Cooper v. Utah Light & Railway Co.

102 P. 202, 35 Utah 570, 1909 Utah LEXIS 48
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1909
DocketNo. 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 102 P. 202 (Cooper v. Utah Light & Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooper v. Utah Light & Railway Co., 102 P. 202, 35 Utah 570, 1909 Utah LEXIS 48 (Utah 1909).

Opinion

STRAUP, C. J.

This is an equitable action, brought by plaintiff to subject certain property conveyed and transferred by the Utah Light & Power Company, a corporation, to the Utah Light & Railway Company, a corporation, to the satisfaction of a [577]*577judgment obtained by tbe plaintiff against tbe first-named company. Tbe case was submitted to tbe court below principally upon an agreed statement pf facts. Tbe statement, and findings of tbe'Court, so far as material, show: Both corporations are domestic corporations. Tbe Utah Light & Power Company was organized in 1899, and from that time until January 2, '1904, when tbe conveyance and transfer was bad, was engaged in tbe business of producing and furnishing, for industrial, commercial, and domestic purposes, light and power to tbe inhabitants of Salt Lake City, and to various municipal and private corporations in Salt Lake and other counties of tbe state. That for tbe purpose of carrying on such business it held, used, enjoyed, and was seised and possessed of, certain franchises or licenses granted by Salt Lake City, by virtue of which it bad tbe right and privilege to occupy and use tbe streets and public places of Salt Lake City to there erect poles and maintain wires for tbe purpose of conducting electricity and electric currents. These franchises are particularly described in tbe complaint and findings. That in tbe use and enjoyment of these franchises tbe TJtah Light & Power Company, from 1899 until January 2, 1904, “held, owned, used, possessed, and enjoyed certain real and personal property necessary and convenient to the business by it carried on under and in the operation of said franchises.” Tbe. personal property described consisted of horses, wagons, tools, office furniture, safes, boobs, electrical instruments, electric light meters, “and other electrical devices of great value.” The real property described consisted of several parcels of land situated in Salt Lake City, and “electric generating or power stations” maintained and operated on such lands, and by means of which stations “the Utah Light & Power Company generated the currents of electricity so by it carried or conducted through and upon its lines of wire maintained by it under the privilege of and franchises granted by the city of Salt Lake,” and “power houses with generators, engines, boilers, and other machinery,” also maintained and operated on such lands, and that all such property was “used as aforesaid by the said Utah Light & Power Com[578]*578pany in connection with, and for the purposes of, the enjoyment of the franchises hereinbefore described.” That on January 2, 1903, “while the Utah Light & Power Company so held, used, enjoyed, and operated the franchises, and the real and personal property” heretofore referred to, “and while it was engaged in the operation of its machinery and generators in furnishing and supplying currents of electricity to be carried upon and over the streets of Salt Lake City as aforesaid, it so used, maintained, and operated the same, and particularly the machinery, currents, and circuits of wire maintained at” one of its stations, “as to cause to the plaintiff serious bodily injury, whereby the Utah Light & Power Company became and was liable to the plaintiff in a large sum of money.” That on the 13th day of October, 1905, the plaintiff commenced an action in the district court of the Third judicial district against the Utah Light & Power Company “to enforce the liability of said defendant to plaintiff for the injuries so suffered and sustained by him,” and that, on its appearance in the action, such proceedings were had as resulted in plaintiff obtaining a judgment against it on the 24th day of January, 1907, in the sum of ten thousand, thirty-one dollars and sixty cents. That on or about the 2d day of January, 1904, the Utah Light & Railway Company was organized “for the purpose of acquiring all the property, real, personal', and mixed, of the Utah Light & Power Oom-,-pany, and particularly all the franchises, rights, and privileges theretofore held and enjoyed by said UtahLight&Power Company, including the property, real and personal, and the franchises hereinbefore set forth,” and on that day the Utah, Light & Power Company conveyed and transferred to the Utah Light & Railway Company “all of said real and personal property theretofore by said grantor [the Utah Light & Power Company] used, held, and enjoyed, and including the real and personal property and franchises hereinbefore particularly mentioned, set forth, and described.” That such conveyance and transfer “was made without any consideration of any sort whatsoever, save and except the transfer and allotment by the said Utah Light & Railway Company to the said [579]*579Utah Light & Power Company of three million, sixty-two thousand and five hundred shares of the capital stock of the Utah Light & Railway Company,” and that, as stated in the agreed statement of facts, “the said consideration expressed in the said deed [of conveyance] was in accordance with an agreement theretofore entered into between the Utah Light & Power Company and the TJtah Light & Railway Company, and ratified by the vote of the stockholders of the TJtah Light & Power Company, whereby it was provided that the said TJtah Light & Power Company should be sold and transferred to the Utah Light & Railway Company, in consideration of the said' number of shares [3,062,500] of the "Utah Light & Railway Company. That the said number of shares were the same as the entire subscribed and outstanding number of shares of the Utah Light & Power Company; the said agreement being that the said shares so received from the Utah Light & Railway Company should be distributed to the shareholders in the Utah Light & Power Company, share for share; and that the stock so delivered by the Utah Light & Railway Company was so distributed to the stockholders of the Utah Light & Power Company in accordance with said agreement.” That the Utah Light & Railway Company immediately entered into the possession, use, and enjoyment, and has ever since held the possession, use, and enjoyment, and has and does claim title to all of the real and personal property and franchises, rights, and privileges, theretofore enjoyed by the Utah Light & Power Company, including all the real and personal property and franchises mentioned and described in the complaint and in the findings. That the Utah Light & Power Company is not the owner of any property, real, personal, or mixed, or of any franchises, upon which an execution may be levied, “or out of which may be made on execution the sum of money so due and owing from the Utah Light & Power Company to the plaintiff,” and that all the shares of stock received as and for the consideration for the conveyance and transfer were distributed to the various stockholders of the .Utah Light & Power Company, and thus placed beyond the levy of process under plaintiff’s [580]*580judgment. That an execution was issued on sucb j'udgment, and was returned wholly unsatisfied.

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Bluebook (online)
102 P. 202, 35 Utah 570, 1909 Utah LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-utah-light-railway-co-utah-1909.