1. Corporations: , members and stockholders: meetings: voting by proxy. I. The plaintiffs seek relief on the allegation, in substance, that the dissolution of the old and the formation of the new bank should be set aside because both acts were a fraudulent scheme on part of those defendants who control both banks to transfer the assets and good will of the old bank to the new, and to exclude' plaintiffs from sharing in the new. to the extent of the value of their shares in the old. If the corporation was dissolved, and the new bank has stockholders not in court, how is such relief possible?
3. Corporations members and stockholders: meetings : proxies: neecessily for prompt objection. It is a principle of corporation law that the legality of an election will not be inquired into upon the ground that illegal votes were cast, unless those votes were challenged at the election at the time when they were cast. 2 Cook on Corporations (7th Ed.), 1827. All irregularities in a corporate election, the legality thereof, as well as the legal qualifications of the officers elected, are settled by the election as against a collateral attack. Jones v. Bonanza Min. & Mill Co., (Utah) 91 Pac. 273. Though a proxy cannot vote when the owner of the stock is present and votes, yet the alternative proxy may vote the stock even though the principal proxy is present, no one objecting. 2 Cook on Corporations (7th Ed.), 1785. The ordinary proxy, being intended to be for an election merely, does not enable the proxy to vote to dissolve the corporation, or to sell the entire corporate business and property, or to vote upon other important business, unless the proxy itself is general, or in special terms gives
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4. Corporations : members and stockholders: dissolution : sale of assets. The majority has power to order dissolution and the sale of the assets upon such vote as was here had. It had power even to sell it to itself. The courts will closely scrutinize the fairness of such a sale, but that does not affect the original power to make it. One corporation
“The right Avhich a shareholder in a corporation has by reason of his OAvnership of shares, is a right to participate according to the amount of his stock in the surplus profits of the corporation on a division, and ultimately, on its dissolution, in the assets remaining after payment of its debts.”
In Price v. Holcomb, 89 Iowa 123, speaking to a claim that, under the rule governing a purchase of trust property by the trustee, the holder .of the majority of stock cannot buy the property of the corporation, we said that such stockholder’s relation Avas not that “of agent or trustee, but a joint OAvner,” and, while “an agent or trustee, is charged with the interests of his principal or cestui que trust, and cannot have any interest adverse thereto. Not so, hoAvever, as to a stockholder. He has his OAvn interests to protect,
See Windmuller v. Standard Distilling & Distributing Co., 114 Fed. 491.
5' SssoiuEtion0-NS: scquentnsaie’" of^assets: efWe do not go into the question for ttie sale will be avoided, because, as ^lle majoi’ity had the power to dissolve and Up aTUj sep[ to anyone, including itself, no fraud in the subsequent sale can affect that original power. When the requisite vote ordered dissolution, the corporation became, ipso facto, dissolved, no matter what the motive that induced the vote. No actionable wrong can arise from doing by lawful means what there is lawful right .to do.
6' ai°ssoiuUon0fs' solution T reasonableness: banks ana banking. In Watkins v. National Bank, (Kan.) 32 Pac. 914, it is said that a national bank may go into liquidation and be closed by a . vote of its shareholders owning two thirds ° of its stock; and this right may be exercised although it may be contrary to the wishes, and against the interest, of the owners of the minority of the stock. It is held in Windmuller v. Standard Distilling & Distributing Co., 114 Fed. 491, that a stockholder may, in stockholders’ meeting, vote on any measure, even though he has a personal interest therein separate from, or adverse to; that of other stockholders, and may vote for a dissolution, even though he is influenced to that course by a wish to terminate a contract beneficial to the corporation, but onerous to himself; and in Green v. Bennett, (Texas) 110 S. W. 108, that shareholders owning two thirds of its stock may vote to liquidate the bank, though they áte the directors and the executive officers thereof;' since they, as directors and officers, owe no duty to dissenting minority stockholders to continue the bank, where they do not desire so to do. Appellants cite Beidenkopf v. Des Moines Life Ins.
(a) By change in statute, a dissolution need no longer have unanimous support, hut it suffices if it have such vote as is stipulated in the articles of incorporation.
(b) Every stockholder impliedly agrees, in becoming a member, that the management and control of the corporate business and interest shall be vested in the majority, and that Platner v. Kirby, 138 Iowa 259, at 265, is sup-‘ ported by precedent in saying that “in this state we have recognized the right of a majority to determine whether the corporation shall be continued, or shall be wound up.”
(c) Such majority has a discretionary power in the matter of dissolving.
(d) While an article of incorporation majority may dissolve because the corporation is insolvent, it may do so though the corporation is not insolvent — which is as well the holding of Green v. Bennett, (Texas) 110 S. W. 108.
(e) Such majority may wind-up if, in its judgment, there is reason to believe that, at some time in the future, the business may not prove satisfactory, and that, when the acts of the majority are impugned by the minority, the courts will hold that the policy and wisdom of the act is a matter of business, and not judicial judgment, and will not set the judgment of the court against it.
7. corporations: finality. 8. Corporations : members and stockholders: right to assets of undissolved corporation. (f)There is no implied contract to remain in business, and the courts will do nothing which is in effect ordering specific performance of such claimed implied agreement. Nor is the fact that the required vote ordered dissolution, all. The charter would have expired by limitation on March 1st. The dissolution was ordered in October preceding. Section 1618-a, Supplement to the Code, 1913, provides that to continue the corporate existence of a state bank necessitates an affirmative vote of two thirds.
9' aissoi0utiorL0frs: minority1 stockhoideis. . Just as impossible is the relief asked as the new bank. To be sure, the plaintiffs speak of a “pretended” new bank; but they also say — and it is the fact — -that the new bank “is now doing business as a state savings bank and conducting business as such at Bode, Iowa,” on authority from the state. And it is manifest that, no matter what complaints plaintiffs may justly make of the dissolution of the old and the organization of the new bank, we cannot, since other shareholders in the new bank are not made parties, give to plaintiffs an interest in the new bank without taking from the shares of those over whom we have no jurisdiction. As said in Leurey v. Bank, (La.) 58 So. 1022, the amount of the capital stock of a corporation being fixed by its charter and divided into aliquot parts, it is no more possible to add parts in excess of the number which constitutes the whole than it would be to add another to the two halves which constitute any whole thing.
10. Corporations : members and stockholders : majority ordering dissolution : nonexistence of trust relation. .The prayer which asks the impression of a trust, the removal of the defendants as trustees, and the like, asks what is not impossible, but it does ask what the law will not give. As has been seen, the relation between stockholders who disagree as to what shall be done is not a trust relation. On such division of opinion they assume an adversative relation, at least in such sense as that those who prevail because they are in the majority, may not, therefore, be held to have violated a
11. Corporations : dissolution : rights of minority stockholders. We do not see what relief the plaintiffs can base upon the fact that Captain Bossing claims he voted to dissolve and to have the assets sold because it was his understanding that he and others should have as much of a share in the new bank as they had in the one to be dissolved. If there were no other difficulty, it is an insuperable one that the “understanding” of the witness is all there is, and that there is no evidence of any agreement to ‘do what the captain understood or believed was going to be done, even if that were possible. The utmost his testimony comes to is that he voted in the understanding that all done was merely a form of reorganization for the purpose of renewing the charter and reducing the stock, and that he voted, “expecting to get stock.” Be that as it may, it is, to say the least, extremely doubtful whether the result would have been changed if those who claim to have voted aye with said understanding had voted no. We cannot grant relief based on treating the dissolved bank as going. We cannot thrust the plaintiffs into the new bank at the expense of parties' not before us. We should not impress a trust upon the new bank nor deal with its officers as trustees for plaintiff. The old bank is dissolved, and the plaintiffs have no interest in the new one. This much must stand, be the consequences what they may, and whatever may or may not be the remedy available to plaintiffs.
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12. equity: ae3mpossi¿íeyireS-prayer. But that one seeks relief which cannot or should not be granted does not work to deny him any relief to which the petition and its prayer for general relief entitle Mm. For instance, while Green v. Bennett,
That impossible relief is sought is, as said, no bar to possible relief. Indeed, it may fairly be held that, even where possible and impossible relief is sought in the alternative, the possible is not an alternative at all, but is all that is sought and expected. But, of course, even possible relief may not be due. In this case plaintiff alleges all he does as a reason why all done should be nullified — the equivalent of asking a rescission. The only specific prayer for a money judgment is for the sum got by Hanson for farm loan commission, which it is claimed he was improperly allowed to divert from his employer, the bank. There is not a suggestion in pleading that damages are sought for conversion of either property or good will of the old bank. Eescission and restoration by setting aside is the object. The brief points make no claim for damages, or complaint that the stock of plaintiff is worth more than defendants offer. It is doubtful, to say the least, whether appellant may, in argument, mend holds and change from .the claim that the sale is a nullity to one that damages are due because the purchase price is too small. See Pollitz v. Wabash R. Co., (N. Y.) 167 Fed. 145; Smith v. Stone, (Wyo.) 128 Pac. 612; Farmers’ Milling Co. v. Mill Owners Mut. Fire Ins. Co., 127 Iowa 314, 318; Donley v. Porter, 119 Iowa 542, 545; Hawes v. Swanzey, 123 Iowa 51; Schillinger Bros. v. Bosch-Ryan Grain Co., 145 Iowa 750, 758; Yoder v. Kalona Sav. Bank, 142 Iowa 219; Home Sav. Bank v. Morris, 141 Iowa 560; Wright v. Lieth, 146 Iowa 290; Criley v. Cassel, 144 Iowa 685; Farmers & Merchants Bank v. Wood Bros, & Co., 143 Iowa 635. But, as both parties
13. Corporations : dissolution : sale of assets: • non-nceessity for public sale. II. Some claim is made that the sale was not public; that no opportunity for general bidding was given; and that, were it not for the conduct of defendants, more than was could have been realized from the sale. The plaintiffs knew the sale was ordered. Most of them voted for the order. While they claim defendants designed that no one else should bid, plaintiffs admit they could have bid, and that they were neither ivilling nor able to. They admit, in effect, that no amount of publicity and no public sale would have produced a buyer, except in the plaintiffs or the defendants. When a public sale would get no more than was got, private sale is not a fatal objection. One stockholder may buy all the property at a public sale thereof. Price v. Holcomb, 89 Iowa 123. If the price be fair and adequate, there is no overreaching, all that is ordered and done is public, and the minority have full opportunity to bid and buy, it is not material that the sale was not at public vendue. Linsley v. Strang, 149 Iowa 690, 691; Roberts v. Herzog, (Minn.) 124 N. W. 997; Kessler & Co. v. Ensley Co., (Ala.) 141 Fed. 130; Pewabic Min. Co. v. Mason, 12 Sup. Ct. Rep. 887; Baker v. Seattle-Tacoma Power Co., (Wash.) 112 Pac. 647; Buell v. Buckingham & Co., 16 Iowa 284; Clark v. American Coal Co., 86 Iowa 436; Taylor v. Lovett, 87 Iowa 177, 178. It is said in Phillips v. Steam Engine Co., (R. I.) 45 L. R. A. 560, that a sale fair to all concerned will not be set aside for the purpose of ordering an auction sale. All that is held by Hart v. Mt. Pleasant Park Stock Co., 97 Iowa 353, cited by appellants, is that one who is an agent of an association, and also stockholder in a company,.can base no rights upon a clause in a contract between the two which he inserted without authority, and which was repudiated as soon as
14 aSsouition1;0”8: “|ooa01wm”ts: vahip?ment o£ So it all narrows to whether more than book value should be allowed. In Green v. Bennett, (Texas) 110 S. W. 108, the owners of two thirds of the stock of a solvent national bank, who were also its directors and executive officers, voted to liquidate the bank, and organized a new bank, and apportioned the stock thereof among themselves, to the exclusion of minority stockholders of the old bank. They elected themselves directors and officers of the new bank; and, through a liquidating committee composed of themselves, they transferred the assets of the old bank to the new. It is held that the transaction is not void, but is subject to the closest scrutiny on the part of a court of equity, and subject to be set aside on its being-shown that it was not conducted with the utmost fairness, to the end that full value and the best price obtainable may
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The great question is whether those who dissolved the corporation and wound it up and bought its tangible assets should be dealt with as if they had continued the old bank, had bought its good will, and not paid for‘it. The crux is whether defendants are in that position, and, if so, what is the value of this “good will.” We are of opinion they are not in that position. If the bank was dissolved, it ceased to be a going concern, and no good will was left-Appellants concede that this is the holding of Green v. Bennett, (Texas) 110 S. W. 108. Our leading case on the subject, Millspaugh Laundry v. First Nat. Bank of Sioux City, 120 Iowa 1, so holds when the business was ended by an authorized foreclosure: that the one who forecloses and thereby destroys the business has done no wrong, and cannot be guilty of a conversion of the good will, because the exercise of his rights worked that there was no good will to- convert. While selling the property of a party on foreclosure is not ordering a dissolution and a sale of the property in carrying out the dissolution, the two acts invoke the same rule: that, when a business is closed out, there is no good will left. The witnesses in this trial finally agreed, in substance, that the fact that the concern is no longer going will at least greatly reduce the value of the good will. We think it a fair view of the whole of the evidence that it would be of no value. It is held in Bell v. Ellis, 33 Cal. 620, Farwell v. Huling, (Ill.) 23 N. E. 438,
If there be in fact a dissolution, it does not matterthat surviving partners, in the absence of a restrictive agreement on their part, carry on the same line of business as was transacted by the firm, and at the same place, and they may do so without accounting for the value of such of the good will of said firm as thereby accrued to them. Lobeck v. Lee, (Neb.) 55 N. W. 650. This was held in Musselman & Clarkson’s Appeal, 62 Pa. St. 81, where, after a banking firm had dissolved 'and appointed a partner to liquidate, he, immediately following the dissolution, commenced banking in the firm’s house on his own account, and under the firm name, while at the same time settling the firm business at that place. It is said that, if he had sold the good will, he would have been obliged to have accounted for the value received; but, in the absence of such sale or agreement on his part to pay for it, and his not selling it as such, he was under no liability to pay for good will; that this is so because—
“There was no relinquishment of business by the partners. Their business expired by its own limitation. They had no exclusive right in the business that existed for a moment after the firm dissolved * * * ; and these are the criteria of property in good will under the English rule. Kennedy v. Lee, 3 Meriv. 441; Coll, on Part. 156; Story on Part., § 99.”
The court adds that though, in its opinion, the rule has
As some of the authorities put it, the good will arising from the sale of the property exists only in cases where such sale is compellable by some of the members of the partnership or the association; that, therefore, on the death of one partner, the good will is not stock upon which the executor of that partner can comjiel a division, because he cannot compel a sale of the whole premises. Bradbury v. Wells, 138 Iowa 673, at 680, citing with approval Collyer on Partnership, Section 162.
In Slack v. Suddoth, (Tenn.) 52 S. W. 182, a firm of dentists dissolved partnership, and complainant notified defendant that the partnership was dissolved. But before giving this notice, or perhaps on the day after, he rented another office in the same building, and near the head of the stairway where the old offices were. On the next day after the dissolution, he advertised in the papers that the partnership was dissolved and he was located for practice in an adjoining room in the same building, and put his sign up at his office door. The other partner remained in éliarge of the old office, and used such of the furniture and instruments as he needed or wished. Complainant thereupon filed a bill to wind up the partnership, asked that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the lease and property and sell the same, and that he be allowed to start the bidding at $2,000. Relief was denied upon the ground that here is a case wherein no forced sale or transfer can be made of a good will, and that good will implies something gained by consent.
The very definitions of “good will” demonstrate that it belongs to none but a going concern which continues the business sold to it, — that “stays at the old stand,” — a business handled as something other than “a closing-up transaction.” Ott v. Boring, (Wis.) 121 N. W. 126. It is an element in the transfer “of a well-established business.” In re Graeser’s Estate, (Pa.) 79 Atl. 242. The most frequent definition of good will is that old customers will continue to be customers. Halverson v. Walker, (Utah) 112 Pac. 804; Brown v. Benzinger, (Md.) 84 Atl. 79.
Other cases on the rule of the prospect of the customers’ going back are Vonderbank v. Schmidt, (La.) 10 So. 616; Bergarnini v. Bastian, 35 La. Ann. 60; Succession of Journe, 21 La. Ann. 391; Chittenden v. Witbeck, (Mich.) 15 N. W. 526. Cruttwell v. Lye, 17 Ves. 335, says it is “the probability that the old customers will resort to the old place.” Williams v. Farrand, (Mich.) 50 N. W. 446; Meyers v. Kalamazoo Buggy Co., (Mich.) 19 N. W. 961 (20 N. W. 545). The Master of the Rolls, in Wedderburn v. Wedderburn, 22 Beav. 84, at 104, says: “It seems to be that species of connection in trade which induces customers to deal with a particular firm.” It is said in England v. Downs, 6 Beav. 269, at 276, “It is the chance or probability that custom will be had at a certain place of business in consequence.of the way in which that business has been previously carried on.” Story on Partnership, Sec. 90, speaks of an advantage or benefit acquired “by establishment * * * in consequence of the general public patronage and encouragement which it receives from custom or habitual customers.” It is said in Williams v. Farrand, (Mich.) 50 N. W. 446, that a retiring partner, in the absence of stipulation, and in addition to his interest in the tangible effects, parts simply with “the advantages that an established business possesses over a new enterprise. The old business is an assured sue
It is said in Cottrell v. Babcock Printing-Press Mfg. Co., (Conn.) 6 Atl. 791, at 797:
“By purchasing the good will merely, Cottrell secured the right to conduct the old business at the old stand, with the probability in his favor that the old customers would continue to go there.”
In Austen v. Boys, 4 Jur. (N. S.) 719, 721, it was said:
“Where a trade is established in a particular place, the good will of that trade means nothing more than the sum of money which any person would be willing to give for the chance of being able to keep the trade connected with the place where it has been carried on. * ' * * It seems to have been intended to describe that interest which the retiring partner would have had if he had remained in the partnership, and which, by his retirement before its termination, he was willing to relinquish to the continuing partner.”
In Angier v. Webber, 14 Allen (Mass.) 211, this is said:
“These facts show that the defendants have done acts which tend directly to deprive the plaintiff of the benefit of the reputation of the old.firm, to take away from him the patronage which appertained to it, and to draw away the business of its habitual customers to which he had acquired a right by the purchase of the good will.” .
How can there be customers continuing to deal with a closed-out establishment? As said by Mr. Justice Ladd in Millspaugh Laundry v. First Nat. Bank of Sioux City, 120 Iowa 1, if, by lawful conversion, the business is at an end, and the property disposed of, there cannot be left for appropriation that probability that customers might con
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Much of the law which treats good will as a thing of tangible value rests upon the holding that he who buys good will gets the benefit of eliminating a rival in the business bought; that the seller is bound not to impair the continued success of the business whose good will he transferred. See Smith v. Gibbs, 44 N. H. 335, 346; Labouchere v. Dawson, L. R. 13 Eq. 322; Cottrell v. Babcock Printing-Press Co., (Conn.) 6 Atl. 791; Churton v. Douglas, Johns. Eng. Ch. 174; Dwight v. Hamilton, 113 Mass. 175; Munsey v. Butterfield, 133 Mass. 492; French v. Parker, (R. I.) 14 Atl. 870, at 873; Rice v. Angell, (Texas) 11 S. W. 338; Brown v. Benzinger, (Md.) 84 Atl. 79; Howard v. Taylor, (Ala.) 8 So. 36; Knoedler v. Boussod, 47 Fed. 465; Meyers v. Kalamazoo Buggy Co., (Mich.) 19 N. W. 961 (20 N. W. 545); Williams v. Farrand, (Mich.) 50 N. W. 446, 451.
The fact that it is so often made the test of value that good will means that having established a happy reputation would make it probable old customers and new ones will resort to the business that has been sold, and that the breach consists of impairing that probability and absolving those same customers in a rival business established, is an irresistible argument for the proposition that, when the authorities define what good will is, and what its value is, they have reference to a going business that has been transferred, and the owner of which complains of interference therewith, either while the business is still going, or because its going qualities have been destroyed or impaired by the one who sold the going business. See Smith v. Gibbs, 44 N. H. 335, 343, 345; Jackson v. Byrnes, (Tenn.) 54 S. W. 984; Nelson v. Hiatt, (Neb.) 56 N. W. 1029, 1032; Howard v. Taylor, (Ala.) 8 So. 36; Bradbury v. Wells, 138 Iowa 673.
It is quite difficult to appreciate rivalry in or an im
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The four cases most relied on by plaintiffs, Knapp v. Reed, (Neb.) 130 N. W. 430, at 434, Inman v. Inkster, (Neb.) 134 N. W. 265, Lindemann v. Rusk, (Wis.) 104 N. W. 119, and Moore v. Rawson, (Mass.) 70 N. E. 64 (85 N. E. 586), are not applicable. All have a central holding which, though differing as to circumstances and detail, is the same in all; and that is: If one partner or one managing stockholder in effect oust the other, seize the corporation or partnership business or property, and carry on the business as his own, he is to be dealt with as liable to account, among other things, for a conversion of the good will.
III. The case could well be disposed of on the ground that the plaintiffs have estopped themselves by laches and acquiescence. But we have determined that, in view of the nature of the law questions presented on this appeal, the decision thereof should not rest upon that ground. See Cowell v. City Water Supply Co., 130 Iowa 672; Watkins v. National Bank of Lawrence, (Kan.) 32 Pac. 914; Beidenkopf v. Ins. Co., 160 Iowa 629, 649; Baker v. Seattle-Tacoma Power Co., (Wash.) 112 Pac. 647; Smith v. Stone, (Wyo.) 128 Pac. 612; Kessler v. Ensley, (Ala.) 141 Fed. 130; Jones v. Bonanza Min. & Mill. Co., (Utah) 91 Pac. 273.
15' ba'nkingA-nd powers: lomemployees:° ratification. IV. Plaintiffs charge that the board of directors of the old bank wrongfully allowed Hanson farm loan commissions in from $1,000 to $1,200, which commissions belonged to the bank. It is responded that the allow
The decree is — Affirmed.