State Ex Rel. Harwood v. Sartorius

198 S.W.2d 690, 355 Mo. 837, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 512
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 16, 1946
DocketNo. 39973.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 198 S.W.2d 690 (State Ex Rel. Harwood v. Sartorius) 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. Harwood v. Sartorius, 198 S.W.2d 690, 355 Mo. 837, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 512 (Mo. 1946).

Opinion

*839 ELLISON, J.

This is a proceeding in prohibition instituted in this court by the relatrices, Misses Ollie Harwood and Vivian Patterson, against the respondent, Hon. Eugene J. Sartorious, Judge of the circuit court of the City of St. Louis. The cause is at issue on relatrices’ petition for our writ, respondent’s return and a transcript of the evidence in the underlying litigation, which has been brought up by agreement.

Eelatriees seek to prohibit the enforcement against them of certain preventive and mandatory injunctive orders 'decreed by respondent allegedly in excess of his jurisdiction as chancellor, in an equity suit brought against the relatrices by one Madame Henrietta de Bernard (hereinafter called Madame Bernard). The petition in the equity suit prayed: cancellation of two stock certificates for TOO' shares each of the capital stock of a Missouri corporation styled Maison de Bernard, Inc., severally issued some five years earlier to the relatrices, respectively; that relatrices be divested of any right, title or interest in said shares of stock and any others of the corporation; that they be enjoined from interfering with Madame Bernard’s management *840 and control of the corporation; and for general relief. The corporation was not joined as a party defendant in the equity suit. Before stating the nature of the decretal orders made by respondent and assailed by relatrices, we must outline the facts.

The undisputed evidence adduced in the equity suit was as follows. The corporation was chartered by Madame Bernard in 1927 to take over a business she had earlier founded in St. Louis dealing in women’s tailored and ready-to-wear apparel. It had 500 shares of capital stock of the par value of $100 per share. In the beginning she owned all of it. But in 1932 at the suggestion of her'bankers she transferred 155 shares to the corporation’s treasury to eliminate an item of good will appraised at $15,500' in the original schedule of capital assets. This left her with 345 shares of which 341 stood in her name, the other four being held by two employees as qualifying shares since the statutes required a manufacturing or business corporation to have-at least three shareholders and directors. Sec’s 4555 (7) and 4933, R. S. 1929. Relatrix Harwood was one of these two employees, holding two qualifying shares. She had entered the service of the corporation as bookkeeper that year — 1932. But she lays no claim to those two shares and they may be treated as actually belonging to Madame Bernard. The other two qualifying shares were issued to a former employee'named Flora Witbeek, who receipted for them on the stock book. Her stock certificate is not accounted for on the corporate records, but there was testimony in the equity suit that Madame Bernard had possession of it, and since the relatrices do not claim the two shares, we think it may be conceded for the purposes of the case that Madame Bernard owned them also,giving her the entire 345 shares outside of the 155 shares of treasury stock.

Madame Bernard’s version of the disputed facts was that seven or eight years later, in the summer of 1940, the relatrices requested her to sell each of them 100 shares of her stock in the corporation for $500, or $1,000 for the two. She was dubious because it would leave her only 145 shares. Thereupon the relatrix Harwood [acting also for relatrix Patterson] proposed that the 155 shares of treasury stock and 45 shares of Madame Bernard’s own stock be sold to thein, making their 200 shares, and leaving her with 300 shares and stock control. She consented to that. But since relatrix Harwood felt she needed advice as to the proper manner of transferring the treasury stock, certificates for the two blocks of 100 shares were temporarily issued to the relatrices, respectively, on September 1, 1940, out of Madame Bernard’s 345 shares, and a new certificate was issued to her for 143 shares, which together with the two qualifying shares in the name of Miss Witbeek took up the outstanding 345 shares. As a part of this arrangement relatrix Harwood promised to adjust the stock holdings later so that she (Madame Bernard) would be credited *841 with 300 shares. Relatrices were elected as two of the three directors; Madame Bernard was president; relatrix Patterson was made vice-president; and the relatrix Harwood, secretary and treasurer. She continued also as bookkeeper.

Madame Bernard further testified that for over four years the business of the corporation was conducted harmoniously with her in control, but that relatrix Harwood failed to make the stock readjustment. Sometime in 1944 the attitude of the relatrices changed. They began to mistreat her and she learned they had defrauded her by two bookkeeping entries. One of these involved the $1000 allegedly paid in by relatrices for their 200 shares of stock. For some time that money had been credited on the corporation’s books to “Paid'in surplus”, and thereby treated as a corporate asset. But in 1944 the amount was transferred to “Due Officers and Stockholders”, making it appear that the money was due back to the relatrices as a debt. The second entry covered an item of $2880.87, which Madame Bernard had advanced to the corporation before relatrices’ entrance into the business. In November, 1941, relatrix Harwood transferred that item from “Due Officers and Stockholders” to “Paid in surplus” thereby making it appear as a corporate asset. These, in brief, were the asserted facts on which Madame Bernard based her equity suit, though she did not specifically pray for relief as to the bookkeeping entries. After an ineffectual demand on relatrices in May, 1945, she called a special meeting of the stockholders on August 1, 1945, at which.the parties and their counsel were unable to agree. Shortly thereafter she brought the equity suit.

Relatrices’ version of the disputed facts was as follows. Miss Harwood testified she and Miss Patterson did not luy the 200 shares of stock from Madame Bernard, but that the latter transferred 100 shares to each of them in consideration of their respectively advancing $500 to the corporation as a loan for the purpose of “securing”, or underwriting, a two year lease at a new location, the lease,calling for a down payment of $1000 which was to cover the rent for the last five months of its term and to constitute liquidated damages in ease of a breach. Relatrix Harwood testified the impelling reasons for the transaction were that the corporation was insolvent; that Madame Bernard was improvident and harassed by creditors; that there was an economic depression; and that other like businesses had moved to the new location. She further declared the matter of stock control was never mentioned at the time of the transaction, or until 1945. Relatrices assert Madame Bernard’s contention that they were to purchase the 155 shares of treasury stock from the corporation was an afterthought, inspired by the. fact that the value of the stock had increased by 1945, because of the business prosperity attending World War II.

*842 As to the bookkeeping entries.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W.2d 690, 355 Mo. 837, 1946 Mo. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-harwood-v-sartorius-mo-1946.