Fleming v. Riegel
Fleming v. Riegel
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This is a suit in equity, by the plaintiffs, as minority stockholders in the corporation called Ware Shoals Manufacturing Company against the corporation itself and the other defendants above named, a9 majority stockholders, seeking specific performance of a contract partly oral and partly in writing, alleged to have been made by the defendants, and praying an injunction against the continuance of certain acts on the part of the defendants charged tobe in violation of such agreement and of the rights of the plaintiffs as stockholders. The complaint also seeks an accounting by the individual defendants for certain moneys belonging to said corporation alleged to have been illegally and wrongfully expended in breach of such agreement and in disregard of the rights, of the plaintiffs as minority stockholders; and there is a prayer for alternative relief by the cancellation of the alleged contract in case the same cannot be enforced according to its terms as averred by the plaintiffs, and for a restoration of the status of the plaintiffs as stockholders, as same is claimed to have existed prior to the making of the said contract under which the individual defendants became stockholders therein. It is further charged in the complaint that, by reason of the alleged1 wrongful, wilful and malicious acts of the individual defendants in violation of said contract, the value of the shares of stock held by the plaintiffs and *113 other minority stockholders has been greatly impaired', to their damage one hundred thousand dollars, for which amount judgment is also prayed against the said defendants individually.
By consent of parties, all of the issues both of law and of fact were committed for determination to a referee, who took the testimony offered on behalf of the plaintiffs and thereafter made his report recommending the granting of a motion for the dismissal of the complaint, which motion was made by the defendants at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s case and without entering upon the evidence of the defense. Upon exceptions duly taken by the plaintiffs to the said report and recommendation of the referee, the cause came on for hearing by the Circuit Court, whereupon a decree was made affirming the findings and conclusions of the referee and overruling the exceptions in all particulars. From this decree the plaintiffs have now appealed to this Court.
It appears that, on June 30, 1905, the plaintiffs were stockholders in the said Ware Shoals Manufacturing Co., a corporation- then duly organized with the plaintiff N .B. Dial as president and treasurer, having an authorized' capital stock of $500,000.00, of which about $255,000.00 had been subscribed and about $215,000.00 thereof had been paid in cash and property, and shares of stock to the amount last named had been issued and were then held by various shareholders, including the plaintiffs. On the day last mentioned, an agreement in writing was entered into between the defendant B. D. Riegel and the defendant Ware Shoals Manufacturing Co., by which it was stipulated1 that the said B. D. Riegel would take and pay for the unsold portion of the capital stock of the defendant company, amounting in par value to $285,000.00, upon condition that such subscription should not be binding until and unless, at the next annual meeting of stockholders, the number of the directors of the corporation should be fixed at nine and the *114 defendant B. D. Riegel should be permitted1 to name five of that number. On-the same day, an agreement in writing, expressed to be upon valuable consideration, was made between the plaintiff N. B. Dial and the defendant Benjamin D. Riegel, by which it was contracted! that the former would use his best endeavors to procure the ratification forthwith of the above mentioned written agreement by the directors of the Ware 'Shoals Manufacturing Co., and, at the next annual meeting of the corporation, would procure the election of five directors to be named by B. D. Riegel, who with four others to be named by other stockholders, would constitute the board of directors, and that N. B. Dial would sell at par to the defendant N. B. Riegel sufficient stock in the corporation to make up the total amount of $255,000.00 of stock thereof, in case the corporation itself should be unable to. sell him stock to that amount at least. It was thereby further provided that such person as should be designated by defendant B. D. Riegel should be elected treasurer of the corporation; and it was also thereby stipulated that the plaintiff N. B. Dial- would cause the by-laws of the defendant corporation to be so amended at the said annual meeting of the stockholders as to provide, among other things, for a board of nine directors, who should manage and control the affairs of the corporátion and who should have power to borrow money for the benefit of the company as they might deem advisable and should elect the president and fix his salary. ¡The written agreement in question contains no other provisions having any bearing upon the issues of the cause, there being no reference therein to the filling of the office of president other than such as is contained in the provision last above stated'.
It appears from the evidence that the above agreements were carried at the annual stockholders’ meeting of the defendant company, held on July 22, 1905, the contract made by the company through its president, with B. D. Riegel, as already recited, was ratified and accepted in all *115 its terms, provisions and' conditions and nine directors of said company were unanimously elected to serve for one year, among them 'being six of the individual defendants in this action. Thereafter, in pursuance of this contract and agreement, Benjamin R. Riegel and his codefendants became owners by purchase of a majority of the stock in the defendant corporation; and, at the annual meeting of the stockholders held in 190b, the same directors were unanimously re-elected. During each of the years 190-5 and 1906, the plaintiff N. B. Dial was elected by the directors to the position of president of the corporation and he continued to serve as president during those years. Although there appears in the record no resolutions or other official action by the directors fixing the salary- of the president during these years it appears to have been the understanding that the salary of the president during that time should be the sum of three thousand dollars per annum, payable in monthly installments, and the plaintiff Dial received payment of such salary.
At the meeting of the stockholders held on the 23d day of July, 1907, the same directors were unanimously re-elected, and, at the meeting of the directors held the same day, as appears by the minutes offered in evidence, the plaintiff N. B. Dial was re-elected president for one year. Thereupon, the president having by request temporarily retired from the meeting, the defendant B. D. Riegel was appointed a committee to confer with the president Dial and to fix the amount of salary of the latter. Being unable to come to an agreement with the plaintiff Dial, who refused to accept an annual salary of $1,200- proposed, a further meeting of the directors was held on the same day, at which a proposition on behalf of the plaintiff Dial to fix his salary at $2,500 was rejected by a vote of a majority of the directors, whereupon- Mr. Dial- tendered his resignation as president, which was accepted1, and -a new president was *116 elected by the directors in his stead, on the same day, to serve without salary.
The foregoing are conceded facts bearing upon the issues here presented, but there are certain allegations of fact by the plaintiffs which are controverted by the defendants and it is necessary to consider the testimony bearing upon these questions.
It is averred in the complaint, as a part of the contract by which the defendant Benjamin D. Riegal and his associates 'became the owners of the majority of the stock in the corporation, it was verbally agreed by defendant that the plaintiff N. B. Dial should be retained in the office of president of the corporation and be annually re-elected for that offioe, at a salary of $3,000 per annum, for a period of time “as long as he could and would give to the duties of the office proper attentionand paintiffs ask that specific performance of this contract shall be adjudged by the Court, it being alleged to be for the best interest of the plaintiffs and other stockholders that the same should be specifically enforced.
Upon the whole evidence we are staisfied that some one or more of the defendants, in discussions had with some of the plaintiffs, expressed a general purpose to retain the plaintiff Dial in the presidency of this corporation for an undetermined period at an unfixed salary; but we are unable to discover any evidence in the record) which would justify the conclusion that any contract upon consideration was made to keep him as such president for any period capable of definite determination.
Aside, therefore, from any question as to the lack of mutuality in any such contract as is claimed here to have been made and .apart from any consideration's- as to the effect of the resignation by appellant Dial of his position as president, we must conclude that no agreement upon consideration has been1 established for the employment of said appellant for any term which can be rendered certain nor at any compensation definitely fixed. The exceptions-, therefore, which complain of error in the Circuit decree, in any particulars bas-edi upon the failure or refusal of the defendants to retain the plaintiff Dial in the office of president of the defendant corporation, cannot be sustained and the same must be overruled.
In brief, there is no evidence to establish the making of any definite contract with defendant company to furnish money for its use at any fixed rate, nor is there any proof of any loss or damage resulting to any of the plaintiffs by impairment of the value of their stock or otherwise, caused by any breach of the alleged verbal contract of the individual defendants to furnish money for the corporate purposes of the defendant company.
The conclusions already announced as to the matters of fact render it unnecessary to consider certain exceptions, ably argued both on behalf of the appellants* and of the respondents, charging error- of law by the Circuit Judge in the holding that an agreement between stockholders to. elect from year to year a certain person, for an indefinite period at a fixed annual salary would be void as contrary to public policy, and that such a contract must be held void in this case for the further reason that the same is in violation of the by-laws of the defendant company. Upon these exceptions as well as upon all others which raise questions of law based upon a view of the evidence at variance with the *122 facts as found' by the Circuit judgment and concurred in by this Court, no opinion need now be expressed, since the questions thereby raised have become entirely speculative in consequence of the determinations reached as to the matters of fact.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Fleming v. Riegel.
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Corporations — Contracts.—There is no evidence in this case from which it could be concluded that certain stockholders of the Ware Shoals Manufacturing Company upon consideration contracted to keep Mr. Dial as president of the company for any time which can be rendered certain at any compensation definitely fixed. 2. Ibid. — Ibid.—Nor is there evidence to support the claim that certain stockholders as a consideration in part for a block of stock agreed to take at the ruling market prices the output of the company for all future time. 3. Ibid. — Ibid.—Nor is there any evidence to support the allegations that defendants agreed to furnish such money as the company needed from time to time at lowest market rates of interest, or that plaintiff stockholders have been damaged by their failure to do so. 4. Ibid. — Ibid.-—.Nor is there error in the Circuit Judge in dismissing the complaint as to the alleged extravagance of certain stockholders or directors in the erection of private residences on the corporate property and in issuing preferred stock.