Wunsch v. Consolidated Laundry Co.

198 P. 383, 116 Wash. 44, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 790
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1921
DocketNo. 16217
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 198 P. 383 (Wunsch v. Consolidated Laundry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wunsch v. Consolidated Laundry Co., 198 P. 383, 116 Wash. 44, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 790 (Wash. 1921).

Opinion

Fullerton, J.

The respondent, Wunsch, instituted this action on behalf of himself and his assignors, O. C. Nelson, F. A. Nelson, Minnie Fletcher and W. R. White, against the appellant, Consolidated Laundry-Company, and others, to recover the value of certain shares of stock held by them in a corporation whose property, it was alleged, appellants had taken and converted to their own use. The trial court, on the hearing, dismissed the action as to the codefendants of the appellant corporation and entered a judgment against it in the sum of eight hundred and seventy-four dollars. This appeal followed.

The Hotel Laundry Company, the corporation whose property is alleged to have been converted, was organized, in the early part of the year 1918, to do a general laundry business in the city of Spokane. Its chief promoter was one Charles Roberts, who seems to have been the active manager of the corporation during the months it engaged in business. To assist in the promotion of the corporation, Roberts engaged the services of the respondent and his assignors (with the exception of F. A. Nelson), agreeing to give them severally as compensation, in addition to a weekly wage, a certain number of shares of the corporation. On the organization of the corporation, pursuant to the agreement, shares of stock were issued, to the persons named, in the following amounts: to Wunsch fifty shares, to O. C. Nelson twenty shares, to Fletcher ten shares, and to White fifty shares, each of such shares having a face value of ten dollars. F. A. Nelson, to whom was [46]*46issued oue hundred and fifty shares, paid for his stock by turning over to the corporation certain laundry equipment, which he had theretofore used in the operation of a laundry owned by himself individually. The number of shareholders, on the organization of the corporation, totaled about ninety.

The corporation continued in business until the month of October of 1918. Whether it had been a profitable or a losing venture the evidence is in dispute. It had, however, during this time accumulated property of a considerable value and had incurred a considerable debt. In the month named, a number of the stockholders of the corporation, some of whom were trustees, met to consider its affairs. This meeting was not held pursuant to a call of the trustees or pursuant to any notice given, and it does not appear that a majority of the stock of the corporation was represented thereat. At the meeting the stockholders present agreed to abandon the corporation and the business as conducted by it, organize a new corporation with an increased capital stock, turn over to the new corporation all of the property assets and good will of the existing corporation, and require the new corporation to assume the debts of the old. It was agreed also that stock of the new corporation should be issued to the stockholders of the old “dollar for dollar.” Pursuant to this agreement, the appellant corporation was organized. To. it was transferred all of the property of the old corporation, and it assumed and agreed to pay all of the debts of the old corporation. Shares of stock of the new corporation were issued and delivered to all the shareholders of the old corporation in proportion to their holdings therein, save and except to the respondent and his assignors. No stock was delivered or tendered to them for the reason that the [47]*47organizers of the new corporation, after investigation, concluded that the stock issued to them hy the old corporation was issued without consideration.

From the evidence introduced at the trial, the court found that the respondent and his assignors were holders for value of the stock issued to them by the first of the corporations, that it had a value at the time of the transfer in the sum of $874, that the transfer of the property of the first corporation to the second was not in conformity with the rules of law, and was made without the knowledge or consent of the respondent or his assignors, and concluded, as matter of law, that the respondent was entitled to recover.

In the course of the proceedings, the court allowed the respondent to amend his complaint. It is urged that this was error, the reason given being that the amendment changed the cause of action from one sounding in tort to one sounding in contract. But we cannot conceive that the amendment had this effect. If the form of the action was tort prior to the amendment, it was so afterward. The amendment but added some additional facts, brought out in the evidence at the trial, which were not contained in the original complaint. If, however, we were to concede that the amendment had the effect contended for, we could not concede that it would be fatal to the right of recovery. In this state it is provided by statute that there shall be but one form of action for the enforcement and protection of private rights, and it is especially enjoined by statute what the complaint shall contain. One of the requirements is that it contain a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting the cause of action without unnecessary repetition. Manifestly, under the liberal provisions of our statute relating to amendments, which even permits amendments in this court, if the [48]*48complaint alleges what was formerly denominated a tort and the evidence tends to show a breach of duty or a breach of contract, the complaint may be amended to conform therewith. The defendant has, .of course, in such a ease, as he has in the case of all amendments to complaints, the right to time sufficient to prepare to meet the new allegations, but he cannot, if he does not demand the right but tries the cause on the new issues, afterwards claim that he was prejudiced thereby.

In addition to showing the exchange of the stock in the old corporation for stock in the new on a basis of par value, the trial court permitted the respondent to show the par value of the stock in the new corporation and that none of it had ever been sold for less than its par value. It is contended that, because the question at issue was the value of the stock in the old corporation, this evidence was inadmissible. But the evidence clearly had some tendency to show the value of the stock in the old corporation, and the trial court had the right, and this court would have the right were the question before us, .to consider it for that purpose.

It is next contended that the evidence overwhelmingly shows that the first of the corporations was insolvent and that its stock at the time of the transfers had no value whatsoever. But the appellants are concluded by the record from urging the question in this court. Prior to the preparation and settlement of the statement of facts, in order that the testimony introduced at the trial, relating to the character and value of the property of the first corporation transferred to the later one might be omitted therefrom, the parties stipulated:

“Now therefore it is hereby stipulated and agreed by and between the appellant and respondent, through their respective attorneys, that if the supreme court shall hold that the plaintiff, or either or any of his [49]*49assignors, is entitled to recover a money judgment against the appellant herein, then and in that event no question shall be raised by either party as to the amount of such money judgment as rendered by the trial court.”

Since the amount and value of the property the corporation had on. hand at the time of the transfer was a material element in determining the value of its stock at that time, the stipulation concludes an inquiry in this court as to its value.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 P. 383, 116 Wash. 44, 1921 Wash. LEXIS 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wunsch-v-consolidated-laundry-co-wash-1921.