Central Trust Co. of Mobile v. D'Arcy

142 S.W. 294, 238 Mo. 676, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 23, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 142 S.W. 294 (Central Trust Co. of Mobile v. D'Arcy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Central Trust Co. of Mobile v. D'Arcy, 142 S.W. 294, 238 Mo. 676, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 342 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

WOODSON, J.

The respondent, the plaintiff below, brought this suit against the appellant, to compel him, as trustee of the assets of F. H. Smith Lumber Company, to allow, and pay out of the trust funds in his hands, a certain judgment obtained by the former against the latter.

The facts of the case are practically undisputed, and are as follows:

The respondent was a banking and trust company, organized and doing business under the laws of the State of Alabama, with its place of business at Mobile, in that State.

The F. H. Smith Lumber Company was incorporated and doing business under the laws of Missouri, with its chief office in the city of St. Louis, where it had extensive lumber yards, for the storage of lumber, bought by and shipped to it from various States of the Union, and from which it made sales of lumber and shipped the same to its numerous customers throughout this country and Europe.

The Hardwood Export Company was incorporated under the laws of Illinois, with its chief office at the city of Cairo. This company also had and maintained an office in the city of St. Louis, and another at Mt. Vernon, Alabama, at or near which place it owned many thousands of acres of timber lands, also extensive sawmills, drying houses, kilns, sheds and other appliances and machinery used in manufacturing its timber into lumber and preparing it for sale.

The business relations that existed between these two lumber companies were very close, and apparently [679]*679they were financially interested in each other. At any rate, the dealings and transactions between them were numerous and extensive, the latter sawing its timber into lumber and preparing it' for market, and the former purchasing much if not all of it, and selling it to its own customers throughout the United States and Europe.

In furtherance of that relation and the dealings between them, on August 10, 1903, the E. H. Smith Lumber Company made and delivered to the respondent, the Trust Company, the following written guaranty, viz.:

Mobile, Ala., Aug. 10, 1903.
Central Trust Company, City:
Gentlemen:—In consideration of our interest in the Hardwood Export Co., we hereby guarantee the payment of any moneys that may be advanced by you to the Hardwood Export Company of Mt. Vernon, Ala. They proposing from time to time to obtain loans from you for which they will give you their promissory notes signed by their manager. Mr. J. C. McKinnon will have entire charge of the finances at Mobile and will sign such notes, etc.
Yours truly,
F. H. Smith Lumber Co., of St. Louis, Mo.
Per J. M. Bullard, Secy, and Treas.
J. M. Bullard.

The Trust Company, with this guaranty in its possession, 'and relying upon it, thereafter, on November 11th, 1903, lent to said Hardwood Export Company $5,000, taking its note therefor, executed as provided for in said-guaranty, and due ninety days after date. On December 12, 1903, while still holding and relying upon said guaranty, the Trust Company loaned to the said Hardwood- Export Company a further sum of $5,000, evidenced by a note of that date, due in sixty days thereafter,- also executed as provided by said guaranty. These loans were made in the due course of business; and, under the laws of Alabama, said notes bore eight per cent interest.

[680]*680On December 24, 1903, the Hardwood Export Company became insolvent and was unable to pay its debts. According to dne process of law, all its property and effects were sold, and the proceeds thereof were legally distributed among its creditors, $599.48 of which was paid to the Trust Company on said notes, leaving a balance due thereon of $9400,.52, with interest.

■ On December 24, 1903, the F. H. Smith Lumber Company, by its deed of that date, c.onveyed all its property of every kind to a trustee, in trust for the following purposes, viz.: '

1. To ’ pay the reasonable attorneys ’ fees for services rendered in the preparation of this conveyance, to pay all costs and expenses, including reasonable counsel and attorneys’ fees, incurred in executing the trust herein, including compensation to the said trustees, the survivor and successor thereof, for executing the said trust, as is referred to and stated hereinafter, the amount of' premiums for the bonds required of said trustees hereinafter provided for, all taxes on the trust property due and payable at any time, all premiums for insurance on said property, all claims and demands for work and labor done or material furnished, which by the statutes of any State or States are made a lien upon any of the property held under said trust, and which by virtue of said statutes are entitled to priority of payment over other debts and to pay all indebtedness of every kind and nature incurred or created by said parties of the second part, their survivor or successors, in executing this trust.

2. To pay from time to time from the cash on hand, to the present creditors of said party of the first part, pro rata according to the indebtedness of said party of the first part to them owing, such sums as said parties of the second part may deem safe and convenient to pay, taking into consideration the condi[681]*681tion of said trust estate, and after all debts, demands, claims and liabilities incurred and created by said parties of the second part, their survivor or successors, in executing this trust shall have been paid, and all debts, claims and demands and liabilities of the said party of the first part now existing, with interest thereon at the rate of six per centum per annum shall have been paid, then the said parties of the second part, their survivor or successors, shall reconvey to said party of the first part all the property, of. every kind and nature whatsoever, in their hands or to them belonging under this conveyance.

The trustee of the latter company has been collecting up the assets thereof and applying the same to the payment of its debts, as provided for by said deed of conveyance, excepting said debts of the Trust Company, which he refused and still refuses to pay, or any part thereof, out of the assets of said company, although .having in his hands sufficient assets to pay the same percentage of its debt, that he has paid to all the other creditors.

Upon that state of facts the Trust Company, the respondent, instituted a suit against the F. H. Smith Lumber Company, and the trustee aforesaid, for the purpose of recovering, against it, the balance due on said two notes, under the provision of said written guaranty. Subsequently, the Trust Company dismissed the suit as to the trustee, and the Lumber Company having failed to answer, a judgment by default was rendered against it, upon its guaranty, for the balance due on the two notes executed by the Hardwood Export Company to the Trust Company.

This judgment was presented to the trustee of the F. H. Smith Lumber Company for payment,' which was by hinrrefused. Thereupon the Trust Company, the respondent here, instituted this suit against the said trustee to compel him to pay to it its proportional [682]*682part of the assets conveyed to him by that company on December 24, 1903.

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Bluebook (online)
142 S.W. 294, 238 Mo. 676, 1911 Mo. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/central-trust-co-of-mobile-v-darcy-mo-1911.