Winstead v. Hearne Bros.

92 S.E. 613, 173 N.C. 606, 1917 N.C. LEXIS 354
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMay 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 92 S.E. 613 (Winstead v. Hearne Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winstead v. Hearne Bros., 92 S.E. 613, 173 N.C. 606, 1917 N.C. LEXIS 354 (N.C. 1917).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

Tbe plaintiff is a stockholder in defendant corporation and seeks to have tbe corporation dissolved and a receiver appointed, not upon tbe ground of insolvency, but because it has not declared a dividend within six years preceding this action. Pub. Laws 1913, chap. 147.

*607 Tbe cause was referred to a referee, Mr. Tames Pender, who made a lucid and comprehensive report, to which no exceptions were filed.

Upon the coming in of the report the judge, without in any wise disturbing the referee’s findings, held that “Regardless of the various matters-set up by the defendant and the matters and facts appearing in the receiver’ report, the plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded in the complaint.” Whereupon the court entered an order dissolving the corporation, etc. From which order defendants appealed.

Upon considering the case this Court, ex mero motu, made an order directing the judge holding the courts of Edgecombe County to find certain facts and answer certain questions from the evidence and report to this Court. The judge made the following report:

In compliance with the certificate of the Supreme Court ordering the judge of the Superior Court holding the courts of the district to find and certify to the Supreme Court certain facts in the above case, and propounding certain questions to be answered, in obedience thereto and in response to said questions the court doth certify as follows:

Q. 1. When was the plaintiff elected a director of the corporation, and how long did he continue as such ?

A. Plaintiff was elected a director of the corporation upon its organization, and seems, from the minutes, to have been such up to the time of the institution of the action. The plaintiff was also an officer of the corporation, either its general manager and secretary or its vice president, during the entire existence of the corporation up to the bringing of this action. There seems to have been no distinct meeting of the board of directors, but there seems to have been annual meetings of the stoekholdprs. All or most of them were directors, and practically all of the business of the corporation seems to have been transacted at said meetings, except the general management of the business, which was intrusted by the by-laws to the general manager.

Q. 2. Did the plaintiff participate in the active management of the corporation, and if so, how long and to what extent ?

A. Up until the year 1907 he seemed to be the active and moving spirit in the corporation, acting at one time as its general manager. After said date he was continuously vice president and seemed to have participated in all of the annual meetings. The records do not disclose that at any of these meetings he ever demanded a dividend to be declared which was not declared.

Q. 3. Did he consent to the use' of the profits of the corporation to increase its capital?

A. Yes.

Q. 4. Did he object to the use of the profits of the corporation to increase its capital, and if so, when and under what circumstances ?

*608 A. The referee’s report and. the evidence as taken by the referee shows that he raised no objection whatever to the use of the profits of the corporation to increase its capital, and seemed to be perfectly satisfied with the management of the company until after the sale of the Strickland stock to W. R. Mann.

Q. 5. Did he demand or request the directors to declare a dividend, and if so, when and under what circumstances ?

A. The records do not disclose that he ever* demanded that a dividend be declared.

Q. 6. Give any other facts showing the connection of the plaintiff with the business of the corporation.

A. This question seems ter be answered by the replies to the foregoing questions. Since the institution of this suit a dividend has been declared and the plaintiff has received his dividend upon his stock. This dividend was declared in the year 1914.

The foregoing is respectfully submitted,

H. W. Whedbee,

Judge of the Superior Court.

NotatioN. — Counsel for the plaintiff asks the court to consider further evidence in respect to the questions asked by the court. The court declined to consider any other evidence, and makes all findings from a careful reading of the testimony taken by the referee and from the report of the referee. The other evidence offered was in the shape of affidavits, which are filed in the court and which the court declined to consider. To the refusal to consider the affidavits filed, plaintiff excepts.

Whedbee, Judge.

Upon the coming in of the report and findings of his Honor, Judge Whedbee, the plaintiff moves for a certiorari directing the judge to certify to us the affidavits and new evidence offered before him, and which he refused to consider. 1 :

This motion must be denied. It was not intended by the order herein-before mentioned to open up the ease for a new trial before the judge or a referee.

The judge acted strictly within the scope of our order in finding the facts from the evidence already taken by the referee. These facts had not been found by the judge who rendered the judgment appealed from, and we deemed them essential to a proper determination of the case.

Coming to consider the appeal of the defendant from the order dissolving it, we find that no exceptions were filed by either party to the referee’s findings of fact and that the judge based his judgment upon the facts admitted that no dividend had been declared and paid for more *609 ■than six years prior to the commencement of this action, and that during that period the financial condition of the defendant had been very prosperous.

It appears from the record that the defendant corporation was organized on 17 Inly, 1901, (taking over the business of Hearne Bros. & Co., coffin manufacturers) with a paid-up capital of $4,000; that the incor-porators were W. R. Mann, W. T. Hearne, J. O. Hearne, and the plaintiff, and on 8 January, 1904, the Hearnes sold their stock to Mann and Winstead, the plaintiff, and his wife. From this time on Mann and Winstead and Mrs. Winstead were the only stockholders until 1906, when Mann and Winstead each sold to B. A. Strickland three shares, which Strickland kept until (1911, when he sold the six shares to W. R. Mann, since which time W. R. Mann has owned thirty-three shares and R. W. Winstead twenty-six shares and Mrs. Winstead one share, and they are now the only stockholders in said corporation.

On 31 December, 1902, a stock dividend of $2,000 was declared, thereby increasing the capital stock to $6,000, at which it has since remained. On 1 October, 1903, a dividend in cash of $2,000 was declared and paid, another in May, 1906, of 6 per cent, and another in May, .1907, of 17 per cent. Since then no dividend has been declared until 1914, after commencement of this action. The referee finds:

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Bluebook (online)
92 S.E. 613, 173 N.C. 606, 1917 N.C. LEXIS 354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winstead-v-hearne-bros-nc-1917.