Wildes v. Rural Homestead Co.

53 N.J. Eq. 425
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 53 N.J. Eq. 425 (Wildes v. Rural Homestead Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wildes v. Rural Homestead Co., 53 N.J. Eq. 425 (N.J. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The object of the suit is to set aside a transfer, of two hundred and thirty-eight shares of the capital stock of the Rural Homestead Company to one Samuel W. Bower, which, it is claimed, was effected by the directors of that company for a grossly-inadequate consideration, in bad faith, to the injury of the company and incidentally to the injury of the complainants, who are stockholders of the company; the directors’ motive in making such transfer being the perpetuation of themselves in office as directors.

It is disclosed that the entire capital stock of the company consists of two thousand four hundred shares of the par value of $50 each, and that all of the stock was issued, but that subsequently a portion of'it came back to the company and was held in its treasury and disposed of from time to time to produce money for the needs of the corporation.

[426]*426Immediately prior to the transaction now objected to, two hundred and thirty-eight shares of that capital stock remained in the treasury, the other shares being held by various stockholders, among whom were the defendants Julius H. Pratt, who owned eight hundred and ninety-one shares, and Henry F. Torrey, the son-in-law of Mr. Pratt, who held eighty-five shares, both of whom were officers and directors of the company. Mr. Pratt was the president and Mr. Torrey was the secretary and treasurer. Besides these, the defendants John Linn and his son, Clarence Linn, and David W. McCrea were directors, each holding one share of the stock.

The company was originally organized through the instrumentality of Mr. Pratt, for the purpose of disposing of land at Arlington, New Jersey, in building sites. But after the land had been laid out into lots, owing to the depreciation in real estate values, the original project so failed that it was concluded to abandon it and parcel out to the different stockholders the several lots into which the land had been divided, in proportion to their respective holdings of stock in the retirement of that stock. But after that determination had been partially carried into effect, a scheme was devised to organize a cemetery corporation, under the statutes of this state, tó which the land should be conveyed, in order that, through such instrumentality, they might find a market. Accordingly, the major part of the land, divided into lots, approximately thirty-five acres, was returned to the company, and, on the 1st of December, 1882, was conveyed to the Arlington Cemetery Association, by which, in turn, it was to be sold in graves and graveyard lots for the burial of the dead.

The nominal consideration of the deed was $1, but, by concurrent agreement, it was arranged that the Homestead company, after it should expend $20,000 in surveying and laying out the lands for cemetery purposes, should receive one-half of the receipts from sales of graves and lots. The other half was to be used by the cemetery association in paying the expenses of conducting and maintaining the graveyard.

In 1883 this agreement was modified so that forty-five per [427]*427cent, of the receipts were to go to each corporation, and the remaining ten per cent, was to be retained and accumulated by the cemetery association as a fund for the perpetual maintenance of the cemetery.

Much of the stock held by Messrs. Pratt and Torrey was issued for land purchased, and it became necessary that stock in the treasury should be sold to meet the expenditures which were required to put the cemetery in operation. Accordingly, from time to time, stock was sold.

Among other purchasers of it were the complainant Daniel L. Shearer, of Boston, and others of the complainants who were induced by Mr. Shearer to invest in the enterprise. Mr. Shearer had been interested by Mr. Pratt, who had been his college classmate, and in whom Mr. Shearer for a time reposed-implicit confidence.

From the outstart of this renewed enterprise, both corporations were controlled and managed by Messrs. Pratt and Torrey, who associated with themselves as directors such persons as they chose. The entire income- from the sale of cemetery lots was insufficient to adequately conduct the enterprise, and consequently the share of it which otherwise, under the agreement referred to, would have gone to the Eural Homestead Company, was used for cemetery purposes, and for that shax-e the Homestead company received merely ei’edit in account with the cemetery association.

From 1885 to 1890 no elections for directors of the Homestead company were held, and the accounts of both corporations were so neglected that they were kept, in the shape of loose memoranda and were not written up in books of account. The excuse for this neglect was the inability of Mr. Torx’ey to attend to all the duties which were thrown upon him, including the keeping of the accounts. The validity of that excuse has been disputed, but it is not pertinent to the present inquiry that such dispute should be determined. ■ It is sufficient for present pux-poses that the condition of the accounts and the fact that the cemetery company was déeply involved in debt, beyond that which it owed to the Homestead company, led to dissatisfaction [428]*428upon the part of the complainants, who, because they almost all reside in Boston, have been called “the Boston stockholders,” and they insisted upon examining the accounts and having them written up, furnishing assistance to that end. They also insisted upon having Mr. Shearer made a director of the company, and he was, in June, 1890, so elected. Later in the summer of 1890 their dissatisfaction grew to such extent that the complainant Frank W. Wildes, one of them, declared that they would change the management of the company by taking it away from Messrs. Pratt and Torrey, and after that, in apparent fulfillment of his threat, commenced to buy up stock wherever he could find it for sale.

Though Mr. Shearer' held over four hundred shares of stock he was not re-elected a director in 1891, but Mr. McCrea, a young lawyer and the owner of a single share, was chosen a director in his stead.

When the annual election in 1892 came, the Boston stockholders represented one thousand one hundred and twenty-four shares of stock, which they voted for a board of directors nominated by them, leaving the old management one thousand and thirty-eight shares in support of their ticket, which, Avith the two hundred and thirty-eight shares now claimed to have been fx-audulently transferred to the defendant BoAvei’, elected Messrs. Pratt, Torrey, John and Clarence Linn and Bower directors. Those gentlemen still retain the direction of the company.

The transaction complained of may be stated in this way: Mr. Bower is a lawyer of the State of New York, resident in the city of Brooklyn. In his professional capacity several years ago he became concerned for the estate of one Huntley, who in his lifetime was the owner of some lots of land at Arlington and also of several shares of the stock of the Rux'al Homestead Company. Through his concern in this property he became acquainted Avith Mr. Pi’att and eventually was professionally employed by that gentleman.

Adjoining the Arlington cemetery is a tract of upland and meadow comprising some fifteen or sixteen acres, yet in Tough, uncultivated condition, upon which there was erected an old frame [429]*429house of little value.

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53 N.J. Eq. 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wildes-v-rural-homestead-co-njch-1895.