such contracts and such deposits, paying them the sum of $6,250 for a few months ’ services, although said John W. Donnell, at the time he made such payments, well knew that the services so rendered were not worth the sum of $6,250 and knew that they were not in any event worth more than the sum of one [180]*180hundred dollars per month for each of the agents so employed during the time they were actually engaged in working for said corporation, or a total sum of $600.
“(4). Plaintiffs further aver that said John W. Donnell, hy and through his domination and control of the officers of the defendant corporation, has paid to himself, as a pretended salary for his services as the president and general manager thereof, the sum of sixty-nine thousand dollars in excess of the amount of salary which he was lawfully authorized to draw from or he paid hy said corporation.
“(5). Plaintiffs further aver that as soon as the deposits above referred to, amounting to more than one hundred thousand dollars had been made with the defendant corporation by the parties, induced to sign said contracts, the defendant, John W.

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W. 184, 225 Mo. 171, 1910 Mo. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-donnell-v-foster-mo-1910.