Zeckendorf v. Steinfeld

100 P. 784, 12 Ariz. 245, 1909 Ariz. LEXIS 93
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1909
DocketCivil No. 1101
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 100 P. 784 (Zeckendorf v. Steinfeld) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zeckendorf v. Steinfeld, 100 P. 784, 12 Ariz. 245, 1909 Ariz. LEXIS 93 (Ark. 1909).

Opinion

SLOAN, J. —

This is the second appeal which has been taken in this canse to this court. We reversed the case on the first appeal upon the ground that the judgment which was entered in the court below was not sustained by the findings. 10 Ariz. 221, 86 Pac. 7. The cause was remanded for a new trial. Upon the second trial, by stipulation of counsel, the case was submitted upon the evidence put in upon the first trial, except that certain testimony, deemed by the parties immaterial under the issues, was eliminated. As this record is voluminous, and as both parties have appealed from the judgment, a full statement of the facts is made necessary for a complete understanding of the questions presented for our determination.

Louis Zeckendorf, as a stockholder of the Silver Bell Copper Company and in its behalf, brought this suit against Albert Steinfeld, R. K. Shelton, and J. N. Curtis, individually and as officers and directors of said company, and against the Mammoth Copper Company, to recover for said Silver Bell Copper Company the sum of $838,710.15 and three hundred shares of the stock of the latter which he alleged had been wrongfully appropriated by the defendant Steinfeld, and to be in his possession, and which rightfully was the property of the said company; that this wrongful appropriation was made through the aid and assistance of the defendants Shelton & Curtis, as directors of the Silver Bell Copper Company. The plaintiff prayed for an accounting, the return of the money and shares of stock alleged to have been thus appropriated, and for costs, attorney’s fees, and the appointment of a receiver. The answer of the defendants contained a general and specific denial of the wrongdoing complained of, and set up that the money and shares of stock sued for were the property of Steinfeld and rightfully in his possession; that this money represented in part the proceeds from a sale of mining property which had been purchased by him and held in his own name, and which had been sold in conjunction with property belonging to the Silver Bell Copper Company; that the remainder of the money had been rightfully paid Steinfeld in the way of dividends upon the shares of stock of the Silver Bell Copper Company owned by him and standing in his name, [253]*253including the three hundred shares of stock mentioned in the complaint; and that these dividends had been declared from the proceeds derived from the sale of the mining property belonging to the company.

The court below gave judgment for the plaintiff for the sum of $20,800, being the amount of the dividends declared upon said three hundred shares of stock after deducting a certain sum paid out by Steinfeld in the purchase of the same from the original owner, and denied him any relief upon the cause of ’ action set up in the complaint based upon the alleged misappropriation of the proceeds of the sale of the mining property claimed by Steinfeld as his individual property, the title to which was in his name. The court appointed a receiver to disburse the money thus adjudged to be wrongfully appropriated among the stockholders of the Silver Bell Copper Company and to close up the affairs of the latter company. From this judgment both parties have appealed.

The court found the facts to be as follows: From 1878, and during all the times herein mentioned, the plaintiff, Louis Zeckendorf, and the defendant Albert Steinfeld were partners engaged in the mercantile business in Tucson under the name of L. Zeckendorf & Co. The defendant Steinfeld, under the terms of the partnership, was the active manager and in the control of the business of the firm. The plaintiff was a resident of the city of New York, and only occasionally visited the territory. As ancillary to their business, the firm became more or less interested in various mining enterprises. A property situated in Pima county, known as the “Old Boot Mine,” prior to January, 1899, was held by Steinfeld as trustee for William Zeckendorf and his wife, Julia Zeckendorf. One Carl Nielsen had been given a contract by Steinfeld for working and operating said property on a royalty, and had become indebted to the firm of L. Zeckendorf & Co. in the operation of the mine. On the last-mentioned date, in order to protect the firm on account of this indebtedness, Steinfeld caused a corporation to be formed under the name of the “Nielsen Mining and Smelting Company,” to which was transferred Nielsen’s interest under his contract, the machinery and other personal property owned by him and used in its operation, in consideration of' all of its capital stock and the assumption by the corporation of his debts to L. Zeckendorf & Co. At the time [254]*254of the organization of the company, Steinfeld, as trustee for "William and Julia Zeckendorf, gave the corporation an option to purchase the Old Boot mine for $25,000, payable in installments of $2,500 each. Nielsen assigned to L. Zeckendorf & Co. sis hundred and seventy shares of the capital stock, and to Steinfeld as trustee thirty shares of the capital stock, retaining for himself the balance of three hundred shares of the capital stock. The firm of L. Zeckendorf & Co. put one share in the name of the defendant Shelton, to qualify him as a director, and gave one hundred and seventy shares to defendant Curtis, in consideration of services thereafter to be performed by the latter for the company and retained four hundred and ninety-nine shares for itself. The authorized capital stock of the company was $25,000. The defendant Shelton was an employee of L. Zeckendorf & Co., and the defendant Curtis had charge of the mining business of the firm. Curtis was elected director and president of the company, and Shelton director and secretary. Nielsen was elected a director, and became manager and superintendent of the company. Stein-feld, while not an officer or director of the company was, nevertheless, recognized as the ruling manager of the corporation, and was, in fact, in control, through the officers, of its affairs. The name of the corporation was subsequently changed to the Silver Bell Copper Company, and we will hereafter speak of it by this name.

Adjacent to and surrounding the Old Boot mine was a group of mining claims known as the “English group,” which was owned, at the time of the organization of the corporation, by residents of England. On the 1st of January, 1900, these mining claims were relocated by one Francis and one Volkert, under the claim that the title of the English owners had become forfeited. Steinfeld, through Curtis, and his relations to the corporation and from personal inspection, learned that the English group contained ore bodies of great value, and that the ore body in the Old Boot mine extended into the ground embraced in the English group, and was advised by Curtis that it was desirable that the title to the English group should be acquired so that the two properties might be held and sold as one group, thereby increasing the value of the company’s property. Early in the yéar 1900 Steinfeld became dissatisfied with Nielsen’s management of the property, and deter[255]*255mined to get rid of him by buying his shares of stock. Under the advice of Steinfeld the directors discharged Nielsen and appointed Curtis in his place, and stopped work on the Old Boot mine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 P. 784, 12 Ariz. 245, 1909 Ariz. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zeckendorf-v-steinfeld-ariz-1909.