Wrightsville Hardware Co. v. McElroy
Wrightsville Hardware Co. v. McElroy
Opinion of the Court
Opinion bx
The Wrightsville Hardware Company is a Pennsylvania corporation, engaged in the manufacture of hardware at Wrightsville, this State. Henry McElroy, Henry Birnstock and Harry McElroy, who owned a majority of its capital stock, sold the same in November, 1906, to the National Novelty Corporation, a New Jersey corporation, and thereafter they held none of the stock of the hardware company, and never participated in any way in the management of its affairs. For each share of stock they sold to the National Novelty Corporation they received $10 in cash, $20 in stock of the said corporation and $10 in its first mortgage bonds. In
No good purpose can be served by a recital in detail of the matters of which the appellant complains as grounds for the prayers of its bill. It will suffice to say that, in view of material facts properly found by the court below under all the evidence before it, error would have been committed if the bill had not been dismissed. The vindication of the decree dismissing it is found in the following brief statement of those facts: The bonds of the Wrightsville Hardware Company, the validity of which is attacked by this bill, were delivered by that company’s officers upon the surrender and in payment of its notes, given to the defendants in purchasing their National Novelty Corporation bonds. The bonds now held by the appellees were issued and delivered by order of the board of directors of the appellant company, purporting to act in accordance with authority given at an election of the stockholders, conducted in obedience to the Constitution and laws of the State. No one of the appellees had any notice of any defect, fraud or other defense affecting the validity of the bonds when they accepted them in surrender of the notes of the appellant held by them. No one of them was concerned in or had any knowledge of any scheme, conspiracy, fraud or wrongful conduct relating to the execution and delivery of the said bonds to them. They had no control over or.knowledge of the affairs of the appellant company. They surrendered their notes and accepted, the bonds in good faith. The said notes had been executed by the appellant in accordance with resolutions of the board of directors authorizing the making of them for the purchase of the bonds of the National Novelty Corporation held by the appellees. They sold the said bonds to the appellant in good faith and without knowledge of any fraud affecting the validity of the notes received in payment for them.
The bonds of the National Novelty Corporation which
The Act of July 2, 1901, P. L. 603, provides that any corporation organized for profit may purchase the shares
Decree affirmed at appellant’s costs.
Reference
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- Syllabus
- Corporations — Purchase of bonds of another corporation — Validity — Constitution of Pennsylvania, Article XVI, Section 7 — Act of July 2, 1901, P. L. 60S — Equity—Fraud—Cancellation—Bill in equity. 1. Neither an individual nor a corporation can retain the profits of a transaction, or anything of value received from the other party, and set up ultra vires as a defense to the enforcement of the contract. He who seeks equity must do equity. 2. ' Where a corporation organized for profit purchases the shares of capital stock, bonds, securities, or evidence of indebtedness, of any other corporation of this or another state, under authority of the Act of July 2,1901, P. L. 603, and gives its own notes therefor, subsequently issuing its own bonds to take up such notes, Such transaction amounts merely to a change in the form of its obligations to pay and is not a fictitious increase of its indebtedness, in violation of Article XYI, Section 7, of the Constitution of Pennsylvania. 3. A bill in equity by minority stockholders of a Pennsylvania corporation to have certain bonds issued by said corporation to the defendants cancelled on the ground that the defendants were not holders in good faith, was properly dismissed where it appeared that the defendants, who were originally the owners of a majority of the stock of such corporation had sold all'their shares in the same to a New Jersey coiporation, receiving therefor in part payment certain mortgage bonds of the latter; that the Pennsylvania company subsequently bought such bonds from the defendants, giving its own notes therefor, and then surrendered the bonds to the New Jersey company for preferred stock of a New York company. A minority of the stockholders of the Pennsylvania company then filed a bill in equity against the present defendants and others, in which fraud was averred in the issuance of the notes to the defendants, and said suit was- settled by the taking up of the notes and the issuing of bonds of the Pennsylvania company to the defendants. Subsequently the Pennsylvania company filed the present bill in equity against the defendants for the cancellation of said bonds alleging that they were fraudulently issued. On the hearing it appeared that after the sale of their stock to the Pennsylvania corporation defendants had no further interest in that company, and further that though the purpose of the present bill was to repudiate the notes given by the Pennsylvania corporation to the defendants, that company had not returned or offered to return to the defendants either the notes or the bonds of the New Jersey corporation purchased from them. Held, the lower court did not err in dismissing the bill.