Stebbins v. Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Co.

191 F. 238, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5526
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan
DecidedSeptember 12, 1911
DocketNo. 69
StatusPublished

This text of 191 F. 238 (Stebbins v. Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stebbins v. Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Co., 191 F. 238, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5526 (circtedmi 1911).

Opinion

ANGELE, District Judge.

This is a stockholders’ bill filed by complainant in liis own behalf and in behalf of others similarly situated against the Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Company, a corporation in which he held stock, the Saginaw Wheelbarrow Company, a company which acquired the ’property of the Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Company, and against various stockholders of the two companies. Richard S. Woodliff as assignee of a portion of the stock of the Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Company formerly owned by complainant, Stebbins, was allowed to intervene as a complainant.

The bill attacks a transfer from the Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Company of all its property, subject to its debts, to the Saginaw Wheelbarrow Company, and contains prayers for a receiver and an accounting, and for payment to complainant of the value of the property represented by his stock. During the progress of the litigation, under an order, a bond was filed by the defendants to make good any loss which the complainant should be held to have suffered, and the relief now sought by complainant is a money decree. The transfer complained of was voted by the Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Company in December, 1905, and carried through in January, 1906. The Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Company had been organized several years before. The complainant was one of the original stockholders, and for about three years prior 'to July, 1905, had acted as manager of the company, and had also been its secretary. Its business had never been successful. During the period of his connection with the company as an officer, various attempts had! been made to improve matters, but without success. An effort to consolidate the company with some other concern of a like kind failed. An effort by it to issue mortgage bonds failed. An effort to increase the capital stock by issuing preferred stock likewise failed. In August, 1904, the company arranged for a credit of $70,000 at some of the banks in Saginaw upon the indorsement of four of its stockholders, including complainant. To protect these indorsers to the extent of $50,000, each of the ■stockholders in August, 1904, deposited certain stocks with a trustee, and the complainant deposited in this way several thousand dollars worth of stocks which he owned. This agreement by an extension dated July 25, 1905, was to remain in force until August 22, 1906. By dint of this credit the company was enabled to carry on its business in spite of steady losses up to July, 1905, when matters had come to such a pass that Stebbins was requested to resign as general manager. This he did, and a man by the name of Thomas Jackson, a .manufacturer in Saginaw, was procured to take the management of the business in the hope that it could be made a success. Mr. Jackson assumed control about August 1, 1905, on an understanding that he was to have a small salary, and that, if after six months the outlook warranted such course, he was to become permanently connected with the concern, and have $5,000 worth of its stock turned over to him. The stockholders deposited with a trustee enough stock of the company to carry out this arrangement with Mr. Jackson. The complainant thus deposited stock of the face value of $3,000.

Almost immediately after Mr. Jackson’s appointment, trouble with [240]*240complainant began. The other stockholders were not only much dissatisfied with Stebbins’ management, but, justly or unjustly, became suspicious of his good faith and impressed with the idea that he was endeavoring to build up the business of 'the Lansing Wheelbarrow Company at the expense of tbe Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Company, he having a considerable stock interest in the Lansing Wheelbarrow Company, and entering its employ in the autumn of 1905. When he left Saginaw in August, 1905, he carried with him the record book of the company to his summer home in Presque Isle county, and refused to return it upon demand, and omitted to attend meetings of the board. As he was not easily reached at his summer home, and as the bank paper was falling due from time to time, he was asked, instead of indorsing renewals, to sign a guaranty bond with his fellow stockholders so that indorsements would not be necessary; but this he refused to do. As a result of this course of conduct on his part, in September, 1905, he was removed from the office of secretary of the company.

Mr. Jackson and the other officers became satisfied during the autumn of 1905 that without a fresh contribution of money the business of the company could 'not be made a success. This fact, added to the friction between Stebbins and his fellow stockholders, resulted in the calling of a meeting of the stockholders in November to determine whether it would be possible to raise the funds necessary for continuance of the business, and, if not, then to determine the advisability of selling the business if a purchaser could be found. At that meeting the stockholders voted to sell the property in order to pay its debts. The vote was 3,300 shares against 1,300.

Some effort, though the complainant insists no serious effort in good faith, to find a purchaser was made,' but up to the end of December none was found. At an adjourned stockholders’ meeting held near the end of December, 1905, the stock standing of record in the name of Mr. Stebbins was represented by Mr. Woodliff, who claimed to have bought from Mr.' Stebbins the $3,000 of stock deposited with the trustee under the Jackson agreement, and by Mr. Closser who held a proxy from Mr. Stebbins for the remainder of his stock. At that meeting an offer to buy the property of the concern and assume its debts was received from Harker W. Jackson and Alfred A. Alderton. These gentlemen offered to pay the sum of $73,884.91 and to assume the debts of the concern which amounted to substantially that sum. This offer was accepted by a vote of 3,100 shares against 1,300; the negative votes being Mr. Woodliff 300 shares, Mr. Stebbins by Closser proxy 940 shares, and Mr. Card, a relative of Stebbins, 60 shares. The total number of outstanding shares of stock were 5,000. Six hundred shares were not voted on the question. Shortly after this meeting conveyances of the property were made to Mr. Harker W. Jackson and Mr. Alfred A. Alderton. Thereafter, in January, with Mr. Thomas Jackson, these gentlemen, none of whom were stockholders in the Michigan Company, organized the Saginaw Wheelbarrow Company, and turned over to it the property acquired from the Michigan Wheelbarrow & Truck Company. Immediately thereafter sev[241]*241eral of the stockholders of the Michigan Company became stockholders of the Saginaw Company. The complainant, Woodliff, Card, and three other stockholders of the Michigan Company did not become holders in the Saginaw Company; Woodliff, Card, and Stebbins, at least, not being given an opportunity at the time to become such. No money was paid by the purchasers to the Michigan Wheelbarrow Company. In substance, though not in form, the transaction was this: The notes of the Michigan Company were canceled and surrendered upon the substitution for them of notes of the Saginaw Company indorsed by some of its stockholders. The collateral deposited with the trustee to secure the indorsers of the Michigan Company’s notes was surrendered to the depositors thereof. The $25,000 fresh money paid into the treasury of the Saginaw Company was the only money-passing on the transaction.

It is quite clear that this plan of financing the new company was worked out before its actual organization was completed, and that some, at least, of the indorsers of the Michigan Company’s notes expected to become indorsers for and stockholders in the new company.

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Related

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124 N.W. 33 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
191 F. 238, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 5526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stebbins-v-michigan-wheelbarrow-truck-co-circtedmi-1911.