State Ex Rel. Stiers Bros. Construction Co. v. Hughes

190 S.W.2d 880, 354 Mo. 659, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 557
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedNovember 5, 1945
DocketNo. 39596.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 880 (State Ex Rel. Stiers Bros. Construction Co. v. Hughes) 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. Stiers Bros. Construction Co. v. Hughes, 190 S.W.2d 880, 354 Mo. 659, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 557 (Mo. 1945).

Opinion

*665 TIPTON, J.

Certiorari to respondents as Judges of the St. Louis Court of Appeals to review their decision in the case of Lawton-Byrne-Bruner Insurance Agency Company v. Stiers Brothers Construction Company, found in 186 S. W. (2d) 480, wherein that Court affirmed a judgment in an action to collect premiums due on two insurance policies, issued to a corporation styled S. C. Mullgardt & E. C. Hartman, Inc. •

Pursuant to Article V, Section 10 of the Constitution of Missouri, adopted February 28, 1945, the parties have briefed this cause as an original appeal; we will, therefore, decide this ease on its merits. Lawton-Byrne-Bruner Insurance Agency Company will be referred to as plaintiff and relator Stiers Brothers Construction Company as defendant throughout this' opinion.

We have carefully examined the record and find that respondents’ opinion has accurately stated the facts, and we adopt the same without, quotation marks.

The action was brought in two counts, the first for the recovery of ' the sum of $275.60 and interest, being the premium due upon a policy of public liability insurance; and the second for the recovery of the sum of $1,212.56 and interest, being the premium due upon a policy of workmen’s compensation and employers’ liability insurance.

Upon a trial to a jury, a verdict was returned in favor of plaintiff, and against defendant, on both counts of the petition, for tbe aggregate amount of $1,749.33. Judgment was entered in accordance with the verdict.

It is enough to say of the issues in the case that plaintiff’s cause of action was bottomed upon the idea that the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation, in procuring the policies of insurance in question, was acting for defendant as an undisclosed principal so as to have made defendant liable for the premiums on the policies. Defendant’s theory, on the other hand, was that the relationship between it and the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation was not one of principal and agent, but solely of creditor and debtor, and that it was therefore not liable for the premiums on the policies which plaintiff’s assignor, Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company, had issued to the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation,

*666 At the trial below defendant • stood on plaintiff’s case, and now argues, as a matter of chief insistence, that the court was 'in error in refusing its request for a directed verdict in its favor.

The testimony revealed that the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation was organized in June, 1937, with a capital stock of $1,600 divided into sixteen shares, of which E. C. Hartman owned ten, S. C. Mullgardt owned five, and a Mr. Burten owned one. Mullgardt was the president of the corporation, Burten the vice-president, and Hartman the secretary and treasurer. The corporation was organized to do general construction work, and for the first year of its existence, or up until the time that it entered into •contractual relations with defendant, Stiers Brothers Construction Company, operated on a restricted basis, and did nothing but small jobs consisting mostly of alterations and the like which its limited capital permitted it tcundertake. .

Concluding that if the corporation’s condition was to be improved, it was essential that- additional capital be secured, Mullgardt spoke to one Meyer, a salesman in the employ of defendant, who suggested that defendant might be interested in entering into some sort of an agreement with the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation, and later made an appointment for Mullgardt to confer with Mr. L. J. Stiers, the president of defendant company, regarding the possibility of such an arrangement. ‘

After a couple of meetings between Mullgardt and Stiers, a plan was formulated for putting the proposal into effect; and on April 1, 1938, a written contract was executed between the two corporations, by the terms of which after reciting that the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation was engaged in the construction and erection of buildings and other structures and that defendant was desirous of obtaining the stock of a corporation so engaged, it was agreed that the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation should transfer all of its stock to defendant, covering no tangible assets, but free and clear of any and all encumbrances; that Mullgardt and Hartman would be employed to continue the management of the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation at a salary of $150 each per month, plus $50 each per month for the use of automobiles in the prosecution of the contemplated construction business, and plus 5% each of any and all net profits realized from the undertaking; that all bidding' and construction work should be done by the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation in its own name, but with the same backed, financed, or underwritten by defendant until such time as the option for the termination of the agreement should be exercised by either of the parties thereto; and that upon thirty days’ notice to the other, either party might elect to terminate the agreement on its part, provided, however, that if it should be defendant that elected to exercise the option, it should return all of the stock to the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation in the same condition *667 and at the same price as received, and provided further that in such event it would be defendant’s right and duty to finish and complete any and all current and uncompleted building contracts in the name of the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation.

At the time of entering into the agreement, Stiers requested that the fact of the execution of the contract be kept secret and not be told to the general trade for the reason that defendant owned an interest in several material firms which sold materials to other general contractors with whom the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation would thenceforth be in competition, and who might have been expected -to withdraw their business from defendant’s material firms if it were known that defendant was actively backing the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation.

Immediately upon the execution of the contract, the owners of the stock of the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation transferred the same to defendant along with the affidavits of both Mullgardt and Hartman that the stock was free and clear of all encumbrances, and at the same time both Mullgardt and Hartman executed undated resignations as officers of the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation, which were also turned over to defendant for it to hold or act upon at its pleasure. .As a further step towards completing the transaction, a stockholders’ meeting was held at which (according to testimony contained in Stiers’ deposition) defendant voted the stock which had been turned over to it, and elected its own attorney, Mr. Robert N. Jones, as an officer and director of the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation in the place of Burten who had held the qualifying share. Mullgardt and Hartman were both reelected in compliance with the provision of the written agreement that they would be employed to continue the management of the company at fixed monthly salaries and with a share of the profits.

While the Mullgardt-Hartman corporation had no outstanding indebtedness at the time of entering into the arrangement with defendant, it had no more than $500 in its treasury, and possessed no other assets .with which to carry on its business.

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Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 880, 354 Mo. 659, 1945 Mo. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-stiers-bros-construction-co-v-hughes-mo-1945.