Bank v. Belington Coal & Coke Co.

41 S.E. 390, 51 W. Va. 60, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 62
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 41 S.E. 390 (Bank v. Belington Coal & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank v. Belington Coal & Coke Co., 41 S.E. 390, 51 W. Va. 60, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 62 (W. Va. 1902).

Opinion

McWhorter, Judge:

A. Custer, doing business as A. Custer & Co., took options upon various tracts of land in Barbour and [Randolph Counties, aggregating about three thousand acres of coal and coal lands. The price to be paid was about twenty dollars an acre, of which ten per centum was to be paid in cash and the residue in three equal annual installments with interest. Said Custer succeeded in interesting I. Y. Johnson, J. N. B. Crim, J. E. Hall, A. G. Dayton, ■ William Watkins, George W. Hoover, W. W. Teter, Floyd Teter and C. F. Teter in said purchases. On the 26th day of January, 1892, said Hall, Crim, Johnson, Charles F. Teter, Watkins and Hoover filed their agreement with the secretary- of state agreeing to become a corporation by the name of The Belington Coal and Coke Company “for the purpose of mining coal, manufacturing coke, selling and shipping the same, buying and leasing lands and mineral rights, constructing’ tram-roads, shafts, coke ovens and engaging in a general merchandising business, and acquiring such other property and rights and the construction of such other works as may be necessary or advantageous for the proper conduct of said company’s business,” and subscribed thereto ten shares of stock each, making six-thousand dollars and paid in ten per centum thereon and asked the privilege of increasing their capital stock by the sale of additional shares from time to time to five hundred thousand dollars. On the next day, January 27'th, the secretary of state issued to them their charter accordingly. On the 9th day of February, 1892,. the said corporators together with A. G. Dayton and A. Custer, then stockholders, met and organized the [62]*62company by the election of said "Watkins, Crim, C. F. Teter, Floyd Teter, Dayton, Hall and Hoover to be Board of Directors, which board organized by electing Crim president, Watkins vice-president, Johnson secretary and treasurer and Custer general manager, and at which meeting a proposition was made to the said company, which, together with the action of the company thereon and in relation thereto, are as follows: “Whereas, A. Custer, I. V. Johnson, j. E. Hall, J. N. B. Crim, William Watkins, G. W. Hoover, Floyd Teter, W. W. Teter, C. F. Teter, and A. G-. Dayton control a body of three thousand acres of coal and coal land, lying and being in the counties of Barbour and [Randolph, State of West Virginia, tying generally on the Tygarfs Valley river and Beaver creek; and whereas, the said above named parties have agreed to sell their said interest in and to said three thousand acres of coal and coal land at the price of seventy-three dollars per acre, or at a total of two hundred and nineteen thousand dollars, to this company, and to accept in part payment thereof the paid-up certificates of the capital stock of this company to the amount of one hundred and fifty-nine thousand dollars, to be issued to said parties, in the following sums and amounts, viz: To A. Ouster, seventy-eight thousand dollars; to J. N. B. Crim, nine thousand; to C. F. Teter, nine thousand; to W. W. Teter, nine thousand; to Floyd Teter, nine thousand; to A. G. Dayton, nine thousand; to I. V. Johnson, nine thousand; to William Watkins, nine thousand; to G. W. Hoover, nine thousand; to J. E. Hall, nine thousand; equal to one hundred and fifty-nine thousand dollars; and said parties have further subscribed each ten shares to said capital stock, or in all ten thousand dollars.

It is further stipulated that one hundred thousand dollars of the capital stock of this company be sold at a discount, not to exceed twenty per cent., and out of the proceeds of the sale of such stock and the ten thousand dollars subscribed by the said parties, the residue of sixty thousand dollars due upon said lands and coal shall be paid to the parties to whom the same shall bo owing, and the residue shall be expended in developing said property, in the 'opening of mines and the erection and operation of coke ovens, and all other things necessary.

Signed, February 9, 1892, by the above named parties, A. Custer, C. F. Teter, J. N. B. Crim, I. V. Johnson, Floyd Teter, W. W. Teter, A. G. Dayton.

[63]*63Upon consideration of the foregoing proposition it is unanimously ordered that the same be accepted and spread upon the records of this company, and that in compliance therewith, it is further ordered that A. Custer, general manager of this company, be at once authorized to sell one hundred thousand dollars of the capital stock of this company at a discount below par value, of not to exceed twenty per cent.; that so soon as said capital stock is sold this company will issue to said parties certificates of paid-up capital stock of this company to the amounts set forth in said proposition — that is to say: to said A. Custer, seventy-eight thousand dollars; to I. V. Johnson, nine thousand dollars; to C. F. Teter, nine thousand dollars; to W. W. Teter, nine thousand dollars; to Floyd Teter, nine thousand dollars; to A. G. Dajdon, nine thousand dollars; to G. W. Hoover, nine thousand dollars; to William Watkins, nine thousand dollars; to James E. Hall, nine thousand dollars; to J. N. B. Crim, nine thousand dollars, and will out of the proceeds of the sale of said one hundred thousand dollars of the capital stock pay the residue of sixty thousand dollars due for said coal and coal lands, and expend the residue in developing said property at once by opening mines, erecting and operating coke ovens and all other things necessary, and it is further ordered that a certificate bo written and signed by the president of this company and attested by the secretary, under the seal of this company, and be delivered to A. Custer, general manager of this company, showing his authority to sell and negotiate according to the above order the said one hundred thousand dollars of the capital stock of this company.”

The company proceeded under the management as organized to carry out the object of the- organization, and on the 29th of November, 1892, at a meeting of the board of directors the following order was made: “It appearing to the company that it is indebted to A. Custer, general .manager of the company, in the sum of three thousand and twenty-one dollars and forty-four cents upon settlement made this day, it is ordered that the company execute, by its president, its note, payable in six months, to the said A. Custer for the said sum, three thousand and twenty-one dollars and forty-four cents.” Which note was accordingly executed, bearing date the 3rd day of December, 1892, under the seal of said company by J. N. B. Crim, the president, which note being non-negotiable was sold by the payee, A. Cus[64]*64ter, to the Merchants and Mechanics Savings Bank of Grafton. The note not having been paid when due and the maker having become largely indebted to insolvency, the said bank, the holder of the note, instituted its suit in the circuit court of Barbour County in behalf of itself and all other creditors of the said Belington Coal and Coke Company who would come in and join the plaintiff in the costs of the suit, making all the stockholders and creditors of said company parties defendant thereto ; alleging the contract taken by the said Custer for the several tracts of coal lands amounting in all to some three thousand acres at the rate of twenty dollars per acre, ten per centum of the price to be paid down the residue in three equal annual installments, with interest, and that he had written contracts for the purchase of the same; that before the incorporation of said company, on the 23rd of December, 1891, said Custer, as A. Custer &

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

Related

Fayette Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Brown Bros.
135 S.E. 235 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1926)
Williamsburg Power Co. v. City of Williamsburg
124 S.E. 215 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1924)
Conway v. Bailey
112 S.E. 579 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1922)
Vasey v. New Export Coal Co.
109 S.E. 619 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1921)
Kinney v. Town of West Union
91 S.E. 260 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1917)
Maryland Rail Co. v. Taylor
231 F. 119 (Fourth Circuit, 1916)
Farnsworth v. Union Trust & Deposit Co.
211 F. 912 (Fourth Circuit, 1914)
In re Charles Town Light & Power Co.
199 F. 846 (N.D. West Virginia, 1912)
Schmulbach v. Caldwell
196 F. 16 (Fourth Circuit, 1912)
Howard v. National Telephone Co.
182 F. 215 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern West Virginia, 1910)
Security Trust Co. v. Ford
75 Ohio St. (N.S.) 322 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1906)
Chamberlaine v. Marsh's Administrator
6 Va. 283 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1819)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 S.E. 390, 51 W. Va. 60, 1902 W. Va. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-v-belington-coal-coke-co-wva-1902.