Woodruff v. Cole

269 S.W. 599, 307 Mo. 19, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 541
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 17, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 269 S.W. 599 (Woodruff v. Cole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodruff v. Cole, 269 S.W. 599, 307 Mo. 19, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 541 (Mo. 1925).

Opinions

The petition in this case is long and full of details. Learned counsel for the appellant has made a short outline of the pleadings, which, although in very general terms, will very well suffice for that portion of our statement. Such outline is as follows:

"This is a suit in equity by the appellant, John T. Woodruff, filed June 3, 1919, in which he seeks to have cancelled, rescinded and set aside the sale by him of two hundred and sixty-five shares of stock in the United Iron Works Company made in October, 1915, on the ground of fraud, both actual and constructive. The general outline of the facts alleged in the petition are that the defendant Cole, from the formation of the United *Page 26 Iron Works Company in 1903, was constantly a member of the board of directors, a member of the executive committee provided for by its by-laws, and president of the corporation, during all which time he entirely dominated and controlled the policy of the company as much so as if he had been its sole owner, and that after creating a large amount of indebtedness by making a number of extensions and additions to the property he in 1907 purchased a plant at Joplin, incurring a large indebtedness, not contemplated by the original incorporation of the United Iron Works Company (hereinafter referred to as the defendant company); that he and others acting with him adopted the policy of refusing to pay dividends with the fraudulent purpose of depreciating the value of the stock and enabling them to purchase it at a small fraction of its actual value; that in pursuance of this policy no dividend was paid on the stock from June 1, 1907, to June 1, 1914; and that on account of the official position of the defendant Cole, to-wit, president of the defendant company, member of its board of directors and chairman of the executive committee, and the fact that he was permitted to and did dominate entirely the policies of the company, such facts constituted him a trustee, which disqualified him from purchasing the stock of the appellant without making full disclosures of all material facts within his knowledge.

"That the appellant Woodruff had constantly unsuccessfully attempted to induce the defendant Cole and others acting with him to pay reasonable dividends on the stock out of the earnings so that there would be a market value for the stock, but that he fraudulently refused to do so and after having pursued the non-dividend-paying policy for a period of eight years, on the eve of discontinuing the policy he secretly and clandestinely purchased the appellant's stock through the defendant LeBow as a straw man at the inadequate consideration of fifty cents on the dollar, when it was reasonably worth two dollars for one, and that he had conspired and confederated with the defendants and other *Page 27 persons constituting the board of directors to adopt the non-dividend-paying policy for the purpose of depressing the value of the stock and to enable him and others to purchase it for an inadequate consideration.

"The petition proceeds upon the ground of both actual and constructive fraud growing out of the relationship of the defendants to the corporation and their control over the property. It is quite lengthy and sets out a number of details which it is not necessary to mention here, especially as there was no point made on the petition in the trial court.

"The answer of all the defendants was a general denial, except that the defendant corporation, in addition to a general denial, alleges that prior to the filing of the appellant's petition, all of the holders of its issued and outstanding capital stock had in good faith agreed with the defendant Cole, acting for and as their agent, to exchange all of their said shares for shares of capital stock of a new corporation for the purpose of taking over the business and assets of the defendant corporation, and that the said agreement had been carried out on July 1, 1919.

"The trial court made a written finding of facts finding that there was no fiduciary or trust relation existing between the defendants and the appellant, and neither was there any actual fraud in the transaction entitling the appellant to have the sale set aside so as to permit him to redeem his stock. The appellant took the necessary steps, as shown by his abstract, to bring the case to this court on appeal."

The learned chancellor made a finding of facts, as above indicated, which covers seven pages of printed matter. These findings cover the many detail charges of facts in the petition. The findings aforesaid include some findings as to the law. The concluding portion of these findings read:

"According to the general principles of corporation law the full title, legal and equitable, to corporate property is in the corporation. Corporate property may be *Page 28 real, personal or mixed. The full title, legal and equitable, to shares of stock is in the shareholders. A share of stock is always personal property. A stockholder has no dominion over the corporate property, but he has full and complete dominion over his shares.

"The directors are the agents or trustees of the corporation for the management of the corporate property and are charged with the duties and are subject to the liabilities and disabilities of fiduciaries.

"The directors are accountable for these duties, not to the stockholders, but to the corporation. The directors' activities mainly relate to these duties. But the directors as agents owe some duties directly to the stockholders. They owe the duty of paying a lawful dividend. They owe the duty of not depressing the value of corporate shares by their corporate acts. They owe the duty of recognizing the proprietary rights of a stockholder in his stock. And they owe the duty to a stockholder of accounting to him on the dissolution or final settlement of a corporation for his full proportionate part of the net assets of the corporation. In all these several respects they are agents or trustees for the shareholders. And if they acquire the shares of a shareholder in violation of these duties they acquire them subject to the disabilities and liabilities of trustees.

"As the court understands the relation of directors to the corporation and its stockholders they are trustees of the corporation in their acts about the corporate property. And they are trustees for the stockholders in their corporate acts that affect the stockholders' share in violation of the duties that they owe to stockholders. If the directors acquire the corporate property in violation of their duties as trustees for the corporation they take title to that property subject to the liabilities and disabilities of trustees and are accountable to the corporation. If the directors acquire title to the stockholders' shares in violation of the duties that they owe as directors of the corporation to the stockholders they are subject to the liabilities and disabilities of trustees and are *Page 29 accountable to the stockholders as trustees. But otherwise the directors can buy the shares of a stockholder as freely as another, because they are not the agents of the stockholders for the sale of their shares.

"Applying these principles it is difficult, to see how directors of a corporation can escape liability for their wrong-doing. Also applying these principles to the facts of this case the court finds that the defendants acquired a valid title to plaintiff's two hundred and sixty-five shares of stock."

From the foregoing it would appear that the chancellor recognized a part, if not all, of the plaintiff's law, but uprooted him upon the facts. The decree as indicated was one dismissing plaintiff's bill. Details are left to the opinion.

I.

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Bluebook (online)
269 S.W. 599, 307 Mo. 19, 1925 Mo. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodruff-v-cole-mo-1925.