Haskell v. Patterson

262 S.W. 1002, 165 Ark. 65, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 459
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 23, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 262 S.W. 1002 (Haskell v. Patterson) 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
Haskell v. Patterson, 262 S.W. 1002, 165 Ark. 65, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 459 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

Wood, J.

The plaintiffs below, appellees here, as trustees of the Arkansas Development- Syndicate (hereafter called syndicate), instituted this action in the chancery -court of Columbia County, Arkansas, against the defendants below, appellants here, to have an alleged fraudulent conveyance set aside and a trust declared in an undivided interest in oil and gas leases of land in Columbia and Nevada counties, Arkansas, which leases were taken in the name of M. G-. Haskell, and the lands are described in the complaint.

The plaintiffs alleged that M. G-. Haskell and O. M. Evans were first named as trustees of the syndicate in a trust instrument dated May 31, 1921, and of August 8, 1921, which is attached as an exhibit to the complaint. The syndicate first had a capital of $7,500, divided into units or shares of the par value of $100 each, but which was afterwards increased on the 8th of August, 1921, to $50,000, and Franklin Miller was also named as one of the trustees. It is alleged that the moneys obtained by the sale of the certificates of interest were used by the trustees for the purpose of buying oil and gas mining leases and oil and gas mining properties in the State of Arkansas, and for developing the same for the benefit of the members of the trust; that Haskell procured the leases in his own name, and, in violation of the terms of the trust instrument, with the funds of the syndicate, and was claiming the property as his own and fraudulently using and disposing of the same. The plaintiffs further alleged that the defendants, as trustees, failed to keep accounts and to make reports and to perform their duties required of them under the trust instrument; that Haskell fraudulently assigned and conveyed property belonging to the syndicate to Fred L. McDaniels, trustee, to hold for the use and benefit of Lucy Haskell, wife of M. G-. Haskell. They prayed that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the trust and manage the properties for the benefit of the syndicate, and that the defendants be enjoined from disposing of the properties; that the defendants, Haskell, Evans, and Miller, be required to give a full and complete account of all their doings, and that the title to the properties be confirmed and quieted in the plaintiffs as trustees for the syndicate.

The defendants answered and admitted the execution of the trust instrument, and that Haskell was named as one-of-the trustees. They also admitted that Haskell obtained the properties described in the complaint in his own name, but- denied that he purchased the same for the syndicate or with funds of the syndicate. They denied that, in purchasing the property, he was working for the syndicate, but averred that the property was purchased for himself with his own funds. They alleged that the members of the syndicate knew that Haskell was procuring the property in controversy for himself and not for the syndicate, and permitted Haskell to expend large sums of money and to labor more than a year and to incur large liabilities on his own account after they knew that he had obtained the property with his own funds and for his own use and benefit, and that the syndicate was therefore estopped from now claiming the property.

The plaintiffs filed a reply to the answer, and denied all of its allegations.

The testimony is exceedingly voluminous, and we shall not undertake to set it forth in detail, but only such portions thereof as we deem material to the decision of the canse. The trust agreement of August 8,1921, which was substituted for the original agreement of May 31, •1921, is an exceedingly lengthy instrument, and it is unnecessary to set forth its provisions in haec verba. It is divided into sections,'and the substance thereof is as follows:

Section 1 names the syndicate as “The Arkansas Development Syndicate,” and declares that it is entered into between the trustees and the subscribers for the purpose of financing and securing a geological survey of territory in southern Arkansas and northern Louisiana, for acquiring oil and gas leases therein, and selling, trading, and handling the same in such manner as, in the judgment of the trustees, is for the best interests of the syndicate.

■Section 2 authorizes the trustees to receive subscriptions to the capital stock to the amount of $50,000, and to issue certificates of interest of the par value of $100 each to those who subscribed and paid for such interest. The trustees shall issue to themselves a “number of interests equal to one-fifth of the total number, or one .hundred interests, in compensation of their services; to William R. Jewell and P. J. Costello, in compensation for services rendered the syndicate, under contract with the trustees, in such proportion as may be agreed upon, one hundred interests of $100 each, apart from actual living expenses and other expenses incurred in work for and on behalf of the syndicate. The trustees shall issue to holders of original certificates a total of one hundred and fifty interests of $100 each, divided among the original holders in proportion to the number held by each individual subscriber, in the ratio of three interests for one interest previously held. Under this allotment there remained one hundred and fifty interests of $100 each to be sold by the trustees at par, in such number as they deemed advisable.

Section 3 vested title to the property in the trustees, to be held by them free from the management or control of the subscribers.

'Section 4 provided for a meeting of the subscribers to be called on the first Monday of January, 1922, to determine the future policy and disposition of the syndicate and property; and by majority vote to wind up the syndicate, or to continue it.

Section 5 is as follows: “The funds of said syndicate received by the said trustees shall be by them employed in the’ securing of such additional acreage as may be necessary, in the expenses incident to the handling the affairs of said syndicate and disposing of such acreage as it may desire to sell, and for the purpose of exploiting or producing oil, gas or other minerals or royalties, or any interest in said oil, gas or minerals, or in any land which is believed to have the same. It being understood that the trustees are fully empowered to buy, sell and trade for the benefit of the said syndicate, and with the same power and authority and discretion as they could or would exercise if so selling or trading for themselves.”

■Section 6 is as follows: “The said trustees, in bargaining, selling, conveying, 'assigning, trading or exchanging any property so acquired by them, have full authority to execute such deeds, conveyances, or other instruments as to them may seem best, with such covenants, stipulations, conditions and warranties binding the said syndicate and its property as they may see fit in their discretion to enter into, and all the acts of the said trustees in the premises are hereby ratified and confirmed.”

Section 7 relieves the trustees and the subscribers from any individual liability in contract or tort for acts growing out of any contract entered into by the trustees, but instead makes the property of the syndicate liable therefor.

Section 8 limits the individual liability of the holders of interests in the syndicate to the amount subscribed, and limits the liability under any contract entered into by the trustees to the assets and property of the syndicate.

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Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 1002, 165 Ark. 65, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haskell-v-patterson-ark-1924.