Stevens v. South Ogden Land, Building & Improvement Co.

47 P. 81, 14 Utah 232, 1896 Utah LEXIS 82
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1896
DocketNo. 736
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 47 P. 81 (Stevens v. South Ogden Land, Building & Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. South Ogden Land, Building & Improvement Co., 47 P. 81, 14 Utah 232, 1896 Utah LEXIS 82 (Utah 1896).

Opinion

Zane, C. J.:

The court below having .sustained a demurrer to the complaint, and plaintiffs having failed to amend, the court entered a judgment dismissing the action, from which the plaintiffs have taken this appeal.

The complaint contains numerous allegations, among which are the following: That the South Ogden Land, Building & Improvement Company was incorporated on the 18th day of April, 1892, with authority to buy and sell real estate, build roads, parks', hotels, railways, boulevards, pleasure resorts, and d'o a general contracting and building business, to construct water ditches, canals, aqueducts, reservoirs, and lay and construct water works, and to build power dams for propelling machinery, and everything necessarily incident to the transaction of such business; that the business was required to be conducted according to the articles of incorporation, and its by-laws; that the number of shares in the company were 5,000, of which Sidney Stevens subscribed for 1,646 shares, Sidney 0. and Frank J. Stevens 10 shares each, Solomon C. and William J. Stephens 1,666 shares each, and David Kay 2 shares; that the capital stock of the corporation consisted of numerous lots and tracts of real estate, described in the complaint; that it was further provided that Sidney Stevens, William J. Stephens, Solomon C. Stephens, Sidney O. Stevens, Frank J. Stevens, and David Kay should be directors until the first Monday in May, 1898, and until the election and qualification of their successors; that Sidney Stevens should be president, Sidney O. Stevens secretary, Frank J. Stevens treasurer, 'and- William J. Stephens vice president. It was further alleged that the [235]*235Sout'b Ogden Mercantile Company, on the same day, was also incorporated; that the object of this incorporation was a wholesale and retail mercantile business, and the acquisition of such land as might be essential to the business; that the capital stock of the corporation, was •divided into-250 shares, of which Sidney Stevens subscribed for 73 1-3 shares, Frank J. and Sidney O. Stevens 5 shares each, William J. and Solomon G-. Stephens 831-3 shares each; that the officers of the corporation consisted of five directors, president, vice -president, secretary, and treasurer; that, until the meeting of the stockholders on the first Wednesday in May, 1893, and the election and qualification of officers thereto, the board of directors should, be Sidney Stevens, Solomon C. and W. J. Stephens, and Frank J. and Sidney 0. Stevens; that Sidney Stevens should be president, William J. Stephens vice president, Sidney O. Stevens secretary, and Frank J. Stevens treasurer; that the capital stock consisted of real estate, described in the complaint. The plaintiffs further alleged that the South Ogden Clay & Manufacturing Company was also incorporated on the same day; that the purpose of the corporation was the manufacture of brick, tiling, sewer pipe, pottery, the erection and operation of flouring mills, the manufacturing of tinware, the erection and operation of woolen mills, manufacture of wagons and other vehicles and farming implements, and the erection and operation of iron foundries, glass factories, and manufacture of wooden wares; that the capital stock of this corporation was divided into 5,000 shares, of which Solomon C. and W. J. Stephens subscribed 1,660 shares each, Sidney O. Stevens 1,661 shares, and Frank J. and Sidney Stevens 2 shares each; that the officers of the corporation consisted of a board of five directors, a president, vice president, secretary, and treasurer; that until the meeting of the stockholders on the [236]*236first Tuesday in May, 1893, and tbe election and qualification oí officers, tbe directors should be Solomon C. and William J. Stephens, and Sidney O., Frank J., and Sidney Stevens; that said Solomon C. Stephens should be president, Sidney Stevens vice president, Sidney O. Stevens secretary, and Frank J. Stevens treasurer; that the capital stock consisted of all the title and interest of William J. Stephens and Solomon C. Stephens to and in a certain option contract for certain lands described in the complaint. Plaintiffs also alleged that, in May, 1892, the South Ogden Water Company was incorporated, with authority to purchase water, to construct waterworks for South Ogden and a portion of Ogden City, and also to acquire and hold the necessary real and personal property, and to sell the same when necessary or desirable; that its capital stock was divided into 5,000 shares', of which Sidney Stevens subscribed for 1,648 shares* Solomon C. and William J. Stephens 1,666 shares each, Sidney O. and Frank J. Stevens 10 shares each, and David Kay 2 shares; that the capital stock of this corporation consisted of the right to the waters of certain creek® and reservoirs mentioned in the complaint. The plaintiffs further alleged that the four corporations named were organized to prosecute one enterprise, and that they were to be, in effect, subject to one management, and that their business became so intermingled and connected that it was necessary to make them all parties to the same action; that all of the subscribers still own their,stock, with the exception of one share assigned to John J. Hill, and a few shares assigned to Paul Beus. Plaintiffs further allege that Sidney Stevens turned over to the South Ogden Mercantile Company, so-on after its organization, in payment for his stock, a stock of goods of the value of $14,000, and that he placed to the credit of the South Ogden Land, Building & Improvement Company $10,000 [237]*237in payment for stock issued; that, after the organization of said corporations, Solomon C. Stephens became general manager of the business of the South Ogden Clay & Manufacturing Company, and William J. Stephens of the South Ogden Land, Building & Improvement Company, and Sidney O. Stevens of the business and affairs of the South Ogden Mercantile Company; that Solomon 0. Stephens and William J. Stephens represented to these plaintiffs that they were interested in a large number of building contracts in' various parts of the city of Ogden, Park City, Heber City, and other places in Utah territory, and that such business had been entered into by them under the firm name of Stephens Bros., but that they would turn over to the South Ogden Land, Building & Improvement Company all benefits arising from .said contracts, and that the goods and trade connected with said building operations should go to the benefit of the South Ogden Mercantile Company, and that all pay which they were to receive for the construction of such buildings should be paid into the treasury of the said South Ogden Land, Building & Improvement Company, in consideration of certain credits, to which proposal plaintiffs agreed; that thereupon William J. and Solomon C. Stephens began to use, in .such building operations, the $10,0.00 of credit in favor of the South Ogden Land, Building & Improvement Company placed there by plaintiff Sidney Stevens, and also began to use the $14,000 worth of goods and merchandise of the South Ogden Mercantile Company, and they also began to purchase,'from various firms in Ogden City and the East, goods, wares, and merchandise, to be used by them in and about said building operations; that, about the 1st day of September, 1892, plaintiffs ascertained that William J.and Solomon C. Stephens had drawn the full amount of the $10,000 placed to the credit of the South Ogden Land, Building & Improvement [238]*238Company, and that'they bad incurred obligations against that company to the extent of about $17,000, all of which, to the amount of about $20,000, had been used by S. C. and W. J.

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Bluebook (online)
47 P. 81, 14 Utah 232, 1896 Utah LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-south-ogden-land-building-improvement-co-utah-1896.