G. W. Jones Lumber Co. v. Wisarkana Lumber Co.

187 S.W. 1068, 125 Ark. 65, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 120
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 3, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 187 S.W. 1068 (G. W. Jones Lumber Co. v. Wisarkana Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G. W. Jones Lumber Co. v. Wisarkana Lumber Co., 187 S.W. 1068, 125 Ark. 65, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 120 (Ark. 1916).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

The Wisarkana Lumber Company is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Wisconsin, but its assets have always been situated in Craighead County, Arkansas, where it constructed and operated a large lumber manufacturing plant and where a large body of timber lands owned by it is situated. It was organized with a capital stock of $100,000, divided into a thousand shares of the par value of $100 per share, of which the G. W. Jones Lumber Company, another Wisconsin corporation, owned 657 shares, G. V. Nash 200 shares, C. L. Storrs 100 shares, B. C.' Wettlaufer 40 shares, and the other shares were held by three individuals merely for the purpose of qualifying them as officers of the corporation, one of whom was G. W. Jones, who was made president of this corporation, and who was also the president and principal stockholder of the G. W. Jones Lumber Company.

The promoters of the corporation were G. W. Jones and G. V. Nash, who conceived the idea of purchasing a large body of timber lands somewhere in the South and establishing a mill and lumber business. Nash came South in search of timber land, and finally located a large tract in Craighead County, and upon his recommendation the lands were purchased by the G. W. Jones Lumber Company, and upon the organization of the Wisarkana Lumber Company the lands were conveyed to the latter. That occurred early in the year 1905, and a mill was built at Nettleton, Craighead County, Arkansas, and the manufacturing business was begun. ' G. V. Nash was elected treasurer and general manager of the corporation and was put actively in charge of its business at Nettleton. He continued to act in that capacity until the year 1909, when some difference arose between him and G. W. Jones, when he resigned as manager and another was put in his place. He continued to be treasurer of the company for about a year thereafter, but ceased to have any actual control over the affairs of the corporation. He sold 170 shares of his stock to the F. Kiech Manufacturing Company, a corporation controlled by his brother-in-law and doing business in Craighead County, and he sold the remaining 30 shares to his brother, L. J. Nash, who is one of the appellees.

On October 10, 1911, a suit was instituted in the chancery court of Craighead County by the Bank of Nettleton (a banking corporation controlled by the stockholders of the F. Kiech Manufacturing Company), the F. Kiech Manufacturing Company, and the administrator of F. Kiech, deceased, and G. V. and L. J. Nash, against the Wisarkana Lumber Company and the stockholders and directors, alleging that the Wisarkana Lumber Company was insolvent, and asking that its affairs be wound up and that a debt to the Bank of Nettleton be paid out of the assets. Pursuant to the prayer of the complaint, a receiver was appointed and placed in charge of the assets of the Wisarkana Lumber Company, but subsequently an agreement was, reached between all of the' interested parties whereby the suit was withdrawn and the receiver discharged.

It appears from the testimony in the present case that from the time G. V. Nash severed his connection with the Wisarkana Lumber Company, the parties in interest, that is to say the Kiechs and the Nashs on one side and Jones on the other, dealt with each other at arms length and to some extent in antagonism to each other’s interest, though their relations were not altogether unfriendly. The business of the G. W. Jones Lumber Company had been continued at the place of its domicile, Appleton, Wisconsin, and it acted as sales agent for the Wisarkana Lumber Company and made sales of the lumber produced at the Nettleton mill. It also advanced money from time to time for the Wisarkana Lumber Company and guaranteed its credit; and in August, 1912, an action at law was commenced by the G. W. Jones Lumber Company against the Wisarkana Lumber Company in the circuit court of Craighead County for the recovery of an amount of an account alleged to be due in the sum of $43,560.79. The suit was instituted at the instance of G. W. Jones, as president of the G. W. Jones Lumber Company. Said account, which was the subject-matter of that suit, covered all the transactions between the two corporations and showed a. balance in the sum above named due tó the G. W. Jones Lumber Company. Judgment by default was rendered in the circuit court in favor of the G. W. Jones Lumber Company for the full amount of the account on September 11, 1912, and on January .8, 1913, the G. W. Jones Lumber Company and G. W. Jones commenced the present suit in the chancery court of Craighead County against the Wisarkana Lumber Company for the -purpose of winding up the affairs of the corporation and obtaining satisfaction of the judgment debt due to the G. W. Jones Lumber Company. .

■ The stock of the F. Kiech Manufacturing Company was then assigned to L. J. Nash and he intervened in the case to protect his rights as holder of that stock as well as the 30 shares which he had purchased from his brother, G. V. Nash. In the intervention plea of L. J. Nash, he attacked the validity of the judgment rendered in favor of the G. W. Jones Lumber Company, and also of a number of the items embraced in the account of that company against the Wisarkana Lumber Company. At the instance of the intervener, L. J. Nash, the court appointed an expert accountant as special master to examine the books and check up the accounts of the Wisarkana Lumber Company and make report. The master made an elaborate report, with findings favorable to the G. W. Jones v Lumber Company, and exceptions thereto were filed by the intervener, some of which were sustained and others overruled. The exceptions covered items aggregating the sum of $11,627.02, and the court sustained the exceptions concerning four ' of the items aggregating $9,764.75 and struck those items from the account.

The court also decreed payment of the costs of the litigation as follows: “That the plaintiff, G. W. Jones Lumber Company, pay one-half of the costs, and that the Wisarkana Lumber Company pay one-quarter of the costs and that the intervener, L. J. Nash, pay one-quarter of the costs, * * * and that the said costs include the charge of the special master, Homer K. Jones, $3,137.45.” Plaintiffs G. W. Jones and G. W. Jones Lumber Company appealed from so much of the decree as was against them, and the intervener, L. J. Nash, cross-appealed.

The first question presented concerns the validity of the judgment rendered in favor of G. W. Jones Lumber Company against the Wisarkana Lumber Company, for if that judgment was valid it constituted an adjudication of all the matters in controversy therein between the two parties to that suit, and this embraced all of the items covered by the exceptions, except one involving the sum of $3,000 which will be discussed later. All of the other items were charges of the G. W. Jones Lumber Company against the Wisarkana Lumber Company, and, of course, if the judgment had any validity at all it constituted a final adjudication between the parties.

(1) It is not contended that the proceedings were not conducted in accordance with the statutes with respect to the issuance and service of process and the rendition of the judgment, but it is argued that the fact that G. W. Jones was president of both corporations, and instigated the litigation, makes the judgment voidable at. the instance of the minority stockholders of the Wisarkana Lumber Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 S.W. 1068, 125 Ark. 65, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-w-jones-lumber-co-v-wisarkana-lumber-co-ark-1916.