Buckwalter v. Whipple

41 S.E. 1010, 115 Ga. 484, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJune 4, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 41 S.E. 1010 (Buckwalter v. Whipple) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckwalter v. Whipple, 41 S.E. 1010, 115 Ga. 484, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 462 (Ga. 1902).

Opinion

Little, J.

Buckwalter, the general manager of a trading corporation known as the Cypress Lumber Company, exhibited an equitable petition against C. T. Nelson & Company, C. T. Nelson,. H. B. Nelson, M. C. Lilly Jr., E. L. Serage, F. B. Serage, the Cypress Lumber Company, and W. S. Thomson. Shbsequently this case-was, together with the case of the First National Bank of Cordeleet al. v. Ser age-Watkins Company et al., referred to an auditor to hear evidence and report upon the various issues arising therein.. The record is voluminous and much confused. The pleadings .and. evidence make substantially the following case: The Serage-Watkins Company was a corporation engaged in the manufacture of lumber in Wilcox county. In the .year 1896 its stockholders sold [485]*485and conveyed the assets of this corporation to the Cypress Lumber Company, which latter corporation was composed of the same shareholders as were stockholders in the former, except P. B. Watkins, a shareholder in the old company, was not a shareholder in the new; and J. B. Buckwalter, the petitioner, who was not a shareholder in the old company, subscribed and paid into the new corporation $5,000, for which he received 167 shares of stock in the Cypress Lumber Company. All the property of the Serage-Watkins Company, except its choses in action and bills receivable, by the arrangement which was entered into, went into the hands of the Cypress Lumber Company. In these were included the sawmill ■plant etc. of the old company. The capital stock of the Cypress Lumber Company, the assets of which consisted of the property •conveyed to it by the stockholders of the Serage-Watkins Company, plus the $5,000 paid in by Buckwalter, was $50,000, divided into 500 shares of the par value of $100 each. At the time of the transfer the Serage-Watkins Company owed certain debts, of which Buckwalter had knowledge, and which were not paid at the time of the organization of the Cypress Lumber Company. Among these creditors was the First National Bank of Cordele, which together with other creditors, after the organization of the Cypress Lumber Company, sued out attachments against the Serage-Watkins Company and had them levied upon the mill and plant which the defendant in attachment had before that time conveyed to the Cypress Lumber Company. The 500 shares of stock of the Cypress Lumber Company were held and owned as follows: J. B. Buck-waiter 167 shares; F. B. Serage 296 shares; M. C. Lilly 10 shares; C. T. Nelson 10 shares ; H. B. Nelson 10 shares; and F. L. Serage 7 •shares. Of these shareholders F. B. Serage, M. C. Lilly, and C. T. Nelson composed a firm doing business under the name of C. T. Nelson & Company, in Columbus, Ohio. This firm was indebted to the Cypress Lumber Company in an amount exceeding $3,000, •and being in a failing condition, Buckwalter had sued out an attachment against the firm, and caused the same to be levied on the individual shares of the capital stock of the Cypress Lumber Company owned by the members of that firm.

Of the attachments which had issued in favor of the different •creditors of the Serage-Watkins Company, which had been levied •on the mill and plant in possession of the Cypress Lumber Com[486]*486pany, only that one in favor of the First National Bank of Cordelehad been tried. That trial resulted in a judgment in favor of the-bank. A motion to set aside the judgment and grant a motion for a new trial had been made, and was pending at the time Buck-waiter filed his equitable petition, in which, after referring to the-issuance of the attachment by him against C. T. Nelson & Company, he alleged that the members of that firm were seeking to divest their stock from the lien which the Cypress Lumber Company had on the same by virtue of a by-law of the company. He also alleged that a transfer which members of that firm claimed to have made was fraudulent, and that, owning a majority of the stock of the lumber company, they had entered into a fraudulent scheme to-settle their indebtedness by retiring 150 shares of their stock in payment of their debt. He further alleged that it was the intention of such majority stockholders, through their attorney Thomson, to have the attachment which the petitioner had sued out dismissed and marked settled. He also alleged that the other defendants, H. B. Nelson and F. L. Serage, were confederating with the members of the firm of C. T. Nelson & Company in their fraudulent scheme. Under these allegations he prayed that the defendants C. T. Nelson & Company be enjoined from any interference with any of the property, choses in action, or other assets of the-corporation, and that they and their attorney, Thomson, be enjoined from in any manner interfering with the attachment proceedings instituted by him, which were then pending, and from having the same dismissed. He also prayed for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of the property and assets of the Cypress Lumber Company, to collect all debts due said company, and hold the same for final distribution. The injunction prayed for was granted, and D. B. Nicholson was appointed receiver to take-charge of the property and assets of the Cypress Lumber Company. After this had been done, the creditors of the Serage-Watkins Company, who had previously sued out attachments, filed an equitable petition against the Serage-Watkins Company, the Cypress Lumber Company, Buckwalter, and Nicholson, receiver, in which among others the foregoing facts were set out. They charged that the transfer by the Serage-Watkins Company of its property to the Cypress Lumber Company was a scheme to hinder, defeat, and delay creditors of the Serage-Watkins Company, of which Buckwalter [487]*487had notice, or had reasonable grounds to suspect the same, and prayed that an injunction should issue, restraining Buckwalter and the Cypress Lumber Company from interfering in any way with the property levied on under their attachments as the property of the Serage-Watkins Company, and from disposing of the same. They also prayed that a receiver be appointed to take charge of all that property as the property of the Serage-Watkins Company, and hold the proceeds of the same subject to the order of the court; petitioners claiming that all the property so transferred was subject to their debts, and that the transfer to the Cypress Lumber Company was void for the reasons stated. Defendants answered, and H. B. Nelson and F. L. Serage intervened and became parties plaintiff in the petition filed by Buckwalter, and prayed that, on a final distribution of the funds, they should be awarded their share of the assets in proportion to the number of shares of stock owned by each of them.

At this stage of the litigation the case was referred to an auditor to hear and report on the various issues raised by the several proceedings. Buckwalter filed an amendment before the auditor, praying that he be allowed attorney’s fees for bringing the funds into court, and a subsequent amendment praying that certain amounts due him by the receiver be paid. The auditor reported, among others, the following findings: The Serage-Watkins Company and the Cypress Lumber Company were both corporations duly organized under the laws of Georgia, and all of the stockholders of the former, except Watkins, became stockholders in the latter at the time it was organized. F. B. Serage was the president of both corporations, and was in management and control of the affairs of both for some time before and after the dissolution of the Serage-Watkins Company and the organization of the Cypress Lumber Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 S.E. 1010, 115 Ga. 484, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckwalter-v-whipple-ga-1902.