E. M. T. Coal Company v. Rogers

287 S.W. 342, 216 Ky. 440, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 980
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 4, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 287 S.W. 342 (E. M. T. Coal Company v. Rogers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
E. M. T. Coal Company v. Rogers, 287 S.W. 342, 216 Ky. 440, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 980 (Ky. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Affirming.

On February 3, 1922, the appellees, A. D. Kirkpatrick, Carlisle Kirkpatrick, W. "W. Bridges, J. L. Rogers, J. B. Torbert and a man by the name of J. M. Thompson, who was at the inception of this suit a party to it, but because of his insolvency was later dismissed from the same, executed, acknowledged and had recorded articles of incorporation by which the ’Service Fuel Company was incorporated with an authorized capital stock of $100,-000.00, divided into 1,000 shares of the par value of $100.00 each. Of this authorized capital, the articles recited that each of the six incorporators subscribed for .166 shares, except Rogers and A. D. Kirkpatrick, who each subscribed for 168 shares. The reason for the organization of this company was to bring together for the purpose of sale the output of certain coal mines in which these six gentlemen were interested. They thought that if a central selling agency or brokerage company were thus established, better selling connections, especially in the north, could be made by reason of the control of a larger output of coal than any one of the constituent mines could supply, As the coal business was then in the doldrums, these men figured that 'by this expedient they could stimulate the sales of their respective properties to their ‘ profit. The Service Fuel Company was purely a brokerage concern. After the articles of incorporation had been filed and a certificate of incorporation issued by the Secretary of State, these men, during’ February and March, held a number of meetings at which they adopted by-laws, elected officers and directors, the number of which by the by-laws was fixed at four, with *442 three being requisite for a quorum, and laid plans for the future conduct of the 'company’s affairs. The two Kirkpatricks, Eogers and Torbert each paid into the company $500.00, for which they each received five shares of its capital stock. The money thus raised was used in opening an office and providing office furniture and equipment. On April 1st following, a strike occurred in the central competitive coal field in Illinois and Indiana, as a result of which coal became very scarce and high in price. Any- coal mine was able to sell at an excellent profit all the coal it could produce. The two Kirkpatricks, Bridges and Thompson decided that there was no need for the services of the corporation organized in the previous February, but Eogers and Torbert were rather anxious to go ahead with it. The two latter interested in the matter Jos. M. Taylor and Chas. 0. Fowler of Chicago. These last two named gentlemen were brothers-in-law, and Mr. Fowler enjoyed the reputation of being a most successful coal salesman in the Chicago territory. After some negotiations, it was agreed that Thompson, Bridges -and the two Kirkpatricks should be by the corporation released from their subscriptions of stock to the company; that Torbert and Eogers should take -over the ten shares of stock the two Kirkpatricks had paid for and that Fowler, Taylor, Torbert and Eogers should each subscribe and pay for 125 shares of the authorized capital stock of the company; Torbert and Eogers -to be released from the excess of their original subscription of 168 and 166 shares respectively. It is thoroughly established by the evidence introduced that Fowler and Taylor would not have come into the company as minority stockholders and that they insisted that they be on an equal footing with Eogers and Torbert. These four parties agreed to take the $50,000.00 of stock thus subscribed for in order that the company could go ahead and do business under that section of our statutes which requires 50 per cent of the authorized capital stock to be subscribed and paid for before a'company is authorized to do business with those other than its own stockholders. Of course after this arrangement was carried out, as it was, the company had then forever put out of its power to deliver to Bridgés, the two Kirkpatricks -and Thompson the stock they had originally subscribed for, because there was not enough stock, left after the division of *443 $50,000.00 thereof among Fowler, Taylor, Eogers and Torbert to satisfy such subscriptions. On April 24,1922, four individual contracts were drawn up between Bridges, the two Kirkpatricks and Thompson, respectively, on the one side, and the six original incorporators purporting to act as directors and stockholders on the other side, cancelling and releasing the stock subscriptions of Bridges, the two Kirkpatricks and Thompson. At that time there were no stockholders or directors of the company other than these six men, nor were there any creditors, and the company had done no business with one possible exception. It seems that on this April 24th, 1922, the appellant, E. M. 'T. Coal Company, shipped to the Service Fuel Company or its order eleven carloads of coal which it now claims were shipped on a contract made prior thereto with the Service Fuel Company represented by Torbert, and itself; represented by its agent McHargue. This shipment of coal was paid for in May following. The E. M. T. Coal Company, however, claims that the contract thus entered into between it and the Service Fuel Company was one whereby it agreed to sell to the Service Fuel Company all of its surplus output, and that certain debts due it from the Service Fuel Company, which were created after this April 24th and which are in litigation here, arose out of this contract entered into prior to April 24th. A careful reading of McHargue’s testimony, which is all that there is on the subject, except Torbert’s qualified denials, plainly demonstrates that there was no binding or valid contract as the E. M. T. Coal Company now contends. At its best, McHargue’s testimony only goes to the extent of a promise on the part of the E. M. T. Coal Company, unsupported by any consideration, to give to the Service Fuel Company the preference in the buying of any coal the E. M. T. Coal Company might want to sell to others than its regular customers. No set time for the duration of this promise is indicated. The coal company never agreed nor bound itself to deliver one pound of coal to the Service Fuel Company, nor were any prices for the coal fixed. We are convinced that the whole transaction was simply a promise, which did not bind the E. M. T. Coal Company to give to the Service Fuel Company the first call over an indefinite period to any surplus coal it might wish to sell, and that the obligations here set up arose only on the sale of each carload of coal involved. *444 Therefore, it is plain that on April 24, 1922, the Service Fuel Company had. no outstanding debts or liabilities which have not been settled in full and that all its stockholders agreed to release the four men as indicated.

The evidence also clearly establishes that on the release of these four men, the two remaining original subscribers and the two new stockholders, being then all the existing stockholders, agreed that each one of them should have but 125 shares of the capital stock of the company and the two former subscribers who had subscribed for more should not be held to such subscriptions. This agreement, however, was never reduced to writing.

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Bluebook (online)
287 S.W. 342, 216 Ky. 440, 1926 Ky. LEXIS 980, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-m-t-coal-company-v-rogers-kyctapphigh-1926.