Farmers' Bank of Ky. v. Ohio River Line Steamboat Co.

56 S.W. 719, 108 Ky. 447, 1900 Ky. LEXIS 63
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 10, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 56 S.W. 719 (Farmers' Bank of Ky. v. Ohio River Line Steamboat Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Bank of Ky. v. Ohio River Line Steamboat Co., 56 S.W. 719, 108 Ky. 447, 1900 Ky. LEXIS 63 (Ky. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Opinion op the court bx

JUDGE BURNAM

Reversing.

The plaintiffs (appellees here), John H. Barret, B. G. Witt, and the Market National Bank of Boston, were creditors of the defendant, C. G. Perkins. By assignment from Perkins, Barret and Witt held certificate No. 6, for forty shares of the capital stock of the Ohio River Line Steamboat Company, as collateral security to indemnify them against loss as co-securities with Perkins upon a note due by the Henderson Buggy Company to one G. W. Campbell, for $3,333.33, dated.April 25, 1899, and due in one year after date, while the Market National Bank held a similar certificate for 100 shares of the' capital stock of the same corporation, which was pledged by Perkins as • collateral security to secure the payment of a judgment rendered against him in favor of plaintiff in the circuit court of the United States for the district [450]*450of Kentucky on the 28th day of January, 1895, for the sum of $10,000, with'interest from March 26, 1894; and on the 25th day of August, 1897, this suit was instituted, seeking to subject the interest of Perkins; represented by these certificates of stock in the steamboat company, to the payment of their respective demands. They allege in substance, that at the time of the transfer to them of these certificates of stock the steamboat company was the owner and in possession of two steamboats' (one named “Royal,” and the other “Jewell”); that subsequently thereto, on the 4th day of February, 1895, Perkins and J. B. Thompson, who were- the president and secretary of the Steamboat company, and a majority of its directors, and who owned the most of its stock and had absolute control of its affairs, executed and delivered to the defendant the Farmers’ Bank of Kentucky a mortgage on these steamboats, their furniture, outfit, and accoutrements, to secure two promissory notes (one for $23,100, and the other for $4,900), due and payable in four months after date; that the steamer Royal was destroyed by fire, and was insured for $15,000, which was paid to the Farmers’ Bank, and credited upon the $23,100 obligation; and that Perkins and Thompson had sold and delivered the steamer Jewell to the said Farmers’ Bank, to be credited upon these obligations. They further allege that the debt for which the mortgage was executed to the Farmers’ Bank was not a debt of the steamboat company, and that there was no consideration given or paid to it for the execution ■of the mortgage; that the steamboats were the only property owned by the steamboat company; that it was insolvent; and that the defendant, the Farmers’ Bank of Kentucky, holds the steamboat Jewell, and the proceeds [451]*451of the insurance paid to it, as trustee for the creditors and holders of the stock of the company. The articles of incorporation of the steamboat company are set forth in the petition, and show that the capital stock of the company was $50,000, divided up in 1,000 shares, of $50 each; that C. G-. Perkins owned 599 shares, his wife, Annie T. Perkins, 200 shares; J. B. Thompson, 200 shares, and Robert D. Vance, one share. They charge that the execution of the mortgage, and the payment of the insurance money, and delivery of the steamboat Jewell to the bank were in violation of their rights as holders of the stock under the assignment from Perkins, and that they are entitled to receive their pro rata of thes,e assets of the company, and ask that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the property of the steamboat company, and for a reference to the commissioner to ascertain their share of such assets according to the stock held by them.

The defendant, Perkins, for answer to the petition of Barret and Witt, says that he was only a surety on the note to Campbell; that the note was due on the 25th day of April, 1899, and that Campbell’s cause of action accrued on that day; that more than seven years had elapsed from the maturity of that note to the filing of this suit; and he pleads and relies upon the statute of limitation as a defense thereto.

’The Farmers’ Bank of Kentucky in its answer controverts the material allegations of the petition which are inconsistent with its right to subject the property, and avers that on the 4th day of February, 1895, the defendant, the' Ohio River Line Steamboat Gompany, for value received, executed and delivered to it its two promissory note's (one for $28,100, and the other for $4,900), due four [452]*452mbnths after date; that to secure the payment thereof the steamboat company executed and delivered to it a mortgage upon its two boats; that there was paid thereon, out of the insurance money arising from the destruction of the Royal, the sum of $13,577.75, leaving due and owing to it a balance of $14,422.25; that on the 22d day of April, 1896, it instituted suit for the collection of this balance, and the enforcement of the mortgage lien upon the Jewell, and on the 26th day of June, 1896, a judgment was rendered for the amount of such balance, and for an enforcement of its lien by a sale of the steamboat, Jewell, to satisfy such balance, which was had, and the proceeds of such sale applied' as a credit upon the judgment; that this judgment has never been' appealed from, vacated, or modified, andi is conclusive against the holders' of the stock in the steamboat corporation, and of all the matters involved in this case. ■

The pleadings being made up, on final trial the chancellor set aside the judgment of the Farmers’ Bank against the steamboat company,1 but confirmed the sale of the steamer Jewell thereunder, and decided that the bank was liable as trustee for the money arising from the insurance on the Royal and sale of the Jewell, subject to credits of $2,700 and $4,900, amounting in the aggregate to $7,600, which were found to be the debts of the Ohio River Line Steamboat Company; held that the balance of the $23,100 note was the individual debt of C. G-. Perkins, and to that extent the note' and mortgage were void as against the steamboat company; and directed that the overplus of the proceeds arising from the insurance policy and the sale of the Jewell should be paid to the receiver, for the benefit of the stockholders of the steam[453]*453boat company. Exception's were taken to this judgment both by plaintiffs and defendants, and both have appealed to this' court.

The facts out of which this controversy arose, as shown by the bill of exceptions, are as follows: Perkins testifies that he built the steamboat Royal in 1892, and was the sole owner thereof; that subsequently, in 1898, he and J. B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 S.W. 719, 108 Ky. 447, 1900 Ky. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-bank-of-ky-v-ohio-river-line-steamboat-co-kyctapp-1900.