Fulton v. Sterling Land & Investment Co.

47 Kan. 621
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 47 Kan. 621 (Fulton v. Sterling Land & Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fulton v. Sterling Land & Investment Co., 47 Kan. 621 (kan 1892).

Opinion

Opinion by

Strang, C.:

This was an action brought upon the following instrument, which is made a part of the petition in the case, to recover from W. P. Fulton the sum of $200, the amount of his subscription therein:

“We, the undersigned, agree to pay the sum set opposite our names as follows: One-third down, one-third in six months from date hereof, and one-third in 12 months from date hereof, and the said sums so subscribed is a donation to the Cooper Memorial College, of Sterling, Kas., and the said sum to be used in erecting the said college building. And it is agreed that the commencement and building of said college is to be considered and held as a full consideration for this subscription and our obligation to pay the same set opposite our names.
“And each subscriber is entitled to lots to the amount of their subscription in the investment company’s addition.
J. H. Ricksecker........ $750 00
H. Irish................ 750 00
J. C. Turner............ 750 00
C. K. Beckett........... 750 00
J. Hoops............... 750 00
3. S. Smith............. 750 00
W. M. Quigley.......... 200 00
Truehart So Logan....... 300 00
R. J. Shay.............. 200 00
Skiles So Wirshing....... $300 00
W. L. Brown............ 200 00
W. H. Page............, 300 00
J. C. Johnson........... 150 00
H. W. Maxwell.......... 200 00
T. A. Dillay............. 200 00
C. B. Donaldson......... 100 00
McMurphy So Hughes.... 200 00
W. P. Fulton............ 200 00
[622]*622J. W. Goodson.. $300 00
A. G. Landis____ 300 00
J. M. English... 300 00
W. M. Lamb 150 00
M. T. Williams.. 200 00
D. Sturgeon____ 200 00
Hodge & Evans. 200 00
Chas. Mann............. $150 00
J. T. Gaskell......... 150 00
R. F. Bond.......... 200 00
H. Swartz........... 150 00
J. O. Stow........... 500 00
B. Arnold............ 300 00-
W. Q. Elliott......... 750 00
“To be paid only when actually needed to prosecute the • work.”

The defendant below filed a demurrer to the petition, which was overruled. He then answered, and the case went to trial before the court without a jury. The court found in favor of the plaintiff below. Motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, and a case made and brought to this court for review.

The first error assigned is the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to the petition. The petition alleges the incorporation of the plaintiff under the laws of Kansas, recites the fact that, in 1886, the people of Sterling, Rice county, Kansas, were desirous of securing the location and erection of a college at their city, to be called the Cooper Memorial College, of Sterling, Kas.; that for the purpose of raising money to aid in the construction of said college, the instrument in writing, copied above, was created and the subscriptions therein contained were made; that at the time such subscriptions were made it was understood by the subscribers, including the defendant, Fulton, that the plaintiff, the Sterling Land and Investment Company, was to erect the college, and that said subscriptions were to be collected by said investment company and by it used in the construction of said college; that said subscription list was handed over to said company, and the subscriptions therein, except that of Fulton and one other, were paid to said company; that said company, relying upon said subscriptions to, in part, compensate them therefor, erected said college and turned it over to the trustees of the Cooper Memorial College; that the company tendered Fulton lots-in its addition to the full value of his subscription, which he neglected and refused to take; and that he refused to pay the amount of his subscription, or any part thereof.

[623]*623We think the petition states a cause of action, and the demurrer was properly overruled. Counsel for Pulton claims in his brief that there was no contract between Fulton and the plaintiff below. We think there was. The instrument signed by Fulton must be construed in the light of all that occurred in connection with the subject to which it relates. An examination of the record shows that, in 1886, the people of the city of Sterling, like the people of most other cities of Kansas, were actively engaged in an endeavor to improve their city. To promote such endeavor, they determined to secure the erection of a building therefor and the endowment of a college in the midst. They held public meetings and discussed plans for raising money for the erection of the college building, the defendant below, Fulton, being a resident of said city, and actively engaged with others in the work of securing said money. The consultations in relation to the method of obtaining the means to secure the erection of a college building finally resulted in an understanding that a corporation should be created which should take control of the business of erecting such building; that said corporation should purchase land in a body, and cut it up into blocks and lots and sell the same, and from the profits thus obtained raise a portion of the money with which to erect said college building. It was also agreed that subscriptions should be solicited among the residents of the city, to further aid in the construction of said building. In pursuance of this understanding, the Sterling Land and Investment Company was incorporated, and the subscriptions contained in the subscription list herein copied were obtained.

It was the understanding, from the inception and adoption of the plan pursued for raising money, that the subscribers to the fund for the erection of the college building should be permitted to select and have lots in the company’s addition — that is, in the land purchased and subdivided by the company — equal in value with their several subscriptions. The company purchased land, subdivided it, and — except what was taken by the subscribers to the college fund — sold what it could of it, and used the proceeds of such sales in the con[624]*624struction of a college building. It was also understood that a second corporation should be created, known as the Cooper Memorial, College of Sterling, Kas., that should accept the college building when completed, endow the college, and agree to conduct a school therein. The subscription list was turned over to the Sterling Land and Investment Company, which erected the college building and turned it over to the trustees of the Cooper Memorial College, which accepted it.

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Related

State ex rel. Parker v. City of Kansas City
98 P.2d 101 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
47 Kan. 621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fulton-v-sterling-land-investment-co-kan-1892.