Brewster v. Stratman

Citation4 Mo.App. 41
PartiesSIMON BREWSTER ET AL., Appellants, v. ERNEST H. STRATMAN ET AL., Respondents.
Decision Date08 May 1877
CourtCourt of Appeal of Missouri (US)

4 Mo.App. 41

SIMON BREWSTER ET AL., Appellants,
v.
ERNEST H. STRATMAN ET AL., Respondents.

Court of Appeals of Missouri, St. Louis.

May 8, 1877


1. A president of a corporation is a trustee, and will not be permitted to create such a relation between himself and the trust property as will make his own interest antagonistic to that of his beneficiary.

2. A president of a corporation, who has voluntarily purchased a small debt against the corporation, will be enjoined from levying an execution for the payment of a balance on the same, where he has already taken valuable property of the corporation in part payment thereof.

APPEAL from St. Louis Circuit Court.

Reversed and remanded.

FARISH & GRIFFIN, for appellants: The relation between a corporation and its president is that of cestui que trust and trustee.-- Single v. Hogan, 45 Mo. 109; McAllen v. Woodcock, 60 Mo. 174. Such a president may not create such a relation between himself and the trust property as will make his interests antagonistic to that of his beneficiary.-- Kockler v. Black River Co., 2 Black 715; Covington & Lexington R. Co. v. Bowler's Heirs, 2 Cent. L. J. 598.

J. P. VASTINE, for respondents.

OPINION

LEWIS, P. J.

Plaintiffs are the owners of fifty-seven out of eighty-five shares composing the capital stock of the Creve Cœ ur Mill Company, a private corporation. Defendant Stratman owns eighteen shares, and is president of the company. The property of the corporation consists of a mill, with one acre of ground, on which it stands, and a lot of personal property used in the manufacturing and business operations of the mill, the whole being subject to a mortgage of $3,000, and worth, as estimated in the testimony, about $8,000. Thomas Krum held a note for $600 against the corporation, which defendant Stratman purchased from him after its maturity, giving his own note, payable in six months, for the face value. Stratman then caused a suit on the corporation note to be instituted in the name of the defendant Vastine, who obtained a judgment by default. Execution was issued and levied on the realty, including the mill, and Stratman purchased the whole, at sheriff's sale, for $200. The personalty was then levied upon, but its sale was restrained by a temporary injunction granted in this proceeding. The petition, setting forth these facts, substantially, prays that the judgment and execution sale be declared null and void, and that the defendants be perpetually enjoined...

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