Drennen v. Merchantile Trust & Deposit Co.

115 Ala. 592
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 115 Ala. 592 (Drennen v. Merchantile Trust & Deposit Co.) 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
Drennen v. Merchantile Trust & Deposit Co., 115 Ala. 592 (Ala. 1896).

Opinions

McCLELLAN, J.

The Mary Lee Coal and Railway Company having made default in the payment of the interest on its bonded indebtedness, the trustee in the mortgages executed by said company to secure its said indebtedness, seasonably after such default made, filed a bill in the city court of Birmingham praying the appointment of a receiver “with full power and authority to demand, sue for, collect, receive and take into his possession the goods, chattels, rights, credits, moneys and effects, lands, tenements, books, papers and property belonging to the said Mary Lee Coal and Railway Company, and that said receiver may receive from the said court, in addition to the ordinary powers possessed by such receivers, full power and authority to manage, run and operate said property, and to carry out any and all contracts that said company may have made (and to renew the same), connected with the conduct of their business, and especially the contract with T. G. Bush, Receiver, if essential thereto to pay to the said Bush, Receiver, any indebtedness which may now be due him, and to preserve and protect the corporate franchises, privileges and property, and to preserve the corporate existence of the said company, and to preserve all corporate property from being sacrificed under any proceeding which can or may be taken and would be likely to prejudice or sacrifice the same and that an injunction may issue against the said defendant company and all persons claiming to act by, through or under it, and all other persons, to restrain them from interfering with the said receiver’s taking possession of and managing the said property.” The further prayer of the bill is for the ascertainment of the mortgage indebtedness, principal and interest, a decree requiring the defendant to pay [603]*603the same by a short day to be named by the court, and, in default of such payment, for a decree that said company and all other persons claiming under it be absolutely barred and foreclosed of and from all right of equity of redemption in and to said premises, and for a decree directing the sale of the whole mortgaged premises for the payment of said bonded indebtedness and the interest thereon, &c., &c.

The premises embraced in the mortgages, and for which a receiver and sale are thus prayed, consisted of a coal mine and plant complete, coking ovens and a railway in Jefferson county. The railway was six or seven miles in length, built primarily, it may be admitted, for the development and to be used in the working of defendant’s said mine, but defendant’s charter, which authorized the construction and operation of this railway, required that defendant should transport persons and the property of others upon it, so that as to this road the defendant corporation was a common carrier.

A receiver was appointed in accordance with the prayer of the bill, and took possession of all the property and effects of the respondent corporation. The bill was filed and the appointment made on November 28th, 1893.

On February 20th, 1894, Drennen & Company filed a petition in the cause, which, as finally amended, presents the following averments: That the defendant, The Mary Lee Ooal and Railway Company, is indebted to petitioners in the sum of $14,697.52, including interest to time of filing the petition, and that all this indebtedness had accrued during the months of August, September, October and November, 1893 ; that, as shown by the bill, said defendant owned and operated a coal mine, coke ovens and a railway in Jefferson county at the time of the appointment of the receiver under said bill, and that the defendant had carried on these operations for six months prior to such appointment, and that the company then owed a large amount of back wages to its employes and operatives, a great part of which was due to them for work and labor done in said mine and in and about said coke ovens and railway ; that the amount alleged to be due petitioners from said company is a part of such back wages due by defendant to its said employes and operatives for work and labor done and performed for the defendant during the [604]*604months of July, August, September, October and November, 1893, and the books and accounts of petitioners, showing the said amount alleged to be due them, have been compared and checked over with the books and accounts of the defendant, which are in the possession of the receivers in the cause, and both sets of books and accounts agree as to said amount due the petitioners ; that the work done by said employes and operatives during said months consisted in part in digging and mining and shipping coal, in keeping said mine in operation and in preparing said coal for shipment, and that about $8,947.52 of the amount due petitioners was for this work, in other part, to the extent of about $750 in value, in operating and repairing defendant’s said railroad, and for the rest, to the extent of about $5,000, in the operating and repairing said coke ovens and in prepai'ing coke for shipment to market, and that all said work was necessary to enable the defendant to carry on its business, and was done for the benefit of the complainant in the cause and to preserve the property and franchises of the defendant embraced in the deeds of trust to the complainant ; that petitioners have been informed and believe and so state, that there was due to the defendant at and before the time of the appointment of the receiver the sum of about $40,000, for coal and coke sold by the defendant, which had been taken from said mine and manufactured in said ovens, that $40,000 represented gross earning of the defendant into which the labor of said employes and operatives entered, and that they performed work and labor in mining said coal and in manufacturing said coke ; that defendant was and had been for a year or more prior to the appointment of the receiver a corporation duly organized under the general laws of Alabama, and as such had power to condemn land for railroad purposes and to operate its said railroad as a common carrier, and did so operate i.t; and that petitioners for value purchased from said employes and operatives their claims against the defendant, aggregating said sum of $14,697.52, and said claims were duly transferred and assigned to them before the appointment of said receiver. The following is the prayer of this petition: * * * ‘ ‘That your Honors will take jurisdiction of this petition, and that a day be fixed or set for the hearing of the same, and that such [605]*605notice as is required by law and the rules of your Honors’ court be given or served upon the parties to this cause ; and that upon the hearing of this their petition, your Honors will render a decree declaring, or establishing, the said claim of the petitioners a prior and preferred claim to and over said mortgages or deeds of trust of complainant; and that the said receivers be required to pay said claim of petitioners out of the first moneys that come into their hands over and above what shall be necessary to pay the running and operating expenses of said property. Petitioners ask and pray for all other and such other orders and decrees as may be necessary in the premises.” The petition is verified, one of the petitioners making oath that its allegations and statements made of his own knowledge, he knows to be true, and those made upon information and belief, he believes to be true.

To this petition the complainant in the cause interposed a demurrer assigning numerous grounds of objection to its sufficiency. The assignments chiefly relied on may be summarized as follows : (1.) That the petition fails to show that the Mary Lee Coal and Railway Co. is a railroad corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
115 Ala. 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drennen-v-merchantile-trust-deposit-co-ala-1896.