Snow v. Weber
Snow v. Weber
Opinion of the Court
This bill is- filed to obtain certain securities in the hands of defendant Holbrook, which it is claimed belong to complainants and defendant Jenks under an arrangement whereby they were to become the property of those parties in settlement of their claim for a certain amount of stock in the Weber Furniture Company.
These securities of the nominal value of ten thousand dollars, but of about half that actual value, were formerly the property of one Alvin Wilkins. Some facts are admitted and some disputed. It appears that .in September, 1872, the Weber Furniture Company issued to Wilkins ten thousand dollars of full paid stock, which he subsequently transferred for value to various parties now represented by complainants and Jenny Jenks. To pay for this stock, if it was sold to him, as it was at least in form, he gave his notes — as claimed by defendants, — and to secure them he transferred the securities in question as collateral.
The purchasers of this stock — or their assigns — applied to the officers of the company to have it transferred to them on the books. Mr. Weber, who was general manager and president, and who seems to have had entire control of the company matters, refused to make the transfer. Andrew McClellan, William W. Wheaton, Bobert Hosie, Albert Ives and Peter Desnoyers all agree in their statements that Weber refused the transfer, but agreed that the holders of the Wilkins stock might take the securities in exchange for the stock, they being then in the hands of D. C. Holbrook, the attorney of the company. Upon these assurances made to various persons, and expressly relied upon in the purchase and sale of the stock, the holders all acted, and so did purchasers. Mr. Holbrook is shown to have given them the same understanding. The completion of the transfer was to await the consent of all the owners of the Wilkins stock.
'The last interview of Mr. Wheaton was in the fall of 1874, when the arrangement was definitely recognized, and when certain of the stoek was about to be sold by Mr. Ives as assignee of Mr. Hosie, and both Ives and Hosie made similar visits and got the same information, and on the strength of It the stock was purchased by persons bidding at that sale.
The next spring a fire occurred, and the company made an assignment to George Moebs. Proceedings in bankruptcy were commenced against them, and* withdrawn upon a composition — Mr. Bernard Stroh paying twenty per cent, and taking the assets. These securities are not mentioned in any of the transfers or proceedings. Weber’s wife purchased the assets from Stroh, and now claims these securities among them.
Holbrook claims a lien for professional services.
The services on which the lien is asserted were private services for Weber and not for the company, and Weber could not have used these securities or charged them directly or impliedly for his own debt.
So far as Caroline Weber is concerned, she is not in any proper sense a Iona fide purchaser, and stands at best in no better position than the company.
As between the company and Wilkins, such a sale of stock was not in the usual course of corporate business.
But there can be no doubt that any transaction which restored the stock and put the company where it would have been had no sale been made to Wilkins, was unobjectionable, and was practically equivalent in its effect to a rescission. If Wilkins had continued to hold the stock it would have been nothing but a rescission. The object of all the negotiations was to put the parties in statu quo, by giving back for the stock the securities given for its purchase.
Under these circumstances, and treating it as such an agreement, we see no difficulty in sustaining it. As soon as all the purchasers agreed, so that the whole stock was represented, the rescission became practicable and the fund capable of conversion. No formal contract was necessary, as there was nothing in the business within the Statute of Frauds. The parties were induced to act upon the faith of the understanding with full knowledge on the part of the company that it was contemplated and done, and after encouraging such action there could be no withdrawal without fraud.
In our opinion the complainants have made out a complete equity, and should receive the relief prayed.
The decree dismissing the bill should be reversed and a decree made providing that the complainants and Jen
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Edward S. Snow, Peter Desnoyers, Andrew McClelland and George C. Jones v. Henry Weber, Caroline Weber, Dewitt C. Holbrook, Jennie Jenks and the Weber Furniture Company
- Status
- Published