Thornton v. Thornton Farms, Inc.

526 So. 2d 315, 1988 La. App. LEXIS 1119, 1988 WL 45812
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 11, 1988
Docket87-297
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 526 So. 2d 315 (Thornton v. Thornton Farms, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thornton v. Thornton Farms, Inc., 526 So. 2d 315, 1988 La. App. LEXIS 1119, 1988 WL 45812 (La. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

526 So.2d 315 (1988)

Bertha P. THORNTON, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
THORNTON FARMS, INC., Defendant-Appellee.

No. 87-297.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

May 11, 1988.
Rehearing Denied June 21, 1988.

*316 Patrick F. McGrew, Baton Rouge, for plaintiffs-appellants.

Sessions, Fishman, Rosenson, Boisfontaine & Nathan, Max Nathan, Jr., Anthony Dunbar, New Orleans, for defendant-appellee.

Before DOMENGEAUX and GUIDRY, JJ., and REGGIE,[*] J. Pro Tem.

EDMUND M. REGGIE, Judge Pro Tem.

The issue on appeal is whether good title and ownership of improperly issued corporate stock may thereafter be acquired by either three or ten year acquisitive prescription and who bears the burden of proof in an action on the alleged impropriety of the stock issuance.

FACTS

Thornton Farms, Inc., a family farm business, was organized by the father, Albert A. Thornton, Sr., (Albert, Sr.), who was issued 104 shares of stock; one son, Albert A. Thornton, Jr. (Albert, Jr.), was issued 18 shares, and the other son, J.H. Thornton, Sr. (J.H.), was issued 64 shares. Authorized to issue 500 shares of $100.00 par share, the corporation issued a total of 186 shares at organization. Prior to June 21, 1965, a controversy arose among the shareholders over use of corporate finances. J.H. was allegedly drinking heavily and it was said he had been indiscreet with certain oil lease payments to the corporation. A directors' meeting took place on July 21, 1965. J.H. did not attend the meeting. Albert, Jr. replaced his brother, J.H., as secretary-treasurer of the corporation. Their father, Albert, Sr., remained President. The directors provided resolutions *317 that authorized two signatures on all checks and official documents of the corporation and that the new secretary-treasurer would investigate the oil leases and proceeds distribution from those leases. It was at that same meeting of July 21, 1965 that Albert, Jr. received certificate no. 4 representing 46 shares of stock in the corporation. That stock issuance brought the total of stock issued by the corporation up from 186 shares to 232 shares. This suit concerns the ownership of certificate no. 4 and the 46 shares of stock it represents. The signatures on the stock certificate are those of Albert, Sr. and Albert, Jr. and their genuineness is not contested nor is the regularity of that directors' meeting in question.

Notations made on the July 21, 1965 directors' meeting minutes appear to calculate the dollar value of the 46 shares at par value of $100.00, or $4,600.00 plus the cost of documentary stamps to be affixed to the certificate in connection with its issuance in the sum of $5.06.

The next year, 1966, J.H. became delinquent on a note to Calcasieu Marine National Bank in Lake Charles and J.H. agreed to pledge his stock in Thornton Farms, Inc. as security for his restructured bank loan. In connection with his restructured loan, J.H. signed an authentic act to the bank in which he attested to the corporation having issued and outstanding 232 shares of stock. In fact, that affidavit was signed by all three shareholders, Albert, Sr., Albert, Jr., and J. H.

Albert, Sr. was an accountant by training and he kept the corporation's books. After his death, those corporation books disappeared and were not produced at trial. Their disappearance occurred during J.H.'s operation of the corporation after his father's death.

The only existing financial records of the corporation that were produced at trial were the federal and state income tax returns for the period 1965 to 1971. Those tax records show the outstanding issued stock to be valued at $23,200.00, which equates 232 shares at $100.00 par value. On two of those returns the ownership of each stockholder was indicated. It showed A. A. Thornton, Sr. owned 45%; J.H. Thornton owned 27%; and A. A. Thornton, Jr. owned 28%. These ownership percentages reflect ownership if Albert, Jr. is granted ownership of certificate no. 4 for 46 shares.

On November 3, 1971, Albert, Sr. died and the next day, his son, Albert, Jr., died. J.H. then took over the management of the farm.

After her husband died, Mrs. Albert A. Thornton, Jr. was going through her deceased husband's desk and found Thornton Farms, Inc. certificate no. 4 representing 46 shares issued to the name of her husband. She presented it to J.H. who declined to recognize it. She nonetheless included it in the Sworn and Descriptive List of Assets in Albert, Jr.'s succession and it was included in the Judgment of Possession. She paid the federal estate tax on the value of the stock.

To file the first income tax return for the corporation since he took over the management of the farm, J.H. employed McElroy & Quirk, an accounting firm, to prepare the corporation's income tax return. In the information he gave the accountants, J.H. reduced the capital stock from the $23,200.00 figure used in the immediate prior years when his father attended to the tax preparations, to $18,600.00, the figure used before the issuance of certificate no. 4 for 46 shares.

Although certificate no. 4 was spoken about among the families, nothing definitive occurred concerning it since no dividends were paid by the corporation until 1978 and exact ownership was not an issue prior to dividend date. The one surviving sibling of J.H., Dorothy Thornton Yerger, attempted to get the widow of her deceased brother, Albert, Jr. to forego a dispute with J.H.

When the dividends were paid, the checks did not indicate the number of shares represented by the dividend.

In 1983, the parties attempted to settle among themselves the dispute concerning corporate stock ownership percentages so *318 they could lease the land for oil and gas and divide the lease money according to a mutual understanding among them. The amicable agreement failed to materialize. By then J.H. had died.

In 1984, the heirs of J.H. filed a petition for mandamus and declaratory judgment against the corporation seeking to declare certificate no. 4 invalid. Albert, Jr.'s heirs joined as defendants and they contend that plaintiffs own 98.668 shares, defendants own 98.668 shares and the surviving sibling of the two deceased brothers, Dorothy Thornton Yerger, owns 34.667 shares for a total of 232 outstanding and issued shares in Thornton Farms, Inc.

After trial, on September 23, 1986, the trial court ruled that certificate no. 4 had been issued without consideration, but was acquired by Albert, Jr. and his heirs by three year or ten year acquisitive prescription based on the nineteen years that lapsed since its issuance. The plaintiffs appeal. The individual defendants respond to the appeal and state their agreement with the trial court's ultimate ruling recognizing certificate no. 4, but that the court should also have reached the conclusion that the certificate is presumptively valid, because the plaintiffs failed to carry their burden of proving that it was invalidly issued, and because the plaintiffs' claims are barred by estoppel and prescription.

THE LAW

Plaintiffs contend that the constitutional prohibitions against corporate stock issuance without consideration is an absolute nullity and is therefore not susceptible to acquisitive prescription.

Before we deal with that issue, we address the matter of whether consideration was, in fact, paid by Albert, Jr. for the 46 shares represented by certificate no. 4.

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Bluebook (online)
526 So. 2d 315, 1988 La. App. LEXIS 1119, 1988 WL 45812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thornton-v-thornton-farms-inc-lactapp-1988.