Turner v. United Mineral Lands Corp.

33 N.E.2d 282, 308 Mass. 531, 1941 Mass. LEXIS 717
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedApril 3, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 33 N.E.2d 282 (Turner v. United Mineral Lands Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner v. United Mineral Lands Corp., 33 N.E.2d 282, 308 Mass. 531, 1941 Mass. LEXIS 717 (Mass. 1941).

Opinion

Qua, J.

The bill in this case is long and complicated. All parties who have submitted briefs describe it as a bill by minority stockholders of the defendant corporations United Mineral Lands Corporation and Premier Paymaster Mines Company to recover for the benefit of these corporations respectively against the individual defendants, who have served as directors of the corporations, for losses suffered by the corporations in consequence of breaches of duty toward the corporations by the defendant directors. We accept this as a sufficient description of the bill for the purposes of this opinion.

Both of the corporations named as defendants are or were Nevada corporations. On behalf of each there has been filed a pleading in the form of a plea in abatement to the jurisdiction, on the ground that when this suit was brought the corporation had no place of business within this Commonwealth and was doing no business here, and that the court had no jurisdiction of the case. Several individual defendants also pleaded in abatement on the ground that the court had no jurisdiction over the corporations and that the corporations were absolutely indispensable parties to a suit of this nature, so that without them the suit could not proceed at all. The cause was sent to a master to find the facts solely on the question of jurisdiction, and has come to the full court on the plaintiffs’ appeals from interlocutory decrees denying their motion to recommit, confirming the master’s report, and sustaining the pleas in abatement, and from a final decree dismissing the bill.

According to the return of the deputy sheriff service was made upon each of the corporations by delivery in hand to an officer in charge of its business on July 7, 1930, and [533]*533again on July 8, 1930. Neither corporation ever appointed the commissioner of corporations and taxation its attorney to receive service of process under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 181, § 3, and no service appears to have been made upon the commissioner under § 3A. Whether such service would have been good under the circumstances of this case hereinafter appearing is not before us. Service was made under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 223, § 38. Service may be made under that section only when at the time of service the corporation “has a usual place of business in the commonwealth, or, with or without such usual place of business, is engaged in or soliciting business in the commonwealth.” Reynolds v. Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway, 224 Mass. 379, 384; affirmed sub nomine Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway v. Reynolds, 255 U. S. 565. Conley v. Mathieson Alkali Works, 190 U. S. 406. Compare Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association v. Phelps, 190 U. S. 147. See Atlantic National Bank of Boston v. Hupp Motor Car Corp. 298 Mass. 200, and cases cited. Whether “soliciting” alone would satisfy the Federal decisions need not be considered in this case, as there is an entire absence of proof of any soliciting as distinct from engaging in business. The decisive question in the case is whether either corporation was in fact actually doing business in this Commonwealth on the dates of service.

As to the so called defendant Premier Paymaster Mines Company there is no room for serious controversy. The master finds that this corporation was merged with United Mineral Lands Corporation under the laws of Nevada in 1927 and had no separate existence thereafter; that after the consolidation there remained only one corporation, which bore the name United Mineral Lands Corporation; and that Premier Paymaster Mines Company never after-wards took or purported to take any action in Massachusetts or elsewhere.

The result of these appeals must therefore depend upon the status with respect to doing business in this Commonwealth of United Mineral Lands Corporation on July 7 and 8, 1930. This corporation had been chartered as a [534]*534mining corporation. It did not, however, operate any mines. It owned all of the stock of a Canadian corporation which in turn owned and operated a mine in Ontario. The business of United Mineral Lands Corporation was the financing of this subsidiary and the raising of funds for that purpose, by sales of its own stock, by assessments upon its stock, and by borrowing. It had undoubtedly carried on this business in this Commonwealth until some time in March, 1930. It had had an office in Boston and had received and paid out large sums of money here. The real question is whether this corporation had wholly ceased to do business in Massachusetts before July 7.

The master made general findings that by June 11, 1930, the corporation had ceased to do in Massachusetts the business in which it had been engaged, and-that “so far as it is a question of fact” the corporation “was not doing business in Massachusetts, nor was it engaged in or soliciting business in Massachusetts on July 7, 1930, or July 8, 1930.” These general findings are not stated to have been merely inferences from subsidiary findings. So far as appears they may have rested, in part at least, directly upon evidence heard by the master and not reported. We are bound by these findings unless other specific findings of the master are such that these general findings cannot stand with the specific findings and are thus shown to be erroneous in law. MacLeod v. Davis, 290 Mass. 335. Dodge v. Anna Jaques Hospital, 301 Mass. 431, 435.

The subsidiary findings out of which the plaintiffs seek to demonstrate that the master’s ultimate conclusion is erroneous in law are in substance these: On February 6, 1930, a circular letter over the name of the treasurer was sent to the stockholders, reciting that a previous plan for a reorganization had been abandoned; that the corporation was without sufficient funds to finance development and mining operations; and that the directors had voted that a special meeting of the stockholders be held at Reno, Nevada, on February 25, 1930, for the purpose of voting upon the transfer of all the corporation’s property and assets to a new corporation to be organized in Ontario. At [535]*535the meeting at Reno on February 25 the stockholders voted to transfer all the assets to a new Ontario corporation, which was to assume all the liabilities, the stockholders to exchange their shares for shares in the new corporation. Under date of March 6 a circular letter signed “United Mineral Lands Corporation by Dexter B. Pattison, secretary” was sent to the stockholders of that corporation. It stated that the stockholders had voted to ratify the proposition which had been outlined in the earlier letter, referred to various details involved in the plan, and stated that a certain trust company in Toronto would handle the exchange of shares. On March 8, at a meeting of the directors in Boston, three of the defendants resigned as directors, and the defendant Davis resigned as treasurer and never acted as such again. Thereafter the defendants Pattison, Henderson and Barry were the directors, and Henderson was treasurer. All lived in Boston. Pattison was a lawyer and had been the corporation's attorney. The president had moved his residence out of the Commonwealth. Later in March, in consequence of instructions from Toronto, the treasurer, Henderson, packed up and shipped to Ontario all the books and papers of the corporation, including correspondence, files and records.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.E.2d 282, 308 Mass. 531, 1941 Mass. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-united-mineral-lands-corp-mass-1941.