Clay Lumber Co. v. Hart's Branch Coal Co.

140 N.W. 912, 174 Mich. 613, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 502
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 8, 1913
DocketDocket No. 54
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 140 N.W. 912 (Clay Lumber Co. v. Hart's Branch Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clay Lumber Co. v. Hart's Branch Coal Co., 140 N.W. 912, 174 Mich. 613, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 502 (Mich. 1913).

Opinion

Steere, O. J.

The contention in this controversy relates to garnishment proceedings against Charles and George Steffens, the garnishee defendants herein. They were stockholders and directors of the Hart’s Branch Coal Company, principal defendants, and are claimed to have been indebted to it. This claim of indebtedness and their denial present the foundation issue.

The action was commenced in justice’s court on November 6, 1908, by summons; two writs being simultaneously issued and served on that day, one against the principal defendant, the Hart’s Branch Coal Company, in an action in assumpsit, and one against Charles Steffens and George Steffens as garnishee defendants, whose alleged indebtedness to the principal defendant it was sought to reach and hold by garnishment to ultimately satisfy such judgment as might be recovered against the coal company. On January 5,1909, plaintiff recovered a judgment in said justice’s court against the principal defendant for the sum [615]*615of $300 and costs, which judgment was not appealed from and now stands undisputed and unquestioned

The issue in the collateral garnishment proceeding was tried in the justice’s court before a jury, resulting in a verdict for the defendants, from which the plaintiff appealed to the circuit court of Macomb county, where a retrial by jury, on November 22, 1911, resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff and against said garnishee defendants for $346.13. A motion by said defendants for a new trial was denied, and they have removed the proceeding here for review upon a writ of error.

Out of the numerous assignments of error, the most important questions urged and argued center on the ruling of the court in denying defendants’ motion for a directed verdict in their favor, and in excluding testimony offered by them in support of their claim that a certain note for $500, given by them to the coal company in payment for some of its stock, was obtained through fraud and misrepresentation, and void.

The Hart’s Branch Coal Company, a West Virginia corporation, was organized to engage in coal mining in that State, and was so engaged for a time, apparently unprofitably, though the full nature and extent of its operations are not disclosed. Its principal officers and stockholders were residents of Macomb county, Mich. The only records of meetings of stockholders and officers of the company put in evidence show that they were held at 48 Macomb street, Mt. Clemens, Mich. The president of the company, A. T. Donaldson, resided at Mt. Clemens, and was also president of the Citizens’ Savings Bank of that city. The coal company had an account in, borrowed money of, and did its banking business with, said bank. The garnishee defendants, Charles and George Steffens, father and son, resided at Frazer, in said county, where they were engaged in the lumber and coal business. They carried an account in said Citizens’ Savings Bank, in which Charles Steffens, the father, was also a stockholder. They had taken stock in said coal company, at the solicitation and on the rep[616]*616resentation of Donaldson and others who were engaged in its organization, as they claim, and had given in payment on their stock a 90 days’ note for $500, dated June 29, 1908, payable to A. T. Donaldson, as president of the Hart’s Branch Coal Company, at the Mt. Clemens Citizens’ Savings Bank.

On July 25, 1908, the coal company borrowed of said Savings Bank $300, giving its note therefor payable in 60 days, indorsed by the directors of the coal company, including the defendants Charles and George Steffens. The note was given to raise money to pay off certain labor claims in West Virginia against the principal defendant. Defendant George Steffens, then a director, went down to West Virginia with another member of the company and paid certain claims. President Donaldson testifies:

“They got the money and went down and paid all the claims against the company as we supposed. * * * When they came back and found the condition of things, the directors concluded that we wouldn’t do much of anything more and did not have money enough, and, if Mr. Steffens took care of that note and the interest, we would surrender the $500 note, and I saw Mr. Steffens and told him what we had decided on, and he said he would think it over. Afterwards he told me that he would take it up and would leave orders at the bank.”

Both the Steffenses substantiate this and testify that they accepted the proposition; the agreement being reached as a result of various negotiations arising from their objection to paying the $500 note and their claim of fraud and misrepresentations at the time it was obtained.

It appears undisputed that, in pursuance of the agreement reached, Donaldson, as president of the coal company, delivered the $500 note held by the company against the Steffenses to the cashier of the Citizens’ Savings Bank, with instructions that when Mr. Steffens paid the $300 note with interest, which it held against the coal company, the $500 note should be surrendered to Steffens, and that, in pursuance of the same agreement, Charles Steffens went to the bank and told the cashier to charge up the [617]*617$300 note and interest to his account; he having at that time, and continuously thereafter, sufficient funds on deposit to cover the same. This occurred in October before commencement of this suit; but the $300 note was not charged to Steffens’ account nor the paper surrendered until January 22, 1909, at which time the $300 note was charged to Steffens’ account, with full interest figured to that date, canceled as paid on that date, and surrendered to the coal company, and the $500 note was surrendered to Steffens. The reason given by the officers of the bank for not doing this in October, at the time Charles Steffens authorized the cashier to charge the $300 note to his account, is that another note or evidence of indebtedness of the coal company to the bank for $30 was attached to the note Steffens was willing to pay, and it was sought to collect that also. Steffens declined to pay the $30, and the matter was held along in expectation or hope that he might ultimately consent to do so. Of this transaction Charles Steffens testifies:

“ I couldn’t tell exactly the date, but the company says I should pay that note and that would pay the other, and so I went to the bank, and they pinned another note to it, about $30 I think, and I told them it had nothing to do with that note, and I said I would pay that note but the other I wouldn’t. * * * I had money in the bank and I said, You can charge me with that note any time.’ ”

The time the bank selected was January 22, 1909, as stated.

When the proofs were closed, each side moved the court to direct a verdict in its favor, which motions were denied, and the court submitted to the jury, as an issue of fact, the one question of whether the $300 note was paid prior to the commencement of this action on November 6, 1908, saying:

If you are convinced by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the directions of Charles Steffens to Mr. Behnke, the cashier of the Citizens’ Savings Bank, in October, 1908, to charge his account with the payment of [618]*618the $800 note and interest, operated as payment of the note in question, your verdict will be for the garnishee defendants, Charles and George Steffens.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 N.W. 912, 174 Mich. 613, 1913 Mich. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clay-lumber-co-v-harts-branch-coal-co-mich-1913.