State ex rel. Lange v. A. F. Shapleigh Hardware Co.

48 S.W. 927, 147 Mo. 366, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 149
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 48 S.W. 927 (State ex rel. Lange v. A. F. Shapleigh Hardware 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. Lange v. A. F. Shapleigh Hardware Co., 48 S.W. 927, 147 Mo. 366, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 149 (Mo. 1898).

Opinion

BRACE, P. J.

— The defendants are judgment creditors of the W. O. Plass Hardware Company, upon whose stock of merchandise their executions were levied. The relator is the trustee in a deed of trust made by the W. O. Plass [368]*368Hardware Company to secure a note for $7,500 to the Southern Commercial & Savings Bank, in possession of and claiming the stock levied on, under said deed of trust. This is an action on the bond of the defendants to indemnify the sheriff and plaintiff for the seizure and sale of the stock of merchandise under the executions. The defense set up in the answer is that the deed of trust was made for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of the hardware company, and to secure the individual debt of ~W. C. Plass. The facts in the case as disclosed by the evidence are as follows:

For many years prior to 1891 ~W. C. Plass had been engaged in the retail hardware, business in Carondelet, a suburb of St. Louis. He was in debt but of good credit, and did his banking business with W. B. Quigley & Company, private bankers. On the thirteenth of January, 1891, he executed his note for $1,000, had the same discounted by Quigley & Company, and the proceeds were placed to the credit of his account with them; and afterward checked out by him in payment of his debts. On the fourth of February, 1891, a business corporation was formed under the laws of this State by the name of the 'W. C. Plass Hardware Company, with a capital stock of $40,000, divided into shares of $100 each; the subscribers to the stock being ~W. C. Plass, three hundred shares; Messrs. Krauss, J. B. Quigley, Andrews, and Street twenty-five shares each. Mr. Krauss was of the firm of Quigley & Company, Mr. J. B. Quigley was a son of W. B. Quigley, who was also a member of that firm, and Mr. Street was a member of the firm and its cashier, and prepared the articles of incorporation under the direction of Mr. J. B. Quigley. The capital stock purported to be full paid, but in fact nothing was paid therefor by any of the subscribers except Plass, who for a recited consideration of $40,000 executed a bill of sale dated February 9, 1891, conveying all his goods, wares and merchandise to the company, and thereafter conducted the business just as he [369]*369had done before, except that thereafter it was conducted in the name of the W. O. Plass Hardware Company. He acted as president and manager, and Street received a salary of $10 per month for forty-five months as secretary, but doing no act as such, except one hereafter mentioned, and rendering no other service for his salary.

On the eighth day of February, 1891, W. C. Plass executed another promissory note to Quigley & Company for the sum of $6,000, which was thereupon also discounted by them and the proceeds thereof placed to the credit of the said W. C. Plass on his individual account and was thereafter checked out by him in payment of his individual debts.

On the twelfth of February, 1891, Street as secretary, in answer to the following written inquiries of the Bradstreet Mercantile Agency: “What are the liabilities of the Plass Hardware Company? How much, if any, does the corporation owe on bills payable and on accounts payable ?” answered in writing — “None.” This was the only act performed by Street as secretary, for the company, after the execution of the bill of sale, so far as the uncontradicted testimony shows, except that he kept possession of the secretary’s book, and according to the evidence of Miss Ada Plass she opened the books of the hardware company under his directions. It appears that sometime after the twelfth of February, 1891, the style of the firm of W. B. Quigley & Company was changed to Krauss, Quigley & Company, and the latter was thereafter organized as a corporation by the name of the Southern Commercial and Savings Bank, of which Krauss became president and Street cashier.

On the fifth of October, 1891, W. C. Plass executed his individual note for $7,000 payable ninety days after date to the Southern Commercial and Savings Bank, which was discounted by the bank and the proceeds applied to the payment of his two notes aforesaid, held by the bank as successors of Quigley & Company. This note was renewed from [370]*370time to time by other notes for the same amount, signed by TV. O. Plass, payable to and discounted by the bank, until sometime between May 2 and August 6, 1894, when a note for $7,000 of the same date, tenor and effect as the renewal note of May 2, 1894, but signed “TV. C. Plass Hardware Co., TV. O. Plass, President,” was substituted for that renewal note.

On the sixth day of August, 1894, this note was renewed by another note of that date for the same amount, payable ninety days after date, signed “TV. C. Plass Hardware Co., TV. O. Plass, President;” for this note on the seventeenth of September, 1894, another note of that date for $7,500 was substituted, payable to the bank, on the seventh of November after date, signed “TV. C. Plass Hardware Co., TV. C. Plass, President.”

On the seventh of November, 1894, this note was renewed by another note of that date payable ninety days after date for $7,500, signed in the same manner. This is the note in question, to secure which the deed of trust was given under which plaintiff claimed the property. The deed of trust executed by the hardware company was dated and recorded on the twentieth day of February, 1895.

It further appears from the evidence that no meeting either of the directors or of the stockholders of the TV. C. Plass Hardware Company was ever held from the time of its organization as a corporation until the nineteenth of February, 1895. That at the time of its organization, stock certificates were signed for the four hundred shares — three hundred and fifty-two shares in the name of TV. C. Plass, fifty shares in the name of his wife Dorothea Plass, twenty-five shares in the name of Mr. Krauss, and one share each in the name of J. B. Quigley, Andrews and Street. That of these, only the certificates for the three hundred and seventy-two shares to Plass and wife were in fact issued, and they were immediately turned over to Quigley & Company, [371]*371as collateral to secure the payment of the aforesaid note of Plass for $6,000 and ever since have remained in possession of the bank pledged as collateral security for all the renewal notes aforesaid; the last of these, the one in question, having been further secured by a second mortgage on the lot and store house of Plass, made by W. C. Plass when the $7,500 note of date September 17, 1894, was substituted for the $7,000 renewal note of that date.

On the nineteenth of February, 1895, in pursuance of an arrangement made by Mr. Kinsey, vice-president and attorney for the bank, and Mr. Plass, a meeting was held at the residence of the latter, between the hours of nine and ten o’clock at night, at which were present, ~W. C. Plass, his wife Dorothea Plass, his daughter Ada Plass, Charles Bruns, August Meier, Mr. Kinsey and Mr. Street, and at which Mr. Kinsey produced the record book, seal and papers of the corporation and all the certificates of stock, the certificates of Messrs. Krauss, Street, Quigley and Andrews, assigned in blank. Thereupon the assignments were filled out, Krauss’ twenty-five shares to Ada Plass, and the other three shares one each to ~W. C. Plass, Bruns and Meier. Thereupon a stockholder’s meeting was held by ~W. C.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.W. 927, 147 Mo. 366, 1898 Mo. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lange-v-a-f-shapleigh-hardware-co-mo-1898.