Age-Herald Co. v. Potter

109 Ala. 675
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 109 Ala. 675 (Age-Herald Co. v. Potter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Age-Herald Co. v. Potter, 109 Ala. 675 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, J.

The bill in this case is filed by C. Potter, Jr. & Co. against the Age-Herald Co., the First National Bank of Birmingham, the Birmingham Trust & Savings Go., W. P. Pinckard and F. P. O’Brien. Complainants are simple contract creditors of the Age-Herald Company in the sum of $6,700, and were such cred[678]*678itors when the latter executed a certain mortgage or deed of trust to secure bonds issued by it. The Trust & Savings Company is trustee in said deed. The First National Bank is a creditor of said company in about the sum of $27,000, and holds twenty-seven of said bonds, of the face value of $1,000 each, as collateral security for its debt. O’Brien, is also a creditor of said company, his debt being about $26,000, and he holds twenty-two of said bonds as collateral thereto. Pinckard is a creditor also to a small amount, and one of said bonds, the only one remaining of the fifty secured by said deed, went into his hands as collateral security. The execution of said mortgage and the issuance and hypothecation of said bonds came about in this way : On March 10, 1891, the stockholders of the Age-Herald Company, premising that the company, “for the successful operation of its newspaper business, needs and requires certain working capital,” proceeded, “in order to provide such working capital, as well as for other necessary uses and purposes of the company,” to resolve that the said company “shall and will issue its first mortgage bonds to the aggregate amount of fifty thousand dollars, payable ten years after date thereof, and with interest payable by coupons semi-annually at the rate of six per cent, per annum, and each of said bonds shall be for the sum of one thousand dollars ; and that to secure said bonds said company shall and will execute a mortgage on all its property, franchises, rights and privileges to such trustee as the board of directors shall select, and said mortgage and bonds shall contain such stipulations, conditions, covenants and agreements, and be of such form and date as the board of directors may prescribe and determine;” and the directors were given power and authority to sell, hypothecate, and otherwise dispose of the whole or any part of said bonds, at such times, in such manner and upon such terms as the directors might deem proper, “for the purpose of providing such working capital, and for any other necessary uses and purposes of the company.” The board of directors acted on this resolution March 18th, selected the Trust & Savings Company to be trustee, and directed the president and secretary to prepare said morgage and bonds, and execute the’same; and at the same meeting a committee was appointed to ascertain “what arrangements could be made with the [679]*679First National Bank of Birmingham in reference to its debt against the Age-Herald.” On March 24th another meeting of the directors was held, at which the number of directors was increased to sis, F. P. O’Brien was elected to be the additional director, Pinckard, the president and business manager of the company, resigned those offices, and O’Brien was elected to fill them ; and the meeting adjourned to a later hour of the same day. On reconvening, the following proceedings were had, as shown by the minutes of the board: “The committee, consisting of J. J. Altman, Jackson and Pinckard, to see what arrangements could be made with the First National Bank as to its [Age-Herald’s] debt to the bank, reported that said bank was willing to extend its debt for four months, and make advances to the company, provided the Age-Herald Company would hypothecate as collateral security twenty-seven of the bonds of this company for said debt and advances. It was ordered that this proposition be accepted, and that said bonds be delivered when completed .and executed. . It was further ordered that twenty-one of said bonds of the Age-' Herald Company be delivered to F. P. O’Brien, to secure the debt due him, and to secure further advances to the Age-Herald Coznpany to be znade by said O’Brien in pursuance of contract heretofore made with said O’Brien. It was further ordered that, in the event that the said bonds could be sold at not less than ninety cents on the dollar net, the same be done, and the proceeds applied to the debts of this company and further expenses.” Ozi April 1, 1891, the mortgage thus provided for was executed by the Age-Herald Company, covering and coziveying all the property, franchises,'&c., then owned by the company, or that should belong to the company at any time during the ten years to elapse before the law day of the mortgage, for the security of said fifty bozids and the irzterest thereon, which latter was payable on the 1st days of April and October iiz each year. A short time after this, azid as soon as the bonds were prepared and executed, they were delivered to O’Brien and the bank is provided in the above order of the directors, O’Bilen afterwards acquiring another bond. The debt of the First National Bank at this time was about $16,000, and it was increased, by advances to the “working capital” of the Age-Herald Company, to [680]*680about $27,000, before this bill was filed. Similarly O’Brien’s debt was increased from about $13,000 to about $27,000 after the' issuance and delivery of these bonds bo him. The stockholders of the Age-Herald Company participating in the meeting at which the mortgage and bonds were authorized were Pinckard, Walker, Jackson,' Linn, Hartt & Co. and Altman. As we have seen, Pinckard was a creditor, and received one of said bonds, Linn and Walker were directors of said First National Bank, the former being then its cashier. The directors of the company at the time the hypothecation of bonds with said bank and O’Brien was ordered were said Pinckard, Walker, Linn, Altman, Jackson and O’Brien-, and all were present at the meeting which thus disposed of forty-eight, out of the issue of fifty, of said bonds; O’Brien at that time being, as we have seen, president and general manager of the Age-Herald corporation.

The bill, alleging substantially the , foregoing facts, (except it takes no account of the increase of the debts of - the bank and O’Brien after April 1, 1891, by reason of additional advances made by them, but avers that the only consideration for the hypothecation of said bonds was existing indebtedness to these parties), and further that the Age-Herald Company on April 1, 1891, was insolvent, and did not own assets sufficient, and did not then have the means, to pay its debts, and that said mortgage was executed, and said bonds were issued and thus hypothecated, with the intent on the part of .the Age-Herald Company to hinder, delay and defraud complainant and its other creditors, and that said bonds were taken and received by said Pickard, O’Brien and the bank with a knowledge on their respective parts of the said alleged financial condition of the said company, and with a like intent to hinder, delay and defraud creditors, &c.; seeks to have said mortgage or deed of trust declared fraudulent and void as to complainant, and vacatedjand set aside; to have said bonds adjudged to be likewise fraudulent and void, and that said Pinckard, O’Brien and the bank be required to surrender the same to the court for cancellation ;, to have a decree entered against said company for the amount of complainant’s debt, to have a lien upon all the property, &c., embraced in said mortgage, de[681]*681dared in complainant’s favor, to have a receiver appointed to take charge of all said property; and carry on the business of the Age-Herald Company until a sale can be had to pay complainant’s debts, &c., &c.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Drain v. F. S. Royster Guano Co.
165 So. 239 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1936)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 Ala. 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/age-herald-co-v-potter-ala-1895.