Hanrahan v. Andersen

90 P.2d 494, 108 Mont. 218, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 90
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1939
DocketNo. 7,880.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 90 P.2d 494 (Hanrahan v. Andersen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanrahan v. Andersen, 90 P.2d 494, 108 Mont. 218, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 90 (Mo. 1939).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JOHNSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Fallon county quieting the title of Capital Gas Corporation in two oil and gas leases, and decreeing invalid a $50,000 lien imposed against the leases by a former judgment of the same court, together with four assignments executed in consideration of such former judgment. The facts are somewhat involved, and we will at the outset give only a general outline of them, leaving the particulars to be shown during the course of this opinion.

John Wight was the organizer, promoter, director, treasurer and self-styled general manager of Capital Gas Corporation, which held oil and gas leases upon approximately 500,000 acres *225 of land. He then organized, promoted and attempted to finance Montana Consolidated Gas Companies, Inc., and devised and promoted a plan for the consolidation of the entire business and property of Capital Gas Corporation and two other companies by a conveyance thereof to the new corporation in exchange for its capital stock. He also organized, promoted and attempted to finance Great Northern Gas & Utility Company, which was to promote the construction of a pipe line through which the gas was to be marketed, and which apparently was to be the parent company and to control the entire project. These companies will hereinafter be termed “Capital,” “Consolidated” and “Northern.”

Wight and the defendant Jay A. Andersen, through whom or in association with whom he was attempting to finance Consolidated and Northern, not being successful, Wight then caused a trust deed to be made purporting to convey to Andersen, as trustee, all Capital’s interest in the property it had purported to convey to Consolidated, together with the capital stock of the latter which it had received for the property. These transactions were had in 1931; during that year and thereafter most of Capital’s oil and gas leases were lost through the defaults of Consolidated and Andersen.

Olive B. Gifford, a stockholder of Capital, being unable to induce the company’s officers and directors to act, brought suit in 1933 to set aside as void the transfers to Consolidated and Andersen, and' to get back what little was left of Capital’s assets. Wight then was instrumental in the entry of a judgment finding that the allegations of the complaint were true and that the transfers were void, and quieting Capital’s title to the two oil and gas leases in question, known as the Armstrong and Anders S. Anderson leases, which constituted virtually all Capital’s remaining assets, but giving defendant Andersen a judgment of $50,000 with a lien on the two leases for its payment.

Subsequently, in 1933 and 1937, Wight caused four documents to be made and delivered to defendants Kelly and Equities, Incorporated, Andersen’s successors in interest, in Capital’s name, purporting to assign to them oil and gas proceeds from the *226 two leases for payment of the judgment, subject to an option to repurchase. Plaintiff Hanrahan, another stockholder, learning of these transactions in 1937, and'being unable to induce the officers and directors to act, instituted this suit and obtained a judgment quieting Capital’s title to the two leases, finding all the corporate transactions in question invalid and Capital not indebted to Andersen, and holding the Gifford judgment void, so far as the $50,000 judgment and lien against Capital’s property was concerned. This appeal followed.

Hanrahan’s complaint consists of a first cause of action to quiet Capital’s title to these two oil and gas leases; and a second cause of action to set aside that part of the judgment in the Gifford Case giving Andersen the $50,000 judgment and lien and also to set aside the four assignments made in consideration of the judgment. His contention in the second cause of action is that the judgment is void as against Capital because Capital was not a party to it; and that the four subsequent assignments were void because made without authority and without consideration. The defendants were the four appellants, Andersen, Kelly, Smith and Equities, Incorporated, all of whom seem to be interested in the Gifford judgment and subsequent assignments, and John Wight and Capital, who were served but who defaulted. By our general references to defendants in this opinion, we shall mean the four answering defendants, who are the appellants herein.

The defendants’ answer consists of a general traverse, the defense of the statute of limitations, and a defense alleging that the 1931 transfers were valid corporate acts, and that the Gifford judgment was entered pursuant to a compromise agreement by which the transfers were to be declared invalid and the property restored to Capital subject to the $50,000 lien in Andersen’s favor. These defenses are directed against both causes of action; and the prayer is in effect that the defendant Equities, Incorporated, as successor in interest of the other answering defendants, be decreed the owner of the rights purported to be conveyed under the four assignments made after entry of the Gifford judgment. In his reply plaintiff put in issue *227 the corporate acts alleged in the answer. Montana-Dakota Utilities Company intervened and asserted that it had in good faith paid defendants for gas production under the assignments; but a stipulation was entered into between it and plaintiff to the effect that any judgment entered herein should not affect the interests of intervener.

Trial was had to the court without a jury. The record is voluminous and includes the court file in the Gifford Case, including pleadings, exhibits and reporter’s transcribed notes, Capital’s minute book, the various documents relating to all the transactions referred to, and the testimony of eight witnesses, the chief one being John Wight.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P.2d 494, 108 Mont. 218, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanrahan-v-andersen-mont-1939.