Gandía v. Porto Rico Fertilizer Co.
Gandía v. Porto Rico Fertilizer Co.
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
In support of a judgment in favor of the complainant the court below in its opinion found that the complainant was the owner of sixty shares of stock of the defendant company and that the complainant was entitled to recover of the defendant the sum of $8,234.06 by reason of dividends declared and undistributed. One of the principal contentions of the appellant was that there was no interrelation between these two findings of the court and that these dividends were not in any way apportioned to, or shown to be the outcome of, the said sixty shares of stock. Likewise appellant maintained that the ownership of the said sixty shares was never in the complainant, but always in the firm of G-andia & Stubbe of which complainant was an equal partner. Appellant also alleged the inconsistent defence that the sixty shares of stock had been assigned by the complainant, to Stubbe in the articles of dissolution of Gandía & Stubbe and that hence the dividends had been paid to Stubbe Brothers by reason of evidence presented to the company tending to show the ownership of the sixty shares in said Stubbe Brothers, said evidence consisting in the articles- of dissolution of said firm. It is suggested too that the court was in error in ordering the defendant to keep in its stock book a record of the sixty shares in definite favor of the complainant, inasmuch as the evidence tended to show the mediate transfer from Gandía to Stubbe Brothers, and the adverse claimants to the stock were not made parties.
This last question, in point of fact, was attempted first to be raised by demurrer. But the acts of the complainant
We are inclined to agree with the appellant too that there is no mathematical or direct logical relation between the sixty shares and the dividend of $8,234.06. The articles of dissolution show, however, that whatever the origin of the claims before the existence of said articles, therein a specific apportionment of the said $8,234.06 was made to Gandía. The company had the articles of dissolution before it, It relied on them to say that the shares of Gandía had been transferred to Stubbe, and this knowledge, independently of
“Eighth: The partners agree upon the following special conditions for tlie purpose of the liquidation: (a) G-andia will sell to Stubbe all of his stock in the Porto Eico Fertilizer Company at par, one-half of all the dividends declared by the said company remaining to the credit of Gandía. (6) Gandía may make use of the house known as the cotton factory in Santurce up to the thirty-first of December, 1916, without using it for other purposes than those for which it is now used, paying to Stubbe the rent which Gandía collects for it from J. P. Coats & Co., Ltd. (c) The balance resulting after the liquidation in favor of either of the partners will be paid by the debtor in negotiable notes of one thousand dollars each, payable one year after the date of this deed, (cl) Gandía will remain in charge of the contracts for the premises of the old firm of Gandía & Stubbe without making any compensation whatever to Stubbe.”
That tlie dividends of $8,234.06 had been previously declared, is not questioned, nor that they were declared in favor of the partners or either of them. Therefore, the company was notified by this clause that it had no right to pay the dividends to any one but Gandía, and this independently of the fact that there was other evidence tending to show the same conclusion, as found by the court below.
So far as it has any bearing, we are satisfied from the proof and so find that up to the time of the signing of the articles of dissolution, the’ said sixty shares belonged to Gandía. They were originally recorded in his name, whatever the consideration or origin of the same, and the burden was on the defendant to show the fact to be otherwise. It would militate against the defendant that it claimed the inconsistent defense that the said sixty shares were transferred from Gandía to Stubbe by the articles of dissolution. There
Having reached the conclusion, as we have said, that the previous ownership of the sixty shares was unimportant, one of the questions most insisted on does not seem to have great importance, but we shall consider it. It was strongly urged that when the Porto Rico Fertilizer Company was formed an agreement was entered into between Candía & Stubbe on the one side and the Virginia Carolina Chemical Company on the other by which it was stipulated or agreed that 250 shares of the forming company were in Candía & Stubbe and 250 in the Virginia company and that neither of them nor any of them should sell or transfer without notice to the .other. The form of the agreement is not inconsistent with the ownership of part of the shares in Candía and Stubbe individually. The proof does not satisfy us that the sixty shares in Candía, sixty in Stubbe and five other shares in other person was a simulation solely for the purpose of incorporation, nor that the origin of these 125 shares was indirectly from the sale of a piece of property in Santurce belonging to Candía & Stubbe. There was another block of 125 shares belonging to Candía & Stubbe, susceptible of arising by said transfer of land. Candía & Stubbe agreed with
The judgment must be reversed in so far as it orders the defendant to carry on its stock and transfer book the sixty shares of the defendant corporation, to consider the plaintiff as one of the stockholders to the extent of the sixty shares, and to pay him whatever dividends are distributed from the profits of the defendant corporation; and otherwise affirmed. This affirmance leaves a judgment against the defendant for $8,234.06 and the costs.
Affirmed in fart.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.