State Ex Rel. Lidral v. Superior Court

89 P.2d 501, 198 Wash. 610
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1939
DocketNo. 27508. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 89 P.2d 501 (State Ex Rel. Lidral v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Lidral v. Superior Court, 89 P.2d 501, 198 Wash. 610 (Wash. 1939).

Opinion

Geraghty, J.

This is an original application for a writ, directed to the superior court of King county, *611 Honorable James B. Kinne, judge, prohibiting that court from entering judgment in a pending cause.

That action was one in the nature of quo warranto, instituted on the relation of Charles A. Budde, H. R. Macfadden, and George E. Moon, plaintiffs, against Frank E. Hammond, Harry W. Cameron, A. B. Cornelius, George R. Heap, and Northeast Transportation Company, defendants, to determine who were the duly elected directors of the defendant corporation in accordance with the votes cast by the stockholders at their annual meeting held January 31, 1939.

The respondent, in its return to the show cause order issued herein, sets out the facts which it finds to be established by the evidence in the quo warranto proceeding tried to it. We shall refer to such of the facts found in the return as we deem material to the issues in the present action.

The Northeast Transportation Company (hereinafter referred to as the company) is a corporation conducting a motor bus passenger service over a route designated in a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued to it by the department of public service of the state of Washington. Its nominal capital is five thousand dollars, represented by five hundred shares, each of the par value of ten dollars. The stock was subscribed by some 262 shareholders. The subscription agreement provided for payment of ten per cent of the subscription at the time of signing, and payment of the balance in installments as called by the directors of the company.

The return recites that the three plaintiffs in the quo warranto action are stockholders of the company, and were duly elected directors at the annual election held January 31, 1939; that R. C. Johnson, owner of one share of stock, was present at that election and held proxies of subscribers for 234 shares, authorizing him *612 to vote in their behalf. He voted the shares for the election of Budde, Macfadden, and Moon; and other subscribers of stock, holding 33 shares, were present in person and, likewise, voted the stock represented by them for the three named. The acting officers having charge of the stockholders’ meeting allowed Johnson to vote only the one share of stock owned by him and 71 shares of the 234 for which he held proxies.

On December 1, 1937, George R. Heap, D. M. Hinman, Harry W. Cameron, and L. C. Perrott, purporting, to act as the board of directors of the company, adopted a resolution cancelling all of the stock subscriptions of the subscribers who had not paid installments upon their stock, and thereafter, in pursuance of the resolution, declared the subscriptions to 208 shares cancelled. The purported cancellation was illegal and void in several particulars. No call for the payment of any assessment upon the stock subscription had been given to the subscribers, nor any notice of the intention of the board of directors to cancel the subscriptions; the shares were not sold at public auction after giving notice to the subscribers of the time, place, and terms of sale by registered mail; the by-laws of the company do not authorize the directors to cancel stock subscriptions for nonpayment of assessments, and no provision is made for the sale of shares for nonpayment. The board of directors, at a meeting on December 1, 1937, designated three of its members as a so-called executive committee of the board to manage the company’s business during the interim between regular meetings.

Frank E. Hammond, one of the defendants in the quo warranto proceeding, who had been appointed general manager of the company, purported, sometime prior to December 20, 1937, to have sold, under instructions of the executive committee, to the relator, J. F. Lidral, 176 of the 208 shares the subscriptions for which had *613 been cancelled. On December 20, 1937, the executive committee ratified the sale, and thereafter, prior to the meeting of January 31, 1938, Cameron, Heap, and Perrott, purporting to act as a board of directors, by resolution approved the sale of the 176 shares of stock to Lidral.

At the meeting of January 31, 1939, the defendant Frank E. Hammond, presenting the proxy of Lidral, asserted a right to vote the 176 shares of stock claimed to have been sold to Lidral, and thereupon the acting officers of the company, over the protest of the plaintiffs, wrongfully recognized the right of Hammond to vote the shares, and recorded them in favor of the defendants Hammond, Heap, Cornelius, and Cameron, as directors. The officers of the company erroneously declared that Hammond, Heap, Cornelius, Cameron, and Budde had been elected, whereas, if the vote cast by the Johnson group had been received and counted, the plaintiffs Budde, Macfadden, and Moon, and the defendants Hammond and Cornelius would have been elected. The stockholders cast multiple votes at the election, as permitted by statute, so that, in any event, a minority faction would have representation on the board.

The return makes reference to two actions, involving substantially the same parties and issues, instituted in the superior court of King county, growing out of the election of directors at the annual meeting held January 31, 1938. In these actions, the court found that the purported sale of 176 shares to Lidral was void, and that the votes and proxies of the original stock subscribers should have been counted at the 1938 election. The return recites that,

“In each of said actions the court entered its decree on the 23rd day of December, 1938, decreeing that the persons for whom the stock of said original stock sub *614 scribers had been cast as directors of said company at the election in 1938, were elected and that said findings so made by the court were necessary to sustain the decrees in said actions. . . .; that the facts so found in said suits and the right of the original stock subscribers to vote said stock so subscribed for by them, and the fact that the said J. F. Lidral did not have the right to vote the stock at stockholders’ meetings is res adjudicata in this case.”

The return shows that Lidral was not a party to either of the suits involving the 1938 election; neither is he made a party to the pending quo warranto proceeding involving the 1939 election,

The return concludes by stating that, in the court’s opinion, it should be adjudged that the plaintiffs Budde, Macfadden, and Moon, and the defendants Hammond and Cornelius were the elected directors of the corporation at the meeting held on January 31, 1939, and that the writ of quo warranto should issue ousting George R. Heap and Harry W. Cameron from the board.

In the affidavit supporting the application for the writ, Mr. Frank E. Hammond, the relator’s attorney, alleges that the relator, Lidral, paid the company $704 for the 176 shares of stock purchased by him, which, it will be seen, was four dollars a share, or the amount due upon the stock under the call of the directors. The return makes no reference to the relator’s payment, and it is to be assumed that, since the fact is not negatived by the return, the stated price was paid.

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89 P.2d 501, 198 Wash. 610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-lidral-v-superior-court-wash-1939.