Ward v. Dakota Telephone & Electric Co.

206 N.W. 695, 49 S.D. 135, 1925 S.D. LEXIS 145
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1925
DocketFile Nos. 4961, 5005
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 206 N.W. 695 (Ward v. Dakota Telephone & Electric Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ward v. Dakota Telephone & Electric Co., 206 N.W. 695, 49 S.D. 135, 1925 S.D. LEXIS 145 (S.D. 1925).

Opinion

SKINNER, Circuit Judge.

The matter now before this court is complicated by the fact that in the trial court two actions were consolidated and tried as one, and' that appeals have been taken by parties on each side of these two. actions as originally brought.

The real object of the two actions was the recovery by the plaintiff E. C. Ward of the amount alleged to be due on a certain promissory note for $20,000, signed by the defendants J. G. Eunston and E. B. Eunston. The defendants in the two actions are identical, and the only apparent necessity for two separate actions arises from the fact that one of the plaintiffs, Roy Earl Wiley, is acting in the capacity of receiver in the liquidation of two different corporations whose affairs are involved in the matters at issue. The evidence, as presented in the trial court, has precisely the same effect as to the issues of each of the two actions, and the allegations of the pleadings may be considered as identical in the two-, and they will be so considered in this opinion. The complaint alleges that, during all the times material to the issues, the defendants Dakota Telephone & Electric Company and the Missouri River Telephone Company were corporations organized under the laws of this state, and owned and operated certain long distance and' local telephone lines and exchanges in certain counties of the state, and had and maintained their principal offices in Geddes, Charles Mix County, S. D.; that on August 27, 1907, there were outstanding 158 shares of the capital stock of the Dakota Telephone & Electric Company of the par value of $100 each, and that the plaintiff Ward owned 130 of said shares; and that on said date there were oustanding 1,673 shares of the stock of the Missouri River Telephone Company of the par value of $25 per share, of which the plaintiff Ward owned and controlled 1,016 shares.

And the complaint further states: That on or about the said 27th day of August, 1907, the plaintiff Ward sold to the defendants J. G. Eunston and E. B. Eunston the said shares of stock owned and controlled by him in said corporations, at the agreed purchase price of $35,000, of which $3,000 was to be paid in cash, $12,000 by the transfer to Ward by the Funstons of a certain telephone line in Missouri, and $20,000 to be paid in accordance with the terms of the note sued upoq, and' the payment of said note w.as to be secured by the pledge of the shares of stock so sold [139]*139by Ward to the Funstons; that thereafter the $3,000 cash payment was made, the telephone line in Missouri transferred to Ward, the stock in the two South Dakota corporations assigned by Ward to the Funstons and by them reassigned to Ward and delivered to him as a pledge to secure the payment of the $20,000 note; the terms of such pledge agreement being set forth in the note itself, which reads as follows:

“$20,000. Geddes,- South Dakota, Oct. 5, 1907.
“For value received, I promise to pay to the order of E. C. Ward, at Geddes, South Dakota, $20,000.00, with interest thereon at the rate of five and one-half per cent per annum-, from- this date until paid, interest payable semi-annually on the fifth day of Oct., and Apr. each year. The principal is to be payable as follows: One thousand dollars ($1,000) on or before the 5th day of October in each of the years 19.14,. 1915, 1916, 1917, and the balance of the principal on or before the 5th day of October, 1917. As security for the payment of this note, the makers have assigned to the payee 130 shares of the capital stock of the Dakota Telephone & Electric Company, each share being of the par value of one hundred dollars, and 1016 shares of the capital stock of the Missouri River Telephone Company, each share being of the par value of twenty-five dollars, which shares of stock the payee agrees to reassign to the makers of this note upon payment of the note. The makers of this note agree that the telephone lines •and other property of the Missouri River Telephone Company and Dakota Telephone & Electric Company shall not be mortgaged or sold, except minor parts thereof, before the full payment of this note, and further agree that the telephone lines and other property of said companies shall at all times before the full payment of this note, be. kept and maintained in at least as good condition as the same now is. It is further agreed that if the property of said companies, or either of them, shall be mortgaged1 or sold, except minor parts thereof, before the full payment of this note, or if the telephone lines and other property of said companies, or either of them, shall not be kept and maintained in as good condition as the same now is, this note shall at once become -due and payable, at the option of the owner thereof.
“[Signed] Jesse G. Funston.
“E. B. Funston.”

[140]*140And the complaint further alleges that on or about the 5th day of October, 1907, the Funstons, as holders of the stock transferred to them by Ward, elected themselves directors and officers of- the two South Dakota corporations, and went into complete possession and control of the property and business of said corporations, and continued in the possession, control, and management thereof until or about November 1, 1914. And the complaint alleges that on November 23, 1909, the sum of $600 was paid to apply upon the principal of the $20,000 note, and that interest was paid upon said note by the Funstons up to October 5, 1913, and that no other or -further payments have been made thereon, and that the plaintiff F. C. Ward is still the owner and holder of said note and of the indebtedness evidenced thereby. And it is further alleged that at all times material to the issues the Dakota Central Telephone Company was a corporation of this state owning and operating telephone lines in the same territory as the lines of the corporations managed by the Funstons; that by illegal and unfair competition the said- Dakota Central Company sought to discourage the Funstons in their telephone business and to render said business unprofitable; that said efforts did so discourage and injure the business of the corporation owned and managed by the Funstons that about August, 1914, the said' Dakota Central Telephone Company, through its officers and representative, induced the Funstons to enter in a conspiracy, and did enter into a conspiracy with the said Funstons and with the defendants Bruce and others, to induce the stockholders of the two corporations controlled by the Funstons to authorize the directors of said corporations to- sell all the physical property of said corporations, and thereby to enable the Dakota Central Telephone Company to purchase said property at an inadequate price, thereby rendering valueless the stock in said corporations held in pledge by the plaintiff Ward as aforesaid.

And it is further alleged that in pursuance of said conspiracy, and to- accomplish its purposes, the Funstons, as officers of the said- two corporations; called a meeting of the stockholders of said corporations to meet on September 24, 1914; that no- regular or sufficient notice of such meeting was given, and that the calling of said meeting was purposely concealed from the plaintiff Ward. [141]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 N.W. 695, 49 S.D. 135, 1925 S.D. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ward-v-dakota-telephone-electric-co-sd-1925.