State ex rel. Grimm v. Manhattan Rubber Manufacturing Co.

50 S.W. 321, 149 Mo. 181, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 30, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 50 S.W. 321 (State ex rel. Grimm v. Manhattan Rubber Manufacturing 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. Grimm v. Manhattan Rubber Manufacturing Co., 50 S.W. 321, 149 Mo. 181, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 16 (Mo. 1899).

Opinions

YALLIANT, J.

This is a suit upon the statutory bond given by a plaintiff in attachment to the sheriff to indemnify a third party claimant of the property attached.

The facts of the case are substantially as follows: The Peters Rubber and Supply Company was a corporation doing business in St. Louis in 1895. There were but three directors, viz., Charles O. Peters, James Ruane and Charles W. Ohrendorf, who were respectively president, vice-president and secretary. Peters owned nearly all the stock; Ohrendorf and Ruane owned each a small part and had very little to do with the business, both being engaged in other pursuits, and the business of the corporation was under the sole management of Peters. In December, 1895, the corporation was indebted as follows: Third National Bank,' $10,000; Continental Bank, $4,700; Berthold Lange, for director Ohrendorf, $9,155.99, for director Ruane, $420.20; Graton Knight Manufacturing Company, $9,027.45; Metropolitan Rubber Company, $10,543.74; Manhattan Manufacturing Company, $9,399.78; Cable Rubber Company, $621.50; [188]*188Boston "Woven Hose Company, $921.73; Milford Shoe Company, $534.65; Kelly-Goodfellow Shoe Company, $264.52; The Western Advertising Company, $400; W. L. Williamson, $265.25; New York Leather Belting Company, $219.44; aggregating over $50,000. The debts owing to the Third National Bank and the Continental Bank were evidenced by notes indorsed by directors Ohrendorf and Ruane. The debt to Lange was evidenced by notes which belonged to Ohrendorf and by him turned over to Lange for the purpose of having them appear in his name in the deed of trust presently to be mentioned. The Ruane debt was evidenced by note. As to the rest of those debts, the directors Ohrendorf and Ruane were under no individual liability and had no interest.

On December 19, 1895, Peters was confined to his home with serious illness, and Ohrendorf looked into the affairs of the corporation and became alarmed on account of the debts for which he was indorsee and those owing to himself, lie then applied to his personal attorney, Mr. Grimm, for advice as to the best method of securing himself. Mr. Grimm advised the execution of a deed of trust conveying all the' property of the corporation to secure the debts of the concern, applying the proceeds of the property to the payment of the debts, not pro rata, but in the order to be enumerated in the deed, naming first those on which he was indorser, then the debt due him, then the debt due director Ruane, and after that the other debts. It was also concluded between Ohrendorf and his attorney that it would look better if his debt did not appear in the deed in his own name, and for that reason it was put in the name of his friend Berthold Lange. Acting on this advice of his attorney, Ohrendorf conferred with Ruane, who approved the scheme. The two went to the home of Mr. Peters and according to the testimony of these two, which is all the evidence we have on that point, Peters agreed to it. That was Thursday, December [189]*18919. They left with the understanding that the three should meet at the store on the following Monday, and execute the deed. But during that interview Ohrendorf became impressed with the idea that Peters was going to die, and with this thought in mind they had the deed drawn by Mr. Grimm, and on Saturday Mr. Ruane and a notary took it to Mr. Peters’ house for him to execute. He read it, according to their testimony, and was about to sign it, when the notary asked him if he had the corporate seal at hand, and on being answered in the negative the notary declined to take the acknowledgment, and he and Ruane went away leaving the deed in Peters’ possession. The next day, Sunday, Peters sent to the store and got the seal. On Monday at 9 a. m. the notary returned to Peters’ house, but, as he testified, was met at the door by Mrs. Peters, who stated that her husband was too ill toisee anyone or attend to business, and declined to admit the notary, and declined to give him the deed or seal. The notary immediately went down town and reported these facts to Ruane, and he and Mr. Grimm, the attorney, requested the notary to go to Mr. Peters’ house again, which he did at about 11 a. m. of same day, and met with the same refusal, and immediately reported the result to Mr. Ruane. Then Ohrendorf and Ruane held a meeting, ordered a new seal to be made, which was done, and executed the deed, Ruane signing it as vice-president, acting president. The deed was immediately put of record, and the trustee took possession of the goods.

The Manhattan Rubber Manufacturing Company brought suit by attachment against the Peters Rubber and Supply Company and the sheriff, under the attachment, seized part of the goods covered by the deed of trust, which were claimed in due statutory form by the trustee; whereupon the Manhattan Company, the plaintiff in attachment, executed the bond now sued on, and the sheriff retained the goods.

[190]*190Upon, the trial tbe plaintiff endeavored to show that tbe meeting at Peters’ house was a regular board of directors’ meeting, and to this end both Obrendorf and Ruane testified that tbe former told Peters they desired it to be considered a regular meeting and tbe result written up as such in their minute book, and that Peters assented. A by-law was in evidence to tbe effect that when all of them were present, a meeting could be held without notice. There was no formal opening or closing of a meeting, but according to tbe two witnesses, tbe business was discussed and agreed on and they separated. A few days after tbe deed bad been executed Mr. Obrendorf wrote in tbe minute book what purported to be tbe minutes of that meeting, reciting a formal opening, discussion of tbe business, motion to execute tbe deed which was carried, then a motion that Obrendorf and Ruane attended to tbe execution of tbe deed* which was earned, then a motion to adjourn, etc. — all in unexceptionable form. This was read in evidence seemingly without objection, though that is disputed, and tbe record is a little vague.

Plaintiff also offered testimony tending to prove that Peters was agreeable to tbe whole scheme, not only tbe testimony of Obrendorf and Ruane, as above stated, as to what transpired at Peters’ bouse on tbe nineteenth, but also tbe testimony of Ruane and Roberts tbe notary, as to what Peters said on Saturday tbe twenty-first, when they took tbe deed to him to be signed, and also tbe testimony of Roberts as to what Mrs. Peters said on Monday as tbe reason why Peters could not be seen, nor tbe seal obtained from him. This latter testimony tended to negative tbe inference that tbe sending to tbe store on Sunday for tbe seal and bolding possession of it and failing to execute tbe deed on Monday was tbe result of opposition on Peters’ part to executing tbe deed. Rut when tbe defendants offered the testimony of Mr. Tracy, who was the nephew of Mrs. Peters and tbe [191]*191person whom Mr. Peters had sent to the store for the seal, to prove what Mr. Peters said to him on the subject of executing the deed, it was on objection of the plaintiff ruled out, and with the like result the defendants offered to prove by his witness’ conversations with Peters on that Sunday about the indebtedness of the concern to the Manhattan Rubber Manufacturing Company, and that the witness had at the request of Peters on that day sent telegrams to creditors in New York, among them the Manhattan Company, and the contents of those telegrams. So also the testimony of Mr. Givins, for the same purpose, was on the plaintiff’s objection excluded. Mr. Givens did testify, however, that he saw Mr. Peters in his room about

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W. 321, 149 Mo. 181, 1899 Mo. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-grimm-v-manhattan-rubber-manufacturing-co-mo-1899.