State v. Tally

46 Ariz. 270
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1935
DocketCivil No. 3590
StatusPublished

This text of 46 Ariz. 270 (State v. Tally) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Tally, 46 Ariz. 270 (Ark. 1935).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, C. J.-

— -This is a proceeding to determine who is entitled to certain distributive shares of the assets of Hull Copper Company, a corporation. The facts, with one exception, are not in dispute and may be stated as follows :

Hull Copper Company, a corporation, hereinafter called the company, was a corporation duly organized under the laws of the territory of Arizona and having many thousands of stockholders distributed over all parts of the United States. It owned a considerable amount of valuable property, and on the 22d day of September, 1922, by proper corporate action, sold all its assets of every nature, except the cash in its treasury, for $2,250,000. After the payment of ail the corporate debts, there remained as its sole asset more than $2,000,000 in cash, and in the legal manner this money ’ was ordered divided pro rata among' the stockholders, and the board of directors was instructed to take such steps as would be necessary for dissolution of the company and a surrender of its corporate franchises. Thereafter, and on the ’22d day of December, 1922, by order of the superior court of Yavapai county, it was duly and regularly dissolved, but the then board of directors were continued as trastees for the purpose of closing its affairs. In pursuance of their duty as such trustees, the board of directors made every effort to distribute to the stockholders of record their proportionate share of its assets, as aforesaid. Most of the stockholders were promptly found, and their share paid to them, but at the end of over thirteen years there still remained in the hands of the trustees the sum of $46,309.20, representing the distributive shares of over 600 stockholders of record who had not been found. Thereupon the trustees filed this proceeding together with a report of their action praying that [273]*273the report be approved, and that there be a determination of what should be done with the undistributed assets aforesaid, and that they be discharged from their trust. The state of Arizona answered, claiming that such undistributed assets escheated to it for the benefit of the general fund under the provisions of sections 4304-4310, Eevised Code 1928. Certain stockholders who had already been paid their distributive share also appeared, demurring to the state’s answer, and alleging that the money remaining belonged proportionately to the stockholders who had already received a share of the assets. The theory of the answering stockholders, as set forth in their pleadings, was that those stockholders who on the face of the corporate records were entitled to the $46,309.20, as aforesaid, as their distributive share of the assets of the company, as a matter of fact were fictitious persons who never had any existence, and such being the case, the remaining money belonged to the stockholders who had been found and should be distributed pro rata among them. This claim was supported by the trustees. The position of the state was that the stockholders who had not been found were in reality of the class described in section 4304, supra, which reads as follows:

‘ ‘ § 4304. When property escheats. If any person die, seized or possessed of any property without any devise or bequest thereof, and having no heirs, or where the owner of any property, without any devise or bequest thereof, and having no heirs, shall be absent for the term of seven years, and is not known to exist,-such estate shall escheat to and vest in the state.”

And that, by virtue of such section, the money in question escheated to the state for the benefit of the general fund.

[274]*274The only evidence before the court on the question of whether or not stockholders who had not been found were actual bona fide stockholders of the corporation was the stock book of the company, which showed that these stockholders had had issued to them certificates for certain amounts of stock of the company, which certificates had never been returned for cancellation, and the testimony of Bobert Tally, the former president of the company and one of the trustees of the ‘fund in litigation. This testimony reads, so far as it might be considered material to the issue, as follows:

“Q. Will you just state what was done? A. We, of course, had a list of all stockholders available in the stockholders .report and complete reports were mailed to that list in the entire transaction and checks were mailed and of course in most cases received, accepted and cashed. In numerous cases they were returned. Some of the parties ' got theirs. There were a few cases where the parties had the stock and sold it and the owner was not of record. In some cases they received the check and cashed it and others had sold the stock to someone else. If there was a man who lived at a certain address and he was not there we made inquiries from neighbors to ascertain if possible where he moved to. In some cases the parties had moved somewhere else and we wrote to their neighbors and made inquiries about their whereabouts. In that way everything possible was done to try to locate the shareholders.
“Q. These were all stockholders of record of the company? A. Yes; we proceeded and sent checks for several years there afterwards. We would locate one once in a while — maybe several a year or a dozen a year. On this last one there were several who came in and got their checks and there were several where their dividend checks were mailed to them. . . .
“A. . . . I do not know of a single case where an Arizona stockholder has not received his check. . . .
[275]*275“Q. Do you know how many of these stockholders there were that returned their distribution checks?
“Mr. Crable: It is plead, Mr. Strouss, about 28.
“Mr. Tally: It is a fact.”

The judgment of the trial court sustained the theory of the answering stockholders, and a distribution of the remaining assets was ordered to be made pro rata among the stockholders who had been found. From said judgment, this appeal was taken by the state.

It is contended by the appellees, and not denied by the state, that if as a matter of fact the stockholders of record, some 600 in number, who have not yet been located, are fictitious persons who never had any real existence, the true stockholders are entitled to have the remaining assets of the company distributed among them. Nor is there any serious question that if such stock was properly issued to bona fide stockholders, their shares may not be distributed to their costockholders. "What does the evidence show as to their existence? It is urged on behalf of the state that the books of the company are prima facie evidence that the persons whose names appear on the corporate records as having had stock issued to them which has never been canceled are bona fide stockholders, and that the burden of proof is on the appellees to show that such records do not represent the true facts in this respect. On first examination of the adjudicated cases, there seems to be a conflict of authority upon this point. Appellees have cited to us as sustaining the position that the corporate records are not even prima facie evidence of who are stockholders of a corporation the eases of Carey v. Williams, (C. C. A.) 79 Fed. 906; Sigua Iron Co. v. Greene, (C. C. A.) 104 Fed. 854; Girard Life Ins., Annuity & Trust Co. v. Loving,

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Bluebook (online)
46 Ariz. 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tally-ariz-1935.