Folsom v. Detrick Fertilizer & Chemical Co.

36 A. 446, 85 Md. 52, 1897 Md. LEXIS 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 6, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 36 A. 446 (Folsom v. Detrick Fertilizer & Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Folsom v. Detrick Fertilizer & Chemical Co., 36 A. 446, 85 Md. 52, 1897 Md. LEXIS 25 (Md. 1897).

Opinion

Bryan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellees were severally creditors of the Wooldridge Fertilizer Company, a body politic and corporate. They filed a bill in equity containing allegations which impeached the validity of certain transactions between said corporation, [65]*65Robert A. Wooldridge and the partnership of B. F. Folsom & Co. In due course the Court issued an injunction prohibiting the selling or disposition of the property of the corporation, appointed receivers, and passed a decree annulling and setting aside a deed made by the corporation, and declaring certain notes of the corporation invalid as against the complainants.

The facts as they appear to us are as follows : In the year eighteen hundred and ninety-one the Wooldridge Fertilizer Company was incorporated in the State of West Virginia. The incorporators were Edmund J. Folsom, Robert A. Woolridge, Edwin G. Mclnnes, William H. Edmunds and James Thurston; Folsom and Mclnnes being residents of Boston, and the others residents of Baltimore. The article of incorporation stated that the company should keep its principal office or place of business in the city of Baltimore, and that the corporators had subscribed the sum of five hundred dollars to the capital stock, and had paid in on said subscription fifty dollars, and that they desired to increase the capital to one hundred thousand dollars. As stated in the instrument of incorporation the corporate body was formed “ for the purpose of importing, buying, manufacturing and selling fertilizers, dealing in mining and working all kinds of fertilizing materials, and doing any and everything pertaining to the fertilizer business.” It appears to have done no business until January the ninth, eighteen hundred and ninety-three, when, according to the minutes of a meeting held on that day, it purchased from Robert A. Wooldridge, for the sum of two hundred and two thousand six hundred and nine dollars and four cents, all of his assets (with an exception of no consequence), together with the good will of his business, formulas, trademarks, &c., &c. This price was payable as follows: One hundred thousand dollars in stock of the company (which was the entire amount of its stock), seventy-eight thousand dollars in notes of the company bearing interest at six per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually, and the remainder by [66]*66assuming the debts of R. A. Wooldridge and Company to the amount of twenty-four thousand six hundred and nine dollars and four cents. The Fertilizer Company was at this time without any property whatsoever. The property transferred to it in addition to the good will, formulas, trademarks, and about two thousand dollars in money consisted of bills receivable, open accounts, certain warehouses and their fixtures, merchandise, &c., See., and a number of stocks aggregately of small value. The sum mentioned was largely in excess of the value of the property. The valuation put on the good will and trademarks was sixty thousand eight hundred and twenty-eight dollars and forty-six cents. The other property, exclusive of certain property on Smith’s wharf, was estimated by Wooldridge in his testimony as worth about ninety-two thousand dollars. At the time of this transaction Wooldridge was heavily burdened with debt. In his testimony he stated that he owed one hundred and thirty-two thousand dollars; of this sum about ninety-eight thousand dollars were due to B. F. Folsom & Co. He stated that he could not have paid fifty cents on the dollar. B. F. Folsom & Co. abated thirty thousand dollars from the debt due the firm; thus reducing it to sixty-eight thousand dollars, which included eight thousand dollars of acumulated interest. On the day that Wooldridge transferred the property to the fertilizer property, he delivered to Folsom & Co. sixty-eight thousand dollars of the notes. He also on the same day iriade an agreement in writing with B. F. Folsom & Co., and certain trustees representing their interest, whereby he transferred to the said trustees six hundred shares of the stock of the Fertilizer Company for the purpose of securing the payment of the notes, declaring in the instrument of agreement that all voting rights belonging to the stock should be vested in the trustees, and that they should comply with such instructions in regard to voting as might be given from time to time by Folsom & Co.; and that they should take such action as they should deem necessary or proper for the se[67]*67curity of the notes and the good management of the company; and that so long as the company should pay the principal and interest of the notes, as the same became due, the presidency and general management of the business of the company should be in the hands of Wooldridge, or in case of his death in the nominee of his executor or administrator (unless in the opinion of the trustees, or a majority of them, the security of the notes would probably be materially impaired thereby); and that in case one or more of the trustees should die or wish to be relieved from their duties, or become incapacitated to act, Wooldridge, or his legal representatives, Folsom & Co., and the remaining trustee or trustees, or a majority of them, might fill the vacancy or vacancies. On the twenty-eighth of December, eighteen hundred and ninety-three, the directors voted that the company should sell and convey to B. F. Folsom & Co., for fifteen thousand dollars, the warehouse and property at 217 and 219 Smith’s wharf (which it had acquired from Wooldridge), and that the purchase money should be applied to the notes becoming due from July 1st, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, to January 1st, nineteen hundred and three, inclusive, and to the coupons due January 1st, nineteen hundred and four. These notes were held by Folsom & Co. On the same day, at a special meeting of the stockholders, this action of the directors was unanimously ratified and confirmed. The directors present at the meeting when the sale was ordered were Wooldridge, Rhodes and Mclnnes; the stockholders present at the special meeting of stockholders when the action of the directors was unanimously ratified were the same persons and no others. Three of the five original corporators were Wooldridge, Folsom, the appellant, and Mclnnes, his son-in-law. The directors of the company were Wooldridge, Rhodes, his counsel, Mclnnes (the appellant’s son-in-law), E. F. Folsom (his son), and Hoffman (his bookkeeper). At some time not particularly stated, Wooldridge delivered to T. Jelke, his father-in-law, ten thousand dollars of the [68]*68notes which he had received from the Fertilizer Company. The Fertilizer Company paid the debt of twenty-four thousand dollars and upwards, and several of the notes mentioned in the agreement for the purchase of the assets from Wooldridge; but was insolvent when the bill was filed in this case.

It is very apparent that this corporation was chartered in pursuance of a scheme to relieve Wooldridge of an indebtedness which he was unable to pay, and to procure the payment to Folsom and Company of a debt which they were unable to collect from the person who owed it. All the proceedings from the inception of its existence were designed to accomplish this result. In August, eighteen hundred and ninety-one, it came into existence as a legal body with the capacities conferred on it by its charter. But it had no property whatever, and therefore no means of exercising its franchises. On the ninth day of January, eighteen hundred and ninety-three, the directors heretofore mentioned were elected, and on the same day the contract was made with Wooldridge for the purchase of his assets.

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Bluebook (online)
36 A. 446, 85 Md. 52, 1897 Md. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/folsom-v-detrick-fertilizer-chemical-co-md-1897.