Cumberland Lumber Co. v. Clinton Hill Lumber & Manufacturing Co.

84 N.J. Eq. 557
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 20, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 84 N.J. Eq. 557 (Cumberland Lumber Co. v. Clinton Hill Lumber & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cumberland Lumber Co. v. Clinton Hill Lumber & Manufacturing Co., 84 N.J. Eq. 557 (N.J. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Emery, V. C.

On November 9th, 1899, the receiver of the insolvent corporation applied to the court for an assessment against the original subscribers to the capital stock of the corporation, to pay in so much of their respective unpaid subscriptions as might be necessary to pay the corporate debts, with expenses of administration. The application was by petition filed in the cause against four of the five original subscribers, William S. Ketcham, Jr. (one hundred shares), George W. Ketcham (five shares), Frank D. Holloway (one hundred shares) and Edward E. Campfield (one hundred shares), and against said George W. Ketcham, as administrator of his father, William S. Ketcham, deceased, the remaining original subscriber, for one hundred shares. In the petition stock was alleged to have been actually issued to William S. Ketcham for forty shares, William S. Ketcham, Jr., forty shares, and George W. Ketcham, two shares, eighty-two shares in all. No further shares were issued to any of the stockholders, and the subscribers Holloway and Campfield were alleged to be insolvent. The respondents, William S. Ketcham and George W. Ketcham, individually, and as administrator of William S. Ketcham, Sr., filed a joint answer to the petition denying (among other things) the existence of the. corporation, or any subscription for the stock. A previous assessment against the same stockholders had been reversed on their appeal, because there did not appear on the record to have been any judicial inquiry, ascertaining the proportion of unpaid subscriptions needed to meet the [559]*559liabilities. Cumberland Lumber Co. v. Clinton Hill Lumber Co. (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1898), 57 N. J. Eq. 627, 629. On the application made in 1899, and following the practice indicated in the opinion of the court of errors and appeals, a hearing took place as to the amount of debts and expenses to be paid, and the amount of unpaid subscriptions. On this hearing evidence was given which showed, or tended to show, that the eighty-two shares of stock actually issued to the three Ketchams was issued to them respectively as paid-up stock, upon the transfer of certain personal property (a stock of lumber) by Holloway to the company, in consideration of Holloway’s indebtedness to William S. Ketcham, Sr., the intestate, and that for this transfer the Ketchams were to receive, and did receive, paid-up stock for $8,200. Holloway’s indebtedness to intestate was claimed on the bearing, by the administrator, to be $10,136.77, but William S. Ketcham, one of the respondents, called as a witness on their behalf, testified that the lumber and tangible property conveyed was at the time of its transfer by Holloway to the company estimated as worth at least $8,200, and enough to pay for all the Ketchams the forty per cent, assessment made then or about that time upon the stock.

On this hearing no claim was made by or on behalf of William S. Ketcham, Sr., that by reason of the transfer of this property to the company, he was entitled to credit for all of this amount upon his own subscription. No payment on account of any of the eighty-two shares - of stock issued was shown otherwise than by the transfer of the Holloway property to the company, and in the absence of other proof the contemporaneous issue of the stock to the three Ketchams as paid-up stock would seem to conclude all of them from asserting against the company or the receiver any other appropriation or division of the payment. The substantial defence made by all of the Ketchams jointly on this hearing was, that there was no actual incorporation, that the stock had never been actually issued or delivered, and that no property had been transferred to the company. And they abo proved that the intestate had afterwards taken the entire tangible property conveyed by the bill of sale and converted it to his own use on account of Holloway’s indebtedness to him-elf, and had [560]*560not accounted for it to the company. As a result of the hearing, a decree was made fixing the total amount of corporate debts and the administration expenses at $6,344.97, and directing that for their payment an assessment should lie made against the subscribers and holders of the stock. And Holloway and Campfield being found to be insolvent, it was further decreed that the receiver assess and collect the said sum, with interest, from said George W. Ketcham, George W. Ketcham, administrator of William; S. Keteham, deceased, and William S. Ketcham, Jr., out of their respective subscriptions which had not been fully paid up, but not to exceed sixty per cent, thereof, and to enforce payment of the assessment and call by suit, if necessary, against each of the said delinquent subscribers and stockholders. The order, however, was declared “to be made without prejudice to the rights of any person named in said petition or in this' order to any defence which they may have to any action, legal or equitable, on such alleged stock subscription.” The qualification as to the effect of the order followed the practice then in force (see form in Barkalow v. Totten (1894), 53 N. J. Eq. 574), and one special purpose in mind was to leave open to the respondents a number of defences set up by them at the hearing, upon which I considered that I had no jurisdiction to pass. For these, defences in detail I refer to my memorandum of decision filed in the case and printed. 64 N. J. Eq. 517. The respondents had insisted on the right to pass upon all of the defences on the application for assessment. None of these defences, however, touched the question of the amount unpaid on the subscriptions. From this decree, dated June 9th, 1903, a joint appeal, as appears by the record, was taken by George W. Ketcham, as administrator and individually, and by William S. Ketcham, Jr., but not until December 26th, 1906, and one of the grounds of appeal specially stated in the petition of appeal (No. 11) is that the condition at the foot of the decree did not protect their legal rights. At the March term, 1906, this appeal was, on motion of the receiver, dismissed, because not taken within the time allowed by law. The decree for assessment was apparently considered an interlocutory and not final decree. By the decree the cause was also remitted to this court for such decree as might be equitable [561]*561and just. Before the appeal was taken, and in September, 1903, the receiver brought an action at law against William S. Ketcham, Jr., to recover an assessment of $3,095 made on his stock pursuant to this decree, and recovered judgment against him in the Essex circuit court, which judgment was affirmed by the court of errors and appeals November 28th, 1905. McCarter v. Ketcham, 72 N. J. Law 247. In this suit some of the defences not considered by me were set up and overruled. After this judgment of affirmance, the joint petition of appeal on behalf of, or in the name of, all the stockholders assessed was filed, as above stated, on December 26th, 1905, and on January 16th, 1906, an order was made in the cause, on application of William S. Ketcham, Jr., staying proceedings in the judgment against him pending the appeal, upon his paying into court an amount sufficient to pay judgment, costs, &c., $3,885. Upon the dismissal of the appeal an order was made July 24th, 1906, to pay to the receiver the judgment and costs out of this money in court, and this has been paid.

A suit was also brought by the receiver against George W. Ketcham to recover the assessment made against him pursuant to the decree of June 9th, 1903, and a judgment in favor of the receiver was affirmed on writ of error.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.J. Eq. 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cumberland-lumber-co-v-clinton-hill-lumber-manufacturing-co-njch-1908.