Harrison Stave Co. v. Rockhill

107 S.W.2d 534, 194 Ark. 347, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 346
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 28, 1937
Docket4-4708
StatusPublished

This text of 107 S.W.2d 534 (Harrison Stave Co. v. Rockhill) 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
Harrison Stave Co. v. Rockhill, 107 S.W.2d 534, 194 Ark. 347, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 346 (Ark. 1937).

Opinion

GrieeiN Smith, C. J.

Appellant corporation was organized in March., 1934, by E. Bockhill, Howard F. Kingsley, and F. W. Evans, with an authorized capital stock of $10,000, one-half of which was paid in. The board of directors was composed of the incorporators, with Kingsley as president, Evans as vice-president, and Bockhill as secretary-treasurer.

Kingsley and Bockhill were actively connected with the company’s business of manufacturing staves. Each was authorized to draw a salary of $200 per month. The venture was not successful, and about July 20, 1934, the plant was closed. Kingsley agreed in writing that his salary should cease after July 31, and Bockhill in like manner agreed to waive compensation after August 31.

Early in September the directors agreed upon a program of liquidation. In the meantime Kingsley and Evans had gone to Joplin, Missouri, and on September 12 Bockhill met them there in conference. Bockhill testified by deposition that at the Joplin meeting Kings-ley advised against a resumption of operations, and said that Evans was in substantial accord with this view.

Shortly after returning to Harrison, Bockhill began operating the plant.

On December 8, 1934, Bockhill filed complaint in the chancery court, alleging that Evans and Kingsley were insolvent; that they were nonresidents of Arkansas; that they had determined the corporation should cease to do business and were threatening* to remove assets of the company; that they had issued call for a meeting of stockholders to be held December 10 for the purpose of removing complainant (Bockhill) from the office of secretary and treasurer, and that unless restrained from carrying out these purposes, the business would be adversely affected. There was a prayer that a receiver be appointed. The complaint named the Harrison Stave Company, Inc., and F. "W. Evans and H. F. Kingsley as defendants.

On December 13,1934, answer was filed by tbe Stave Company, F. W. Evans and H. F. Kingsley. In passing on Rockhill’s petition, the court found that a receiver should be appointed, and designated M. F. Franklin. Rockhill filed with the court a claim for $400, requesting that he be allowed one-half of his regular salary for September and October, and full salary for November, 1934. He stated that “Said services were of said reasonable value to the company and were necessary for the preservation and protection of the interests of said company.” Mrs. Rockhill hied claim for $262.50, alleging that she was entitled to $35 per month from May 1 to December 1, 1934, as compensation for keeping-books. A claim for $44.55 was filed by Estes Bros. Machine Shop.

On December 2, 1935, the court made findings as to the claims of Rockhill and his wife, saying: “The court is of the opinion that these claims are not now properly before the court, the court holding that the same should first be presented to the receiver and acted upon by the receiver to the end that the court may have the benefit of the receiver’s investigation and advice upon the same. The court is therefore of the opinion that these claims should be dismissed without prejudice.”

Thereafter, the claims were presented to the receiver, and disallowed, and were then filed with the chancery court clerk. On September 4, 1936, the receiver filed separate answers to the Rockhill claims, asking- that the court reject them.

On December 28, 1936, the court handed down a vacation decree, directing the receiver to pay the Rock-hill claims and the claim of Estes Bros. On December 31 the decree of the 28th was superseded, the clerk having been directed by letter to disregard the former decree and enter a substituted decree. In the decree dated December 31 it is recited that the claimants, Florence E. Rockhill, E. Rockhill, and Estes Bros., each objected to the order and decree of the court for the reason that it did not properly state the record upon which the canse was submitted, “in that no answer or other pleading was filed by the defendants F. W. Evans, H. F. Kingsley, and Harrison Stave Company; that no depositions were taken and filed by any of said defendants on the cause herein; that the depositions of Florence E. Rockhill', E. Rockhill, and J. W. Johnson, taken on May 22, 1936, was the only evidence properly before the court; that by reason of the failure of said defendants Evans and Kingsley to plead herein they are strangers' to the record and have no rights herein. ’ ’

The defendants, Harrison Stave Company, and Kingsley and Evans, duly excepted to that part of the decree directing the receiver to pay the controverted items of $400, $262.50, and $44.55, and were granted this appeal.

Appellees contend that because the Harrison Stave' Company and Kingsley and Evans did not file additional pleadings after the chancellor ruled that the Rockhill claims should be dismissed without prejudice, these parties cannot appeal from the decree denying the receiver’s petition that the claims be disallowed.

In other words, it is the theory of appellees that if appellants were dissatisfied with the order of December 2, 1935, they should have appealed from such adverse ruling; or, in the alternative, when the claims were filed with the clerk, appellants should have answered; or, when the receiver filed answer, they should have intervened, or should have had themselves named as parties to the action.

Appellees, therefore, ask that the appeal be dismissed because, as a matter of law, appellants have no place in this record; or, secondly, if this motion is not sustained, that the judgments in favor of E. Rockhill, Mrs. Florence E. Rockhill, and Estes Bros. Machine Shop, be affirmed on their merits.

The original suit filed by E. Rockhill named the Harrison Stave Company, F. W. Evans and H. F. Kings-ley, as defendants. In filing his claim E. Rockhill alleged that the indebtedness was that of the Harrison Stave Company. Mrs. Florence Rockhill’s claim was filed against the corporation, and not against Kingsley and Evans. The demand of Estes Bros. Machine Shop was also presented as a debt of the corporation.

The joint answer of the corporation and Kingsley and Evans, filed December 13, 1934, contains an allegation that F. W. Evans supplied $2,700 of the original capital; that $2,300 was borrowed, but that no part of the total capital of $5,000 paid in was furnished by Rockhill. It is shown elsewhere in the record that a second-hand mill was purchased for $2,250, and that, presumably, $2,750 of the money actually paid in for stock was available when operations began. These allegations are sustained by the proof.

It is true that the court, on December 2, 1935, dismissed the Rockhill claims with the explanation that they should be referred to the receiver for his recommendations. Thereafter, on September 4, 1936, the receiver filed an answer to the claim of E. Rockhill.

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107 S.W.2d 534, 194 Ark. 347, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-stave-co-v-rockhill-ark-1937.