Foster-Thornburg Hardware Co. v. Ardmore Coal Co.

150 S.E. 527, 108 W. Va. 160, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 196
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1929
Docket6486
StatusPublished

This text of 150 S.E. 527 (Foster-Thornburg Hardware Co. v. Ardmore Coal Co.) 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
Foster-Thornburg Hardware Co. v. Ardmore Coal Co., 150 S.E. 527, 108 W. Va. 160, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 196 (W. Va. 1929).

Opinion

Lite, Judge:

On or about July 10, 1926, Ardmore Coal Company, a coal mining corporation, operating mines in Boone county, West *161 Virginia, transmitted, by mail, to its creditors the following proposal, to-wit: ‘ ‘ A suit is now pending in the Circuit Court of Boone county, West Virginia, having for its purpose the appointment of a receiver for the Ardmore Coal Company, a sale of all its assets and payment of the proceeds pro rata to the creditors. That proceeding, while the only thing that could be done at the time of its institution to save the assets from sales under levies of executions and other levies, will require time and considerable expense, and it seems doubtful if the creditors in the end would be paid in full. •

Under the circumstances, it has been tentative agreed that:

First. One of the properties owned by the Ardmore Coal Company, consisting of leases on about 40 acres of coal, more than half of which has been worked out, a side tract, cheap tipple and some mine tract, mine cars and equipment inside the mine, be. sold to Dr. W. F. Harless, or to a company to be organized by him, in consideration of the assumption of a judgment against the Ardmore Coal Company for $1625.00 with interest from May 3, 1926, and $12.00 costs in favor of Henry Keadle, E. C. Knabb and I. G. Stollings, and which judgment was taken for unpaid royalties on about 30 of said 40 acres of coal. The minimum royalty on said 30 acres of coal is $1500.00 a year, and on the remaining ten acres there is no minimum royalty. Our estimate is that there is not more than 35,000 to 40,000 tons of recoverable coal in the whole 40 acres and not more than two railroad cars a day can be mined therefrom. The company has no buildings of any value on said property and very little machinery and equipment. The lease is regarded as a liability and not an asset, and it is believed the disposition of that property as above outlined is to the advantage of the Ardmore Coal Company and its creditors especially as said judgment for royalty is a first lien on that property.

Second. Organize a corporation to take over all of the remaining properties of the Ardmore Coal Company consisting of leases on approximately 2600 acres of adjacent tracts of coal lands upon which the principal mining plant and properties of the company are, in consideration of the assumption by the new company and its agreement to pay all the other *162 creditors of the Ardmore Coal Company and keep and perform the terms of said leases. Fifty per cent of the stock of the new company is to be given to the Lewis-Hale Coal Company of Huntington, West Virginia, a coal buying and selling organization, in consideration of its managing the mines, selling the coal and keeping the books of the new company, until all creditors are paid in full, without cost to the new company. Under this arrangement there will be no salaries paid by the new company to managing officers and directors, no charge for selling the coal and no charge for keeping the books, until all creditors are paid.

Third. The creditors of the Ardmore Coal Company will accept the notes of the new company for the full amount of their claims and in discharge of the Ardmore Coal Company which will be dissolved. These notes will be renewed from time to time but at each renewal will be curtailed by their pro rata amount of the accumulated profits of the new company.

The total indebtedness of the Ardmore Coal Company, exclusive of the judgment to be assumed by Dr. Harless, is, as shown by the books of the company, less than $35,000.00, and it is our opinion the new company under the new management and without charge for salaries, selling the coal and keeping the books, can work out in a reasonable time and pay all creditors in full with interest.

The consent and agreement of the creditors to this arrangement is necessary before it can.be worked out, and if the creditors, or any of them, cannot agree thereto the receivership proceeding will have to go on.

This proposition is being sent to all creditors having claims over $200.00. It will require about $1,600.00 to pay off and discharge all claims under $200.00 and it is proposed to pay all such claims in full at once.

If the creditors will manifest their consent and agreement to the above plan by signing the approval and acceptance at the bottom hereof, the plan will be at once carried into effect. It is important that the creditor act promptly.”

The creditors having accepted the proposal, the appellants, J. H. Lewis and C. C. Hale, trading as Lewis-Hale Coal Com *163 pany, wbo bad already assumed tbe management of tbe Ard-more Coal Company, under a similar arrangement with A. J. Dalton, president and ebief stockholder thereof, continued to produce and sell coal from its mines, pursuant to said agreement, until October 30, 1926. On October 4, 1926, Yale Coal Company was organized and, by written assignment, took over tbe asets of tbe Ardmore Coal Company. Tbe business, however, continued in tbe name of tbe Ardmore Coal Company. On October 19, 1926, Lewis agreed to transfer tbe management to Dalton. This, according to tbe testimony of Lewis, was due to tbe objection of Dalton to tbe distribution among tbe creditors of Ardmore Coal Company of tbe profits which bad then accumulated under tbe management of appellants, and other conduct of Dalton evincing a desire to control tbe affairs of tbe corporation. In accordance with this agreement, appellants wrote Dalton, as president of Ardmore Coal Company, on October 27, 1926, as follows: "On or about May 20, 1926, you came to our office and advised us that you were desirous of making us a proposition to take over tbe management and sale of tbe coal of tbe property of tbe Ardmore Coal Company located at Hadalton, Boone county, West Virginia, on tbe Coal Diver branch of tbe Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Company. A' tentative arrangement was made whereby we advanced tbe Ardmore Coal Company $1100.00 to pay tbe back power bill so that tbe mines might be started up, and on May 25 you brought tbe books of the company from your office to our office and told us to begin tbe management of tbe property, keeping tbe books and sale of tbe coal produced at tbe mines, for which service you would enter into an agreement with us on tbe basis outlined in a letter of agreement sent out to all of tbe creditors of tbe Ardmore Coal Company by E. L. Hogsett, Attorney for tbe Ardmore Coal Company.

On October 19, 1926, you came to our office and advised us that you were unwilling to enter into such an agreement and we advised you that we would not be agreeable to going further with tbe proposition except as originally set out in Mr. Hogsett’s letter to tbe creditors of the Ardmore Coal Company, and that we would terminate our management of *164 the mines and sale of the coal on Saturday, October 30, 1926, on the following terms and conditions.

First: That all orders which we now have on file for coal from the mines of the Ardmore Coal Company be completed as per shipping directions on the orders.

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Bluebook (online)
150 S.E. 527, 108 W. Va. 160, 1929 W. Va. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-thornburg-hardware-co-v-ardmore-coal-co-wva-1929.