Fayette Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Brown Bros.

135 S.E. 235, 102 W. Va. 181, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 101
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 1926
Docket5528
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 135 S.E. 235 (Fayette Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Brown Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fayette Wholesale Grocery Co. v. Brown Bros., 135 S.E. 235, 102 W. Va. 181, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 101 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Hatcher, Judge:

On January 12, 1920, P. L. Abbot, B. G. Brown, and Denver Brown, who were equal partners in a small lumber operation, organized a corporation, by name of Brown Brothers and Abbot Lumber Company. The stockholders were the partners and the respective wives of the Browns. The partners then traded the assets of the partnership, subject to its liabilities, to the corporation for its stock of the par value of $10,000.00. Sometime thereafter, the saw mill burned, the corporation became insolvent, and some of the creditors seek in this suit to hold the partners personally liable for the indebtedness of the corporation.

The circuit court of Payette County found that the debts of the partnership on January 12, 1920, amounted to $10,960.16, of which amount $8,122.13 was subsequently paid by the corporation; that the sale of the partnership assets to the corporation and the issuance of paid up stock of the par *183 value of $10,000.00 therefor, was a fraud on subsequent creditors of the corporation, and held the partners personally liable to the creditors, to the amount of the said sum of $8,122.13. From this decree the Browns have appealed.

Neither the court nor its commissioner who stated the account, attempted to fix the entire value of the assets of the partnership. These assets consisted of a saw mill and equipment, several horses and wagons, certain timber and logs referred to as the “Kilburn or Sturgeon” timber, cash in banks, lumber on yard, and the timber on the Huddleston 196-acre tract. The commissioner listed the first four items at cost, which amounted to $6258.11 (erroneously stated by the commissioner to be $8136.41) but for some reason not apparent, placed no value on the last two items. There was no dispute as to the quantity or value of the lumber on the yard. According to the testimony of F. L. Abbot, there was 37,000 feet of this lumber, and “They took it as it came from the mill at $48.00 a thousand.” The worth of the lumber on the yard was accordingly $1776.00.

Opinions as to the value of the Huddleston timber ranged from $1200.00 to $10,000.00. F. L. Abbot had purchased this timber at public sale in August, 1919, at the price of $3025.00. Sale of the timber was attempted by an agent of Abbott at $4000.00, but no purchaser was found. As property rarely brings its true value at a public sale, the Huddleston timber was likely worth more than Mr. Abbot paid for it, but less than $4000.00. If this timber was worth only $3000.00 on January 12, 1920, it would follow that the assets of the partnership amounted to at least $11,034.11. The assets were therefore of greater value than the liabilities, and there was no fraud perpetrated on the corporation in requiring it to take the one and assume the other. In that transaction the sellers were the purchasers. They sold as a partnership and bought as a corporation. No one, except them, was interested in the price they paid for their own property. If they valued at $20,960.16 property which had a market value of only $11,034.11, who was hurt by their over-estimation? No witness testified that he extended credit to the corporation because of this valuation. There was no proof that the transfer *184 was made to hinder, delay or defraud the creditors of the partnership. None of those listed as creditors of the partnership on January 12,1920, are complainants in this suit, except P. L. Abbot, and he does not plead as such creditor.

The lower court seemingly based its finding of fraud on the fact that the partners formed the partnership to avoid personal liability, and that the incorporators failed to comply with the “Blue Sky Law”. No complainant now says that he was in any way deceived as to the liability of the partners. None claims that he was-led to believe that the individual liability of the partners continued after the corporation was organized. Where no deceit was attempted or accomplished it was certainly not fraudulent for the partners to seek the immunity which the law provides.

As explained in Conway v. Bailey, 91 W. Va. 324, it is no violation of the Blue Sky Law to transfer property to a corporation in exchange for stock of the corporation, “but it is the sale of stocks and securities therein afterwards, without furnishing the information required by the statute which is prohibited”. No sale of the corporation stock was made. Consequently the Blue Sky Law has no application here.

This case falls within the provisions of Sec. 24, Ch. 53, Code, which is in part as follows:

“Nothing.herein contained shall be so construed as to prevent any mining or manufacturing corporation subject to the provisions of this chapter, from issuing stocks or bonds, and negotiating the sale of same, in payment of real and personal estate for the use of such corporation, and for its other corporate purposes and business, at such price and upon such terms and conditions as may be agreed upon by the owners and thé directors or stockholders of such corporation. And any subscriber to the capital stock of any such mining or manufacturing corporation may pay for the same by the transfer and conveyance to such corporation of real or personal property, or both, proper or necessary for the uses and purposes of the corporation upon such terms as may be mutually agreed upon. All stock so issued shall be fully paid and not liable to any further call or assessment, and in the *185 absence of actual fraud in the transaction, the valuation of the property so purchased shall be conclusive; but it shall be the duty of the corporation to have its minutes or other permanent records to show with reasonable detail the items of the property in payment for which stock or bonds were so issued. ’ ’

The attorney of the corporation unthoughtedly destroyed the minutes of the corporation after the saw mill burned. His testimony on the organization of the corporation is: “I was employed by the two Browns and Mr. Abbot to incorporate the company for them and after I secured the charter I called them together for the first meeting of the stockholders and directors, the three men and myself met in my office soon after receiving the charter and the first meeting of the stockholders was held at that time and the directors were elected, composed of these three men and Mrs. Bert Brown and Mrs. Denver Brown, and there was a resolution adopted accepting a proposition of Brown Brothers, and Abbot, a partnership, to buy from the partnership the assets. My recollection is they were all set out, all that standing timber on the 196 acre tract, a saw mill and its equipment and some lumber on the yard and cash in bank and the resolution provided that the corporation agreed to buy it all for $10,000.00 of its capital stock. Later the directors had their meeting at the same time and Bert Brown was elected President, Denver Brown, Secretary Treasurer, and Mr. Abbot elected General Manager. * * * The by-laws were prepared at the stockholders meeting, and were adopted, and I might say the by-laws were in printed form in this book and all we' had to do was to fill out the blank lines according to the facts. I was appointed power of attorney at the meeting and it was written up and the power of attorney sent here for recordation and also to the Secretary of State’s office.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.E. 235, 102 W. Va. 181, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fayette-wholesale-grocery-co-v-brown-bros-wva-1926.