Atlas Coal Co. v. Jones

61 N.W.2d 663, 245 Iowa 506, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 479
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1953
Docket48318
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 61 N.W.2d 663 (Atlas Coal Co. v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlas Coal Co. v. Jones, 61 N.W.2d 663, 245 Iowa 506, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 479 (iowa 1953).

Opinion

Oliver, J.

— This is an equity suit brought by Atlas Coal Company, an Iowa corporation, against E. R. Berwick and Leslie Jones, two former officers and directors, and White City Coal Company, a corporation owned by them, involving certain coal contracts or leases which plaintiff alleges Berwick and Jones secured from plaintiff fraudulently, in bad faith and in violation of their fiduciary duties to plaintiff. Plaintiff prays said leases and a sublease or subcontract made thereunder and royalties secured therefrom be adjudicated to be held by defendants as trustees for plaintiff and be ordered assigned to plaintiff, and for an accounting in connection therewith and for general equitable relief.

*509 Plaintiff was organized in 1933 to engage in tbe business of mining and dealing in coal. Its principal place of business is Oskaloosa. Until 1949 it was actively engaged in strip mining in Mahaska County. Its capital stock consisted of one thousand shares of nonvoting preferred stock at $100 per share and one thousand shares of common stock issued at $1.00 per share. Its business was successful and by June 1949 it had retired its preferred stock and had a surplus of $132,000 after paying common stock dividends of $57,000 in the previous fiscal year.

At first it conducted strip mining operations upon an eighty-acre tract purchased by it, upon which it constructed its processing plant and tipple. It also mined in adjacent properties leased by it. Later it secured coal contracts or leases in three other areas in the county, known as Eddyville field, Kirkville field and White City field, which it planned to work out in order.

Defendant Leslie Jones had been connected with Atlas Company since 1936. Later he was made assistant treasurer and treasurer. He was a director and secretary-treasurer from 1946 until the annual meeting in May 1951. From 1947 to 1951 his salary was $500 per month. From 1947 to 1949 Jones handled the business end of Atlas. Another director, Tom Lanning, handled its operations. Lanning gave up this work in July 1949, and Jones was in active charge of the operating end of the business in Mahaska County until May 1951.

Atlas Coal Company was controlled by A. E. Hollingsworth, of Des Moines, who owned one hundred and twenty shares of its common stock and controlled Central Iowa Fuel Company which held four hundred and eighty-four shares. By 1949 he was failing physically and was less active mentally. Early in 1951 a guardian was appointed for him. He died shortly thereafter. Defendant E. R. Berwick was a protégé of Hollingsworth, was on the payroll of several of Hollingsworth’s enterprises and voted Hollingsworth’s stock at the 1949 Atlas meeting. In 1947 he was elected director and was made assistant to the president of Atlas (Hollingsworth) at $100 per month. .He was re-elected director in 1948 and in 1949 was elected director and president. His salary for 1948 and 1949 was $500 per month. From 1949 to 1951 Berwick and Jones were the principal acting officers of Atlas and were the only salaried officers. Berwick’s office was in Des *510 Moines. Jones made notes of stockholders’ and directors’ meetings from which Berwick typed the minutes. The latter had possession of the minute book. Jones kept all other books and records of Atlas at the office in Mahaska County.

The directors elected in 1949 were Hollingsworth, Berwick, Jones, Tom Banning and K. B. Bead. Bead was a practicing attorney of Des Moines. He held stock [in and his firm was attorney for Central Iowa Fuel Company. In 1950 the same directors were elected except Bead, whose place was taken by Fred MacMillan.

Atlas worked out its original field in 1944 and Eddyville field in 1948. It then considered disposing of the Kirkville and White City fields and also its machinery and equipment.

May 17, 1949, Atlas sold its main mining machine, a large dragline, for $158,000. June 27, Jones offered to purchase the Atlas stock held by Central Iowa Fuel Company. The offer was refused. At the annual stockholders’ meeting of Atlas, June 29, 1949, a resolution prepared by B. B. Bead was adopted, authorizing and directing the Board of Directors to determine whether Atlas should liquidate, remain inactive or actively engage in mining operations, and authorizing the Board to sell all or part of the assets at such prices and on such conditions as the Board should determine.

At the annual directors’ meeting held July 1, 1949, Mr. Bead referred to this resolution, and stated he had concluded Atlas should liquidate. Upon his’motion the Board adopted a resolution:

“(1) That this Company cease active operations, other than to fulfill its contract obligations, until the further order of the Board;

“(2) That officers of this corporation be and they are hereby authorized and directed to consider ways and means of disposing of the assets and properties of this company, either as a whole or in parcels, and that they report back to this Board in respect of any propositions that they may be able to negotiate for;

“(3) That no further advance royalties be paid on either the White City or the Kirkville fields until and unless authorized by this Board;

*511 a* * ».

“(6) That in the event that the Company is unable to dispose of its assets on favorable terms, and in case economic and other conditions would seem to warrant doing so, that this Board shall give further consideration to embarking in active mining operations in the Kirkville field.”

Bead testified he then thought they could readily dispose of both the Kirkville and White City fields and get back their investment in them, or at least get someone to operate them.

The Kirkville field was sold to director Tom Lanning for $32,900 and certain equipment was sold him for $15,800. The contracts were signed about July 18, 1949. Whether the sale of Kirkville field was authorized at the July 1, 1949, directors’ meeting is in dispute. There is no reference to either transaction in the minutes of any directors’ or stockholders’ meeting. In any event, the validity of neither is questioned. Lanning was asked to buy the White City field also but he said he had as much as he could handle.

This suit involves the coal contracts or leases in White City field which defendants secured from Atlas for $10. Atlas had an investment in them of $20,600 for advance royalties and $3825.24 for maps, plats and drilling expense. White City field embraced four contracts or leases with the owners of the real estate:

■ (1) Lee contract, made in February 1944, covering one hundred and thirty acres, providing for a royalty of fifteen cents per ton, with an advance royalty of $3000 per year. (This-was the most important contract.)

(2) Chapman contract, June 1941,- one hundred and twenty acres, royalties ten cents per ton, advance royalty $100 per year.

(3) Nash contract, October 1941, one hundred twenty acres, royalty ten cents per ton, initial advance royalty $100 per year, increasing $50 per year.

(4) Underwood contract, October 1941, fifty acres, royalty ten cents per ton, initial advance royalty $100 per year, increasing- $100 per year.

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.W.2d 663, 245 Iowa 506, 1953 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlas-coal-co-v-jones-iowa-1953.