W. B. Foshay Co. v. Mercantile Trust Co.

220 N.W. 551, 175 Minn. 115, 1928 Minn. LEXIS 840
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 6, 1928
DocketNos. 26,423, 26,424, 26,425.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 220 N.W. 551 (W. B. Foshay Co. v. Mercantile Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. B. Foshay Co. v. Mercantile Trust Co., 220 N.W. 551, 175 Minn. 115, 1928 Minn. LEXIS 840 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

Holt, J.

Appeal by plaintiff and by defendants Bankers National Bank, Minnesota Stove Company, George L. Nye, Charles W. Nye and Tillie C. Potter individually and as directors and as representatives of the stockholders of American Bange & Foundry Company from the orders denying their several motions for a new trial.

The pleadings with attached exhibits cover over 240 pages of the 5,200 pages of the printed record. The summary of appellants’ pleaded causes of action, as stated when the case was here on application for a writ of mandamus to change the place of trial to Hennepin county, should suffice. W. B. Foshay Co. v. Mercantile Trust Co. 166 Minn. 442, 208 N. W. 203. It may be conceded that appellants’ several and separate pleadings cover all possible allegations of conspiracy, fraud, joint adventure, fiduciary relations, breaches of trust and violations of agreements so as to warrant any relief which the evidence would justify.

We shall attempt a short summary of the events upon which the litigation is predicated and which are either undisputed or too well established to be questioned.

[Facts]

In Shakopee, Minnesota, there was established by George L. Nye, as early as 1891, a stove factory, sometime later taken over by the appellant corporation the Minnesota Stove Company. In 1919 a Delaware corporation, the appellant American Bange & Foundry *118 Company, succeeded to all the rights of the Minnesota Stove Company, so that no further reference need be made to the latter, for any right of relief or recovery is now in its successor, the American Range & Foundry Company, hereinafter referred to as the foundry company. The individual defendants, as we view the situation, have no cause for redress except such as may come to them from the relief or recovery, if any, which may result to the foundry company. The Bankers National Bank will herein be referred to as the bank, and the defendant Mercantile Trust Company, a Missouri bank, as the trust company.

When the foundry company took over the business in 1919, a branch factory was established in East St. Louis, and it became a patron of the trust company. The establishment of the branch required additional capital; and in 1921 an arrangement was made, with plaintiff to sell its special preferred stock, and from that time on until 1924 plaintiff sold over $200,000 par worth of such stock. In so doing it represented to the purchasers that it would protect them. Plaintiff, after the foundry company was adjudged bankrupt on October 27, 1924, redeemed its promise and has repurchased this stock at a cost of over $238,000. In 1923 the foundry company required more money. It had started out to establish retail stores in East St. Louis, Chicago and Los Angeles. The trust company underwrote and sold an issue of $250,000 of the foundry company’s “gold notes” to raise the needed capital. Besides the indebtedness thus created, the foundry company in April, 1924, was indebted to the trust company in the sum of over $80,000, making a total liability to the trust company of over $300,000. At that time the foundry company also owed two banks in East St. Louis some $20,000 each, a New York bank about $45,000, and the appellant bank $40,000 and about $200,000 on merchandise. -Some of these debts to the banks were secured by bills receivable. While the foundry company had unfilled orders in the amount of $400,000 and perhaps had on hand raw materials enough in the main to proceed with the filling of the orders, there were no funds available for meeting the monthly payroll, taxes, maturing loans, interest on the “gold notes,” or the dividends of the special preferred stock sold. The foundry company as well as its main creditors deemed the situation critical.

*119 In the first days of May, 1924, conferences were had between them which culminated in the drafting of three agreements on May 12, 1924, one to be executed by the trust company, the New York and the two East St. Louis banks. The chief parts of this agreement were that the banks were to furnish temporary loans to the amount of $75,000 to the foundry company — each bank in the proportion to the amount of its then claim, payment of which and the existing debt to be deferred until January, 1925. The appellant bank was not to be a party to this agreement, because it had already loaned the foundry company the limit permitted by law. Another agreement was for the foundry company to deposit a majority of stock with the officers of the trust company to form a voting trust, and the third agreement was between the foundry company and plaintiff, whereby plaintiff was to sell $100,000 of additional special preferred stock of the foundry company. These several agreements were not executed and failed of being put into operation. The New York bank refused additional help. It also developed that it was doubtful whether under the foundry company’s articles of incorporation a sale of additional special preferred stock was authorized.

A conference with creditors was thereupon had on May 26, 1924, at St. Louis, at which plaintiff and the foundry company were represented, to devise some plan to keep the company going. Plaintiff’s representative, Mr. Foshay, left somewhat disgruntled because his company was not recognized as a creditor on account of its obligation to those to whom it had sold the special preferred stock, he being told that out of any contemplated financial aid to be given the company no part should go to pay dividends on such stock. At this meeting it was agreed — Mr. C. W. Nye, the representative and general manager of the foundry company, reluctantly consenting— to appoint a creditors’ advisory committee to take charge of and supervise the business- in connection with the officers of the company. An agreement to accomplish this purpose, exhibit D, was drawn and executed by the foundry company as party of the first part, the committee selected as party of the second part, and the creditors *120 who should become parties thereto as parties of the third part. A creditor by signing would extend the time of the claim then held until January 1, 1925. The agreement by its terms was not to go into effect unless signed by creditors holding 75 per cent in amount of the debts of the company, excluding the “gold notes.”

Although not signed by creditors representing the required amount, the committee named began to function and made good faith attempts to have other creditors sign. This was by the consent of the majority stockholders and officers of the foundry company. Mr. Foshay was one of the committee. He resigned. Mr. Warner, president of the appellant bank, was one selected at the instance of Nye to take the place of one chosen from East St. Louis. An inventory was to be taken and an audit made by a firm of accountants acceptable to all parties. Even before the result of the inventory and audit was ascertained friction appeared, lack of cooperation, if not obstruction, being charged against C. W. Nye. When the inventory and audit were completed, the creditors’ advisory committee and certain creditors concluded that former financial statements of the foundry company and representations made by the Nyes when credit was obtained had been untrue and misleading.

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Bluebook (online)
220 N.W. 551, 175 Minn. 115, 1928 Minn. LEXIS 840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-b-foshay-co-v-mercantile-trust-co-minn-1928.