Fennell v. J. Comer Jones Power & Pump Co.
Fennell v. J. Comer Jones Power & Pump Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is a bill brought by a minority stockholder against the corporation and the individual defendant Jones, who owns the balance of the stock therein. The plaintiff and Jones in March, 1921, organized the corporation to conduct a power and pump business. It took over the business which had been conducted under the same name for several years by Jones. The bill alleges that Jones in transferring the business to the corporation overvalued the business and good will, thereby perpetrating a fraud on the plaintiff, and that while the business was being conducted from 1921 to 1928 Jones’s conduct was such that customers were dissatisfied, displeased and offended, to the injury of the corporation and to its financial loss. The prayers of the bill were for an injunction and a receiver. The answer, among other things, states that the plaintiff after resigning as president and director of the corporation in March, 1928, organized a new company in a competing business, and also sets up the defences of estoppel, statute of limitations and loches.
The master appointed found that there was no fraud intended by Jones, and that in view of the fact that he conveyed a going business which was conducted by the corporation for many years at a profit, the good will was
The vote in 1921 of the board of directors, of which the plaintiff was a member, authorized the president and treasurer to issue one hundred fifty shares of stock to Jones for his property. The bill contains no allegation that any of the stock was illegally issued.
- No error appears in the rulings of the master in admitting and excluding evidence, nor in his failure to make more specific findings or to include further findings in his report.
The question, whether the report should have been recommitted to the master, was addressed to the discretion of the trial judge and in his decision we find no abuse of that discretion.
No error appears in the interlocutory decree overruling the exceptions and confirming the master’s report.
During the years from 1921 to 1928 the plaintiff participated in the active management of the corporation as president and director, receiving a substantial salary and sharing in the distribution of a dividend on the stock. He knew for more than six years before suit was begun that Jones held all the stock not owned by himself. "... long continued acquiescence in a course of conduct by one interested in it, especially when the rights of others are affected thereby, will induce the court to refuse him relief upon his subsequent complaint of it.” Dunphy v. Traveller Newspaper Association, 146 Mass. 495, 500. Doane v.
Interlocutory and final decrees affirmed with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.