Weber v. Lane

24 N.W.2d 418, 315 Mich. 678, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 372
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 7, 1946
DocketDocket No. 42, Calendar No. 43,413.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 24 N.W.2d 418 (Weber v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weber v. Lane, 24 N.W.2d 418, 315 Mich. 678, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 372 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

Boyles, J.

This is an appeal from an order entered in the circuit court for Wayne county in chancery confirming a sale of the physical property of the Esquire Theatre Corporation to one Michael J. Chargot. There is also a claim of appeal from the denial of several petitions filed by appellants in the same chancery case, seeking to compel said Michael J. Chargot to transfer stock of said corporation to the appellants. The question whether appellants must first obtain leave to appeal from an interlocutory order is not raised. The real parties in interest here, as will appear later, are Ralph Lane, Herbert W. Lane, Arthur Pancioli and Roger Gr. Dolphyn, as appellants, and Michael J. Chargot, as assignee of plaintiffs’ interests in a decree, as appellee.

In 1938 the Esquire Theatre Corporation was organized. The corporation proceeded to erect a building in Detroit consisting of a motion picture theater, stores and offices. In April, 1941, friction which had arisen between majority and minority shareholder interests culminated in the majority *681 shareholders filing a bill of complaint against Herbert Lane, Ealph Lane, Arthur Pancioli, appellants herein, and Anthony Lubinsky. As finally amended, in January, 1943, the bill of complaint, among other things, sought the removal of the above-named appellants as officers and directors of the Esquire Theatre Corporation, the cancellation of certain shares of stock held by them, and the appointment of a receiver to take over the stock and the rights of the shareholders, take possession of the property of the corporation and liquidate the same. It was alleged that the above-mentioned defendants had fraudulently seized control of the corporation, fraudulently voted themselves stock, and had generally mismanaged the financial affairs of the corporation.

Issue was joined and the case heard on matters involving disputes as to the ownership of stock, the validity of a certain voting trust agreement, officer and director control of the corporation, claimed fraudulent issues of stock and misappropriation of corporate funds. An agreement was reached by the parties during trial, as a result of which a compromise or consent decree was entered on April 26, 1943. It provided for the appointment of the National Bank of Detroit as trustee, which appointment was declined, and the. Bankers Trust Company, an appellee herein, was appointed trustee. The decree upheld the validity of a certain voting trust agreement, canceled certain shares of stock, directed certain stock certificates ■ to be issued to the defendants, appellants herein, in full settlement of their respective claims to stock in the corporation, required the transfer to the trustee of all shares of stock of the corporation, transferred to the trustee all the rights and functions of the stockholders, and required the appellants herein to re *682 sign their positions as officers and directors. The decree further authorized and directed the trustee to sell all of the stock at. not less than par value ($1 per share), and provided that if such sale was not made within two years at par value or better the trustee should offer it for sale at the highest price obtainable, file a petition with the court setting forth the offers received, notice of hearing would be given to all stockholders, and the court would approve a sale or reject all offers. The decree further provided:

“If the trustee has an opportunity to sell the assets of said Esquire Theatre Corporation for a price which will net the same amount to the stockholders as if the stock had been sold, said trustee is hereby authorized to vote said stock in said corporation for the sale of said assets upon giving the same notice to stockholders and following the same procedure as to the approval of the court as though the said stock had been sold.”

The decree then finally provided for the distribution of the proceeds among the shareholders after liquidation. No appeal was taken from this decree.

Notwithstanding the fact that by virtue of the decree all outstanding stock was transferred to the trustee and it became the owner thereof, and the only one who could transfer the stock, on April 9, 1945, the plaintiffs in the original bill of complaint, representing themselves to be “formerly stockholders in Esquire Theatre Corporation,” entered into an agreement authorizing and directing “the, undersigned voting trustees under a certain voting trust agreement elated December 23, 1940” to sell all the stock covered by said voting trust agreement to one M. J. Chargot, for 60 per cent, of par value. All of these alleged “former stockholders” were parties plaintiff in this chancery case in which the *683 said consent decree was entered. They are bound by the provisions of the decree, and the agreement to have their “former” stock assigned to Mr. Char-got by the former voting trustees was obviously contrary to its provisions. This is plainly apparent' from an express provision in the decree “that the powers of the voting trustees, Andrew F. Musetti, Paul Bomanowski and Leonard D. Slepski to vote and sell said stock is limited and modified by powers granted to the National Bank of Detroit herein. ’ ’

However, these same plaintiffs also signed and filed in the cause an assignment to M. J. Chargot, from which we quote as follows:

“For valuable consideration, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, the undersigned plaintiffs in the above entitled cause, by their voting trustees, Andrew F. Musetti, Leonard D. Slepski, and Paul ^Bomanowski, and individually, hereby sell, assign, and transfer to M. J. Chargot all right, title and interest in and to the certain decree entered in the above cause on April 26, 1943 by the Honorable Clyde I. "Webster, circuit judge, and as amended by supplemental decrees of May 28,1943 and January 7, 1944, with full power and authority in the same M. J. Chargot to be substituted as assignee of the plaintiffs in said cause and to receive and retain all of the benefits due to the plaintiffs as former stockholders of the Esquire Theatre Corporation under the terms of said decree. ’ ’

Upon this assignment being filed in the court and cause the court made an order substituting Mr. Chargot for said plaintiffs in the cause, giving him all their rights and benefits under the terms of the decree. This was proper. Court Buie No. 49 (1945). It is important to note here, that this assignment and the said order of the court is solely an assignment of the plaintiffs’ interests in the decree, and *684 gives to Mr. Chargot no other or further rights than were then possessed by his assignors under their consent decree. The assignment of their interest in the decree was valid and binding, and thereupon M. J. Chargot succeeded to the rights of his assignors in accordance with and subject to the decree. Brand v. Smith, 99 Mich. 395; Cyrowski v. Wojcik, 280 Mich. 476, 483.

The appearance of Mr. Chargot was thereupon entered in the cause by the attorneys who until that time had represented Mr. Chargot’s assignors in the case.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.W.2d 418, 315 Mich. 678, 1946 Mich. LEXIS 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weber-v-lane-mich-1946.