State, Ex Rel. Squire v. Miller

23 N.E.2d 321, 62 Ohio App. 43, 15 Ohio Op. 401, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 429
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 23 N.E.2d 321 (State, Ex Rel. Squire v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State, Ex Rel. Squire v. Miller, 23 N.E.2d 321, 62 Ohio App. 43, 15 Ohio Op. 401, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 429 (Ohio Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

Overmyer, J.

This is an appeal on questions of law from a finding and judgment of the Court of Common *44 Pleas of this county in favor of appellee, the Superintendent of Banks of Ohio, plaintiff below, and against appellant, The Acorn Supply Company, for the sum of $11,800. The cause was submitted to the court below without the intervention of a jury.

The facts are practically undisputed, and our problem, as was that of the trial court, is to apply the law to the facts shown by stipulation of the parties, a number of exhibits and some testimony. The operative facts are as follows:

In 1927, and theretofore, The Acorn Supply Company was a corporation for profit in Toledo, Ohio, having 1500 shares of its capital stock outstanding, of which Theodore A. Miller, George D. Palmer, R. R. Blair, L. D. Gotshall and I. W. Gotshall, the officers and, with M. M. Blair, the directors of the company, owned the greater part, though the record does not disclose exactly how many of the outstanding shares were owned by the directors, nor who owned the remainder. The evidence shows that at the stockholders’ meeting of 1928 the directors-officers-stockholders voted 1187% shares; in 1929, 1257 shares; in 1930, 1434 shares; and in 1931, 1186% shares. At none of said meetings was all of the outstanding stock represented.

In the years 1927, 1928 and 1929, by resolutions adopted in each of those years by the board of directors, appearing in the corporation minutes, the officers-directors voted themselves each a “salary” fór the year in various amounts as follows:

T. A. Miller, Date Secty. Geo. D. R. R. Palmer, Blair, V. Pres. Treas. L. D. I. W. Gotshall, Gotshall, Pres. V. Pres.

11/30/27 $4,000 $4,000 $4,200 $4,800 $3,300

11/30/28 5,800 4.000 4,200 4,800 3,300

11/30/29 2,000 1.000 1,000 1,200 750

$11,800 $9,000 $9,400 $10,800 $7,350

*45 Beginning in 1927, separate ledger accounts were set np in the books of the corporation for the above designated items and the respective amounts were credited each year to the respective officers-directors therein. None of such sums or any part thereof was ever actually paid to said directors, or any of them, according to the record. Director T. A. Miller received also a salary of $5,000 per year as manager of the company, which was paid to him on monthly vouchers. Each of the directors, except M. M. Blair, was also an officer of the company other than a director.

In July, 1928, T. A. Miller, one of the aforesaid directors and secretary of the company, executed his note and made a personal loan of $25,000 from The Commercial Savings Bank & Trust Company of Toledo, Ohio, and on August 18, 1930, upon a renewal of such note to said bank, he executed to the bank, as additional collateral, the following assignment prepared by the bank relating to his account as a director on the books of The Acorn Supply Company, as shown in the above -tabulation:

“Assignment of Interest.

“I, Theodore A. Miller, of Toledo, Lucas county, Ohio, for valuable consideration to me paid, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, do hereby assign, set over, transfer and convey to The Commercial Savings Bank and Trust Company of Toledo, Ohio, its successors or assigns, all of the right, title and interest which I have or may acquire in and to a part of a certain fund due to me from The Acorn Supply Company, a corporation with its principal place of business in the city of Toledo. The said fund is carried by the said corporation as undivided profits in the amount of forty-eight thousand, three hundred fifty dollars ($48,350), my part of which is eleven thousand, eight hundred dollars ($11,800).

*46 “I do assign the said claim to said The Commercial Savings Bank & Trust Company, its successors or assigns, and direct said The Acorn Supply Company to make all payments and distribution from the said fund to the said bank.

‘ ‘ To witness this assignment I sign my name at the end hereon on this 19th day of August, 1930.

“(Signed) Theodore A. Miller.

“Witness:

“H. F. Slusser.

“H. J. 0. Seeger.

“The Acorn Supply Co. does hereby consent to the said assignment and agrees to pay the assigned funds to The Commercial Savings Bank & Trust Company, its successors or assigns, upon distribution.

“The Acorn Supply Company,

“ (Signed) By L. D. G-otshall, President

“Theo. A. Miller, Secy.”

In August, 1931, The Commercial Savings Bank & Trust Company was taken over by the Superintendent of Banks of the state of Ohio for liquidation, and, the note of Miller being a demand note and unpaid, the superintendent made demand for payment thereof of Miller and The Acorn Supply Company, and same not being paid, the superintendent, on October 17, 1932, filed an action thereon against- Miller and each of the other offieers-directors of The Acorn Supply Company and The Acorn Supply Company.- In the petition and a later supplemental petition, judgment is asked against The Acorn Supply Company in the sum of $11,800, because of the alleged acceptance by the company of the aforesaid assignment by Miller to the bank of that sum.

Issues were joined and on trial a finding and judgment were entered for the plaintiff Superintendent of Banks as hereinbefore noted. The Acorn Supply Company appeals from that judgment and the complaints, *47 though several in number, may be summarized as charging an erroneous finding and judgment under the law and facts.

The appellant, The Acorn Supply Company, contends, first, that the resolutions adopted by the directors of the company voting themselves the ‘ ‘ salaries ’ ’ or “compensation,” or “bonus” or “gratuities”— whatever they may be called — as above set forth, were without authority of law and were and are a nullity; that the board of directors at no time during 1927, 1928 and 1929 consisted of more than six members, and that in each instance such resolution was adopted by the directors who were therefore the direct beneficiaries of such resolution; that although said accounts on the books of the company, showing such “salaries,” were included and presented in the annual financial reports at the annual stockholders’ meetings of the years aforesaid, and accepted, nevertheless all of the outstanding stock was not represented at said stockholders’ meetings and there was no express authorization by the charter or by the non-represented stockholders to such act of the directors; that under authority of Briggs v. Gilbert Grocery Co., 116 Ohio St., 343, 156 N. E., 494, and the authorities therein cited with approval, the resolutions referred to were illegal and void.

If this contention is correct, it would follow that there could be no recovery by the bank on the Miller assignment, or on the company’s endorsement on said assignment, for in such event Miller had nothing to assign and the officers who signed it for the company had no authority from the corporation to thus dispose of the company’s assets.

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23 N.E.2d 321, 62 Ohio App. 43, 15 Ohio Op. 401, 1939 Ohio App. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-squire-v-miller-ohioctapp-1939.