Williams v. Clowes

52 A. 820, 75 Conn. 155
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 18, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 A. 820 (Williams v. Clowes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Clowes, 52 A. 820, 75 Conn. 155 (Colo. 1902).

Opinion

*156 Torrance, C. J.

The plaintiff brought this suit against Clowes and Randolph, individually, and against the latter as administrator of Edward F. Randolph, to recover for services in procuring a loan of money. The court rendered judgment in favor of Randolph, individually and as administrator, and against Clowes, and Clowes alone appeals.

The principal reasons of appeal in the case may, for convenience of discussion, be divided into two classes. The first class relates to the action of the trial court in refusing to correct, modify, or add to the finding; while the second relates to the action of the court in finding certain facts, or drawing certain conclusions, from the other facts found.

Under the first class the defendant claims, in substance, that the trial court erred (1) in refusing to find, as requested, certain facts set forth in the draft of finding; (2) in refusing to make certain additions to, and corrections of, the finding, as requested in the motion to correct. In connection with this part of the case all the evidence is certified up.

Upon a careful examination of that evidence it does not appear that the trial court erred, as alleged in the first class of the reasons of appeal, either in failing to find the facts it refused to find, or in refusing to correct, add to, or modify, the finding as requested by the defendant; and consequently the finding as made must stand.

The material facts found are in substance these: Prior to December 18th, 1898, Edward F. Randolph and Clowes, as co-partners under the name of Randolph and Clowes, carried on the business of manufacturing metal goods in Waterbury. Randolph died on the 18th day of December, 1898, and an administrator was appointed on his estate. After his death Clowes, as surviving partner, carried on said business until about August 1st, 1899. When Randolph died the copartnership owned a valuable plant, and was indebted to various creditors in the sum of about $300,000.

Clowes desired to secure control of the business, and, as a means to this end, shortly after Randolph’s death contemplated having the business taken over by a company to be organized. The copartnership creditors were pressing for *157 payment, and Clowes, who was anxious to devise a plan to take up this indebtedness, requested the plaintiff to procure a loan of $800,000 upon the plant, with the proceeds of which loan the debts could be paid. For sometime prior to the death of Randolph the plaintiff, at the request of Clowes, had been engaged in looking for a loan on this plant. In all, he was at work on this about one year. ■ Nothing as to the terms of the loan was stated. Clowes intended that the loan should be made by the new company, upon the plant, and this had been his plan from the first, as the plaintiff in a general way knew. Clowes agreed to pay the usual commission of one per cent for negotiating such loan, and this was the reasonable value of the plaintiff’s services subsequently rendered-The plaintiff, under his employment by Clowes, saw certain Boston people about this matter, but at the request of Cloweshe abandoned his efforts in this direction. About July 1st, 1899, Clowes said to the plaintiff that he preferred to have Waterbury people make the loan, and that he would take a loan of $300,000. In the early part of July the plaintiff saw Miller, a Waterbury capitalist, about this loan, and as a result of their talk Miller offered to loan on this plant $250,000, and plaintiff reported this offer to Clowes who said he could not get along with less than $300,000. Subsequently, at the plaintiff’s house, there was a meeting of several gentlemen, including the plaintiff, Clowes, Miller, and the representatives of Randolph’s estate, to see if Miller might not be induced to raise his offer of loan to $300,000. Nothing came of this meeting. About the middle of July another meeting was held at plaintiff’s office in Waterbury, at which Clowes, his attorney, the plaintiff, and Miller were present. Miller offered to loan the $300,000, provided he received a bonus of $25,000 of the preferred and $25,000 of the common stock of the new company proposed to be organized. It was then expected that the new company would be capitalized at $900,000 :• $100,000 of the preferred stock to remain as treasury stock,. $400,000 to be issued of preferred, and $400,000 of common stock; the Randolph estate to have the preferred, and Clowesto have the greater part of the common stock. Clowes agreed. *158 to this, subject to his ability to get the Randolph estate to agree to it. The next day Clowes informed the plaintiff and Miller that the estate consented, and Miller told Clowes to go ahead and organize the new company and he would be a director. Reliance was placed on Miller’s promises, and other efforts to get financial assistance were abandoned. Subsequently a corporation was duly organized under the laws of New Jersey. At the first meeting of its incorporators, July 31st, 1899, at which the plaintiff, Miller, Clowes, and the representatives of Randolph were present, a vote was passed reciting Miller’s agreement to loan $300,000, and authorizing the directors to make such loan when title was acquired to the copartnership plant. The company was authorized to take over said plant, pay off its indebtedness with said loan, and pay for said assets by the issue of $500,000 preferred and $400,000 common stock of said company. The directors at a meeting held the same day passed appropriate votes to carry out the votes of the incorporators, and elected Clowes treasurer and general manager. Clowes, as surviving partner, turned over the plant to the new company, and the company agreed to pay the indebtedness of Randolph & Clowes, and of Clowes as surviving partner. The debts remained in amount about the same as they were at the death of Randolph. The directors held various meetings and on August 15th, 1899, Miller said he had not got the full amount of the loan, and on the 22d of that month “ he refused to make the loan on present conditions. The real reason for Miller’s refusal to carry out his agreements was that he thought he saw a way to make a better bargain, and he desired to get control of the company, and get rid of Clowes. . . . On August 29th, 1899, Clowes resigned as treasurer, on condition that his salary continue, and upon the representations to him that Miller would make the loan if he would resign.” After Clowes resigned Miller did not make the loan for a time, and between August 29th and September, while the copartnership creditors were pressing for payment and a receivership threatened, the Randolph estate offered to sell its preferred stock to Clowes, but nothing came *159 ■of this. On the 5th of September, 1899, the newly formed •company, Miller, and the Randolph estate, entered into a written agreement in which, among other things, the estate agreed •to sell and Miller agreed to buy all the interest of the estate in the stock of the company for the price of $100,000, and Miller also agreed to loan to said company, at once, the sum of $300,000, upon a mortgage of its plant to be made by it to him. “ The company was organized on the plan Clowes •had devised or assented to.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dombrosky v. Nytko
142 A. 741 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1928)
Hayward v. Plant
119 A. 341 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1923)
Seward v. M. Seward & Son Co.
99 A. 887 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 A. 820, 75 Conn. 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-clowes-conn-1902.