State Ex Rel. Methodist Old People's Home v. Crawford

80 P.2d 873, 159 Or. 377, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 82
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 80 P.2d 873 (State Ex Rel. Methodist Old People's Home v. Crawford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon 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. Methodist Old People's Home v. Crawford, 80 P.2d 873, 159 Or. 377, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 82 (Or. 1938).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

This is an original proceeding in this court brought by Methodist Old People’s Home, a corporation, and others, as relators, against the Honorable James W. Crawford, judge of the circuit court of the state of Oregon for Multnomah county, for a peremptory writ of mandamus directed to and requiring the said defendant to set aside a certain order made by him and entered December 31,1937, in a case then pending in the above mentioned circuit court, wherein the *380 present relators were plaintiffs and Portland Gas & Coke Company, an Oregon corporation, and others were defendants, and to proceed to hear and determine that litigation. To the alternative writ the defendant has demurred.

The facts giving rise to this proceeding are substantially the following: Methodist Old People’s Home, a corporation, and the other relators as plaintiffs instituted a suit in the circuit court for Multnomah county, against Portland Gas & Coke Company, an Oregon corporation, American Power & Light Company, a Maine corporation, and Electric Bond & Share Company, which is mentioned in the complaint as a Maine corporation but is in fact a New York corporation. It is alleged in the complaint in that suit that the plaintiffs are the owners of 36 shares of the cumulative preferred stock of Portland Gas & Coke Company of the par value of $100 each, and that the suit is brought “on behalf of themselves as stockholders of Portland Gas & Coke Company and all other stockholders of said company similarly situated, who wish to join herein, and in behalf of the defendant Portland Gas & Coke Company”.

The complaint alleges that the authorized capitalization of Portland Gas & Coke Company consists of 330,000 shares of common stock of no par value, all of which is owned by the defendant American Power & Light Company, 60,000 shares of 7 per cent cumulative preferred stock of the par value of $100 each and 50,-000 shares of 6 per cent cumulative preferred stock of the par value of $100 each; that in 1932 there were only 63,280 shares of preferred stock outstanding; and that during the years 1932, 1933 and 1934 Portland Gas & Coke Company paid only a part of the dividends on its preferred stock, and in 1935 paid nothing at all.

*381 The complaint was filed in 1935, and at that time the market value of the preferred stock was about thirty-five cents on the dollar. The complaint charges that in 1910, through the manipulations of the defendants American Power & Light Company and Electric Bond & Share Company, the defendant Portland Gas & Coke Company was organized and the power company acquired 30,000 shares of the latter company’s common stock, of the par value of $100 per share, by paying only $513,000, and that the said power company thereby received stock of the par value of $2,487,000 without the payment of any consideration therefor, for which amount the said power company is still indebted to Portland Gas & Coke Company. In 1928 the said 30,000 shares of stock of the par value of $100 a share were surrendered to Portland Gas & Coke Company, and the defendant American Power & Light Company received therefor 330,000 shares of common stock of Portland Gas & Coke Company of no par value, which stock is still held by said power company. During the time that the power company has held these shares of stock it has been paid as dividends thereon sums in excess of $3,500,000.

The complaint further avers that from the time of its organization to the date the suit was instituted Portland Gas & Coke Company has been under the domination and control of American Power & Light Company, which latter company has at all times been the owner of all the common stock of Portland Gas & Coke Company; that because of the domination exercised over it by American Power & Light Company, the Portland Gas & Coke Company has refused to enforce payment by the power company for the stock held by it, or to have returned to it the dividends on the common stock which are alleged to have been unlaw *382 fully paid to the power company; that Portland Gas & Coke Company, acting under the control and direction of American Power & Light Company, sold its preferred stock in Oregon and elsewhere to the public generally, at par or better, upon the representation, among other things, that the common stock issued to American Power & Light Company had been fully paid for; and that by reason of paying dividends to American Power & Light Company on the stock which was illegally issued to it without consideration, Portland Gas & Coke Company has not had sufficient funds on hand with which to pay dividends on its preferred stock.

It is alleged that from time to time American Power & Light Company has advanced sums of money to Portland Gas & Coke Company, not all of which were repaid when this suit was commenced, and that Portland Gas & Coke Company intends to repay such advances and refuses to offset the money which has been advanced to it against the sums due to American Power & Light Company.

The plaintiffs in their said suit pray, among other things, for the following relief: (1) That the corporate stock so illegally issued without consideration be canceled or that American Power & Light Company be required to pay therefor; (2) that American Power & Light Company be required to account for and repay the dividends illegally declared and paid on such stock; (3) that an accounting be had between American Power & Light Company and Portland Gas & Coke Company to determine what sums the latter owes the former on account of advances made, and that the amount of such advances, if any, be offset against the amounts found due from American Power & Light Company; (4) that until final determination of the suit, Portland Gas & Coke Company be restrained from recognizing the validity of *383 such, corporate stock or permitting American Power & Light Company to vote the same; and (5) “that the def endants and each of them be required to disclose, make discovery, allow plaintiffs to inspect and produce at the trial all corporate records, books of accounts and files, having to do with, concerning or relating to the original issue of 30,000 shares of common stock of Portland Gas & Coke Company” and to permit inspection of other documents pertaining to the issues involved in the suit.

The defendants American Power & Light Company and Electric Bond & Share Company entered separate special appearances and moved to quash the attempted service of summons and complaint upon them outside the state of Oregon. The motion of Electric Bond & Share Company was allowed, and it is no .longer a party to the litigation. On the other hand, the motion of American Power & Light Company to quash service was denied. Thereafter the defendant American Power & Light Company filed in the circuit court its motion “to limit issues as to defendant American Power &

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 873, 159 Or. 377, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-methodist-old-peoples-home-v-crawford-or-1938.