Cordova Coal Co. v. Long

91 Ala. 538
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 91 Ala. 538 (Cordova Coal Co. v. Long) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cordova Coal Co. v. Long, 91 Ala. 538 (Ala. 1890).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, J.

We do not doubt that B. M. Long, appellee here, and complainant below, has all the rights against the consolidated Cordova Coal Company, with respect to the lands in controversy, that he originally could have asserted against the New Orleans & Alabama Coal & Mining Company. The first Cordova Coal Company appears to have been organized by Long at the instance of the New Orleans company, entirely for the purposes of consolidation between the two under the name of the newly organized company, and with a view to the acquisition of its larger powers. In substance, the transaction, so far as Long’s contractual relations were concerned, amounted to a change of the name of the corporation to which he had undertaken to convey the lands; and there is, we do not question, such privity between him and the consolidated corporation as entitles him to all the rights and remedies he had against the New Orleans company in the premises.

Under the contract of sale, as modified, the Cordova Coal Company, in consideration oí' the conveyance to it by Long of certain lands, containing 10,800 acres, was to “ pay and deliver to him $50,000 in cash $108,000 in the stock of the company, and $58,000 in the bonds of the company.” The money was paid before the consolidation, and the stock was delivered after that time; but the bonds contracted for had not been delivered when the bill was filed. It is now sought to have declared and enforced a vendor’s lien on the land for $58,000 in money, on the theory, that the bonds were not delivered when they should have been under the contract; that the value of such bonds as were in contemplation of the parties was $58,000, and that the failure to deliver them as contracted invests the complainant with a right to claim their value in money as a part of the purchase price of the land, and enforce the claim as a vendor’s lein.

The doctrine generally prevailing outside of Alabama, it may be admitted, is, that when land is conveyed in consideration of the transfer and delivery to the vendor of chattels, choses in action, and the like, no lien exists in favor of the vendor to enforce such delivery, or coerce the payment of a money equivalent, 'the claim in such cases being considered unliquidated and uncertain. — 2 Jones on Liens, § 1071. But the contrary view is taken in this State, and has prevailed too long and been too uniformly adhered lo tobe now disturbed, even if it be unsound in principle, of which we are by no means con[543]*543vinced. The rule here is, that when the consideration is the delivery of chattels, which are capable of reduction to a money value, a lien exists for the collection of such value, upon a failure to deliver them in accordance with the terms of the contract.—Neal v. Clay, 48 Ala. 252; Smith v. Vaughan, 78 Ala. 201.

The undertaking to deliver bonds of the company, in the case at bar, is within the principle of these cases. As we construe the contract, it involves no promise to pay $58,000 in money, to be secured by the delivery of the bonds; nor to pay so much money, with a stipulation that it may be discharged by a delivery of the bonds of the company, as in Plowman v. Riddle, 14 Ala. 169, where the sum agreed on was payable in leather. But here, the primary, and indeed only undertaking, with respect to this part of the consideration, was to deliver bonds of an incorporation, of the face value of $58,000; not-in payment of any sum of money ageed to be paid, for there was no such agreement, nor to secure any such payment of money, but in direct consideration of the conveyance. And within the rule stated, the bonds are chattels, ehoses in action, capable of reduction to a money value; and under that rule, thz prima facie presumption is, that a lien was retained on the land to enforce the payment of that money value, upon a failure to deliver these chattels, according to the terms of the contract.

The question of chief importance in this case is, whether there has been such a failure on the part of the corporation to deliver the stipulated bonds as entitles the complainant to proceed against the land for their value; and this involves the further inquiries, (1) when were the bonds to be delivered, and (2) what character of bonds was to be delivered. It is very clear, we think, that immedate delivery was not contemplated, and could not in the nature of things have been effected. The original contract for the conveyance of the lands was entered into on February 5th, or 6th, 1888. Its concluding stipulation is in the following language: “It is distinctly understood and agreed, that no payment of any money, or delivery of any stock or bonds, shall be due to, or demanded by said Long, until the lands are examined and accepted by the company, and the titles to the same are examined and approved by its authorized attorney.” This contract was modified on July 24th, 1888, but expressly only to the extent of reducing the acreage to be conveyed from 12,000 to 10,800 acres, with a corresponding reduction in the price. The whole theory of complainant’s case must find support in, and is, in fact, expressly made to depend upon, this contract as thus modified, [544]*544being the only subsisting agreement between him and the consolidated Cordova Coal Company. In it, and in it alone, are found the stipulations under which the lands were to be, and were on September 26th, and October 17th, 1888, subsequent to the consolidation of the two original companies, conveyed to the new Cordova Coal Company. The stipulation we have quoted must, therefore, be still a part of the contract between the parties; and under it there could be no breach of its terms, as to delivery of the bonds, until after the lands had been examined and accepted, and the title to the same examined and approved by the company’s attorney. There is no averment in the bill that this has ever been done.

But, aside from this, it is alleged, that the $50,000 in cash was paid before the consolidation of the two original companies. This fact can not be of moment in determining that the lands had been examined, &c.; for non constat, but that the condition precedent to any payment or delivery was to this extent waived by the purchaser. But it is of importance as showing that it was not the intention of the parties, or within their contemplation, that the stock and bonds should be delivered presently, or contemporaneously with the payment of the money; for, to the contrary, the agreement of consolidation, made subsequent to the payment of the $50,000 in money, provides for the delivery thereafter of the stock and bonds. Moreover, neither the stock nor the bonds could be delivered for some time after the consolidation of September 21st, 1888. Time was necessary to prepare and issue and deliver the former; and with respect to the latter, their issuance, their denominations, the rate of interest they were to bear, the amount to be issued, &c., had to be considered, determined upon, and authorized by the corporation, and a mortgage or deed of trust to secure their payment had to be prepared and executed, before there could be any delivery to the complainant. All these considerations exclude the idea that they were to be presently delivered, and lead to and enforce the conclusion, that, at most, a delivery within a reasonable time would satisfy and fill the terms of the contract. Parties may in good faith differ as to what is a reasonable time within which an act is to be done. The party upon whom it rests to perform the act, may be ready and willing to do so, and only delay performance because he believes he has further time.

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ala. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cordova-coal-co-v-long-ala-1890.