Elyton Land Co. v. Birmingham Warehouse & Elevator Co.

92 Ala. 407
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 92 Ala. 407 (Elyton Land Co. v. Birmingham Warehouse & Elevator 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
Elyton Land Co. v. Birmingham Warehouse & Elevator Co., 92 Ala. 407 (Ala. 1890).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

The bill was filed by the Elyton Land Company as a judgment creditor of the Birmingham Warehouse and Elevator Company, a corporation, and its purpose is to secure the payment of the judgment by the enforcement of the alleged unsatisfied liability of the- individual defendants as original subscribers to the stock of the defendant corporation. It is averred that said individual defendants pretend that they have discharged and satisfied their liability as such subscribers, but it is alleged that the transaction whereby it was attempted to discharge that liability is merely colorable and is void, as against the creditors of said corporation, and that said subscribers are liable to pay in money the amount of their said subscriptions or so much thereof as is necessary to satisfy said judgment. The following is the substance of the case stated by the bill: On the 9th day of March, 1887, the Elyton Land company executed and delivered to the defendant J. A. YanHoose as trustee for the Birmingham Warehouse and Elevator Company, a corporation then in process of organization, its bond of title for two blocks of land near the city of Birmingham, to be paid for at the price of fifty-three thousand dollars. Said YanHoose paid to the Elyton Land Company five thousand dollars on the execution and delivery of the bond for title, by the terms of which it was provided that he was to execute a transfer and conveyance of his rights and interests thereunder to the Birmingham Warehouse and Elevator Company upon its organization, and that that company should make its nine notes for the balance of the purchase-money to the Elyton Land Company, said notes to be each for $5,333.33, bearing interest from August 20th, 1886, payable respectively at 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 years from that date. On the 19th day of February, 1887, said YanHoose and the other individual defendants, Johnston, Sage and McLester, filed their petition in the office of the probate judge of Jefferson county [412]*412for the organization as a corporation of the Birmingham Warehouse and Elevator Company, the capital stock of which was to be fixed at two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, to be divided into twenty-five hundred shares of one hundred dollars each. On the same day a commission was issued to said YanHoose, Johnston, Sage and McLester, constituting them a board of corporators and authorizing them to open books ol subscription to the capital stock of the proposed corporation. On the 11th day of March, 1887, said board of corporators over their signatures reported and certified to said probate judge that on the 9th day of March, 1887, they had opened books of subscription to the stock of said proposed corporation and that they had each subscribed for five hundred shares, “subscribed through James A. YanHoose, trustee for the subscribers, and payable in real property near the city of Birmingham, ... . . of the money value stated in said subscription of two hundred and fifty thousand, one hundred and thirty-three dollars and thirty-three cents, subject to the unpaid purchase-money due to the Elyton Land Company amounting to fifty thousand one hundred and thirty-three dollars and thirty-three cents, the payment of which is to be assumed by said company, said lands being fully .described in the bond for titles of the Elyton Land Company to said James A. YanHoose, trustee, dated March 9th, 1887, which said trustee is to convey to said company in payment of said two thousand shares of stock,” and YanHoose, Johnston, Sage and McLester each subscribed for one share payable in money. Said corporators further reported, that on the organization of said company, said YanHoose, Johnston, Sage and McLester were present and each represented in person five hundred and one shares in stock; that each of said persons was elected a director of said. corporation, and that the board of directors elected YanHoose as president and McLester as treasurer and secretary of the corporation. It was further reported and certified by the corporators that on the 10th day of March, 1887, after the organization of said company, all the capital stock thereof payable in money was paid to the treasurer and all the property subscribed was delivered to him. The subscriptions were made as reported and certified by the corpora-tors. It was not true at the time of the filing of the bill, or when the subscriptions were made and reported, that said land was of the money value of two hundred thousand dollars. The price named in said bond for title, fifty-three thousand dollars, was at the time of said subscriptions the full money value of said land when sold on long' credit. Said Yanlioose, Johnston, Sage and McLester well knew that said land was [413]*413not worth, nor was it of the money value of, two hundred thousand dollars or anything near that sum. After said subscriptions were made, and after said Birmingham Warehouse and Elevator Company was organized, said YanHoose endorsed to it said bond for title, and said company executed its nine promissory notes as, by the terms oí' the bond for title, it was provided it should do; and said YanHoose, Johnston, Sage and McLester now claim that the assignment of said bond was a discharge and satisfaction of said subscription of two hundred thousand dollars, which has not been otherwise paid. It is this transaction which the bill alleges is merely colorable and is void as against the creditors of said corporation. Only five thousand dollars has been paid on account of said purchase-money. The Elyton Land Company has recovered judgment against said Birmingham Warehouse & Elevator Company on two of said notes. That judgment remains unsatisfied, and said corporation has no property out of which it could be satisfied by execution.

Each of the individual defendants demurred to the bill upon the following, among other grounds : 1. That the bill on its face shows that the complainant has no right to the relief therein prayed because it shows that this defendant owes ■nothing to the Birmingham Warehouse & Elevator Company, •either in unpaid subscriptions- for stock or otherwise; 2. Because said bill alleges no facts which render this defendant liable personally in any way for the alleged debt mentioned therein as due from said Birmingham Warehouse & Elevator Company to the complainant; and, 3. Because said bill shows that this defendant subscribed for stock in said Birmingham Warehouse & Elevator Company payable in property at a valuation mentioned in said subscription, which property has been delivered and received in full payment for said stock, and said bill fails to show that said property was ■over-valued unreasonably, intentionally and fraudulently, or that the defendant has made a profit from the stock so subscribed and taken by him. A decree was rendered sustaining the demurrers as to the grounds here mentioned. The appeal is from that decree.

On the averments of the bill it is to be taken as true that the property which was received by the corporation as full payment of the stock subscription was worth only five thousand dollars, the amount which had been paid on the bond for title. It follows that the decree ef the Chancery Court involves the assertion of the validity, as against the creditors of the corporation, of the payment of a stock subscription of two hundred thousand dollars by the transfer to the corporation of property [414]*414worth only five thousand dollars. In reviewing this determination regard is to be had to certain constitutional and statutory provisions which are to be construed and applied in the light of settled principles governing the relations of stockholders to the corporation of which they are members, and to the creditors thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
92 Ala. 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elyton-land-co-v-birmingham-warehouse-elevator-co-ala-1890.