Frick Co. v. Norfolk & O. V. R.

86 F. 725, 32 C.C.A. 31, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2332
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedMarch 16, 1898
DocketNos. 254 and 255
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 86 F. 725 (Frick Co. v. Norfolk & O. V. R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frick Co. v. Norfolk & O. V. R., 86 F. 725, 32 C.C.A. 31, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2332 (4th Cir. 1898).

Opinion

PAUL, District Judge.

These causes are here on appeals by the Frick Company, the receivers of the Pottsville Iron & Steel Company, White & Dodson, and Prank R. May, appellants in No. 254, against Norfolk & Ocean View Railroad Company and others, appellees, and by the Norfolk Bank for Savings & Trusts, trustee, appellant in No. 255, against T. W. Godwin & Co. and G. S. W. Brubaker, appellees, from a decree of the circuit court for the Eastern district of Virginia rendered in the cause of the Walker Manufacturing Company against the Norfolk & Ocean View Railroad Company and others. As they are here on appeals from the same decree, they will be considered together.

The suit in the circuit court was brought.by the Walker Manufacturing Company to enforce a lien claimed by it upon the franchises, gross earnings, and all the real and personal property of the Nor[727]*727folk & Ocean View Railroad Company. A receiver was appointed in said suit to take charge of the property of the said railroad company, and tlie cause was referred to a master to take an account of the debts and liabilities of the said railroad company, the liens on its property, and their priorities. The appellant in No. 254 and the appellees in No. 255 severally filed their petitions of intervention in said cause, praying to be made parties therein, and claiming that they were supply lien creditors of said railroad company under the provisions of Code Ya. 1887, §§ 2485, 248G.

Section 2485, Code Ya. 1887, is as follows:

“Sec. 2485. .AH conductors, brakesmen, engine-drivers, firemen, captains, stewards, pilots, clerks, depot or office agents, store-keepers, mechanics, or la,borers, and all persons furnishing railroad iron, engines, cars, fuel, and all other supplies necessary to the operation of any railway, canal or other transportation company * * * shall have a prior lien on the franchises, gross earnings, and all the real and personal property of said company, which is used in operating the same, to the extent of the moneys due them by said company for such wages or supplies. * * *”

The mode of perfecting such lien is prescribed by section 2480, Code Va. 1887, as amended by the act of assembly of February 15, 1892, which is as follows:

“Sec. 248(i. No person shall be entitled to the lien given by tlie preceding section unless he shall, within ninety days after such supplies are furnished or services rendered, file in the clerk’s office of the court of tlie county or corporation in which is located the chief office in this state of tlie company against which the claim is * * * a memorandum of the amount and consideration of his claim verified by affidavit, which memorandum the said clerk shall forthwith record in the deed-book and index the same in the name of tlie said claimant, and also in the name of the company against which the claim is. Any such claim may be enforced in a court of equity.” Laws 1801-92, p. 3(>2.

Tlie grounds of exception to the master’s report, and tlie assignment of error in each of the cases brought up by the appellants, present questions sufficiently different from those raised by the others to require a separate examination and discussion of the merits of: each claim upon which appeal was taken from the decree of the circuit court. There is, however, one general ground of exception to the findings of the master which the circuit court overruled, applicable alike to nearly all of these claims. The statute (section 248(5, Code Va. 1887, as amended) provides that “no person shall be entitled to the lien given by the preceding section unless he shall, within ninety days after such supplies are furnished or service rendered, file in the clerk’s office of the court of the county or corporation in which is located the chief office in this state of the company against which the said claim is * " a memorandum of the amount and consideration of his said claim verified by affidavit. * * *” The claims of the appellants in Vo. 254 were filed in the clerk’s office of the corporation court of the ciiy of 'Norfolk. The claims of the appellees in No. 255 were filed in both the clerk’s office of the corporation court of the city of Norfolk and in the clerk’s office of the county court of Norfolk county. The master reported that the claims of the appellants in No. 254 were not filed in the proper office; that the chief office of the Norfolk & Ocean View Railroad Company was not in the city of [728]*728Norfolk, but at Ocean View, in tbe county of Norfolk; and that tbe claims, in order to become liens under tbe statute, should have been filed in tbe clerk’s office of tbe county court of Norfolk county.

Tbe original charter of tbe Norfolk & Ocean View Railroad Company, which incorporated tbe said company as tbe Norfolk & Ocean View Railroad & Hotel Company, fixed no place at which tbe company should have its chief office in this state. Nor did tbe amended charter, which changed the name of the company to the Norfolk & Ocean View Railroad Company, designate the place of its chief office. It was, therefore, left for the stockholders or board of directors to locate the chief office of the company. The company was originally incorporated February 27, 1879, and the evidence shows that from that time until it went into the hands of a receiver, on the 21st day of February, 1896, the meetings of its stockholders and directors were held in the city of Norfolk. It is conceded that its chief office was in the city of Norfolk until September, 1895. But the record shows that the stockholders continued to hold their meetings in the city of Norfolk until February 19, 1896. In pursuance of an act of the general assembly of Virginia (Acts 1801-92, p. 428), railroad companies are required to report annually to the auditor of public accounts, among other things, the county or corporation in which the principal office of such company is located. In June, 1895, the defendant company reported its chief office at Norfolk. This is the place at which, as the evidence shows, it had- been since 1879. It had up a sign at 16 Bank street, in the city of Norfolk, and the directory of Norfolk showed the chief office of the company to be located in that city. In September, 1895, some of the officials of the railroad company moved their business offices to Ocean View, and in June, 1896, the receiver reported the chief office of the company as being at Ocean View. Such removal was done without the direction or approval of the stockholders or directors. No notice was given to the public or to these lien creditors by the directors, or by any one else authorized to make or approve the change, that the chief office of the company had been removed from Norfolk city to Ocean View.

The location of the principal office of a corporation is an important matter in Virginia, affecting, as it dees, the jurisdiction of her courts, service of process, and other legal proceedings. Code Va. 1887, §§ 3214, 3227. To change the place of its principal office without due notice to the public and by competent authority may work serious detriment to persons having important business relations with the corporation. How grave these consequences, may be this case abundantly shows, wheré liens of creditors amounting to thousands of dollars are sought to be defeated because they are, it is claimed, not recorded in the clerk’s office of the county or corporation where the railroad company had its chief office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 F. 725, 32 C.C.A. 31, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frick-co-v-norfolk-o-v-r-ca4-1898.