Hebberd v. Southwestern Land & Cattle Co.

55 N.J. Eq. 18
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 55 N.J. Eq. 18 (Hebberd v. Southwestern Land & Cattle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hebberd v. Southwestern Land & Cattle Co., 55 N.J. Eq. 18 (N.J. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The receiver of the Southwestern Land and Cattle Company, an insolvent corporation of this state, appointed by the court of chancery, by his petition asks to be instructed what disposition he shall make of the proceeds of the sale of certain cattle to which particular reference will hereafter be made, and as to the validity and status of certain claims which have been presented to him. All persons interested in the desired instruction, upon the presentation of the petition, appeared by their respective counsel, and, in pursuance of their written assent, it was ordered that evidence be taken upon the issues suggested, and upon the coming in of the evidence the several parties were heard.

The Southwestern Land and Cattle Company was incorporated on the 15th day of February, 1884, by certificate under the General Corporation law of this state, approved April 7th, 1875, and its supplements. The object for which it was formed, as indicated- by its name, was, in substance, to deal in lands and cattle and their products. Its capital stock was fixed at $500,000, divided into twenty-five thousand shares of the par value of. $20 each. The certificate stated that the company would commence business with $500,000; that the stockholders were George F. Damon, Henry A. Dickinson, Effingham H. Warner, John T. Dutcher and William T. Mersereau, each of whom held five thousand shares, and that the company would continue fifty years. It was signed by each of the stockholders named.

It appears that stock certificates for five thousand shares each, marked in the margin “ for property purchased,” were issued to the several corporators, but that cash was paid by the stock subscribers for only five shares each, and that subsequently the five-thousand-share certificates were returned to the company, and in their place certificates for five shares to each were issued, leaving untransferred twenty-four thousand nine hundred and seventy-five shares. This transaction is styled, on the journal of the corporation, “a contribution” of twenty-four thousand nine hundred and fifty shares, “to enable the Southwestern Land [21]*21and Cattle Company to carry out its contract for the purchase of the assets of the New York Cattle Company.”

■ Later, oh the 1st day of March, 1884, an agreement fabricated .by Damon was entered into between the Southwestern Land and Cattle Company and the New York Cattle Company (Limited), ■a corporation of the State of New York, in both of which companies Damon was a. stockholder and active manager, whereby the latter company agreed to sell and assign to the former a lease for five years from October 1st, 1883, of a cattle range in the Indian territory, which it had obtained from the Cherokee Strip Live Stock Association, and also cattle, horses, mules and the range equipment, for $499,500, to be paid by the transfer and delivery to it of twenty-four thousand nine hundred and seventy-five shares of the capital stock of the Southwestern Land and Cattle Company, and the assumption of the- payment of a note for $29,000, which the vendor had given-to a third party.

The agreement recites that it was the intention of the Southwestern Land and Cattle Company to issue a mortgage upon the property so to be acquired, for $500,000, to secure the payment of bonds, and that when the mortgage should be executed the Southwestern Land and Cattle Company would exchange $142,000 of the bonds for eleven thousand seven hundred and twenty-five shares of the capital stock held by the vendor. Pending the exchange of the eleven thousand seven hundred and twenty-five shares of stock, the stock was to remain in the possession of a trustee.

Subsequently a mortgage of even date with the agreement of sale was executed. It purported to mortgage all the .assets, present and future, of the Southwestern Land and Cattle Company-to secure bonds aggregating in amount $500,000 and payable in ten years, the privilege being reserved to the company to pay any bond with a premium of five per cent, at an earlier date.

The mortgage was made to Charles C. Leeds, then the legal adviser of the Southwestern Land and Cattle Company, and William M. Murray, -a stockholder in the New York Cattle Company (Limited), as trustees. It was never either filed or recorded in any.public office in this state, New York state, [22]*22the Indian territory, or elsewhere. Nor was possession of any property delivered or taken in virtue of it. As to creditors obtaining a lien, it is without validity. Rev. p. 709 § 39; Jones Chat. Mort. § 176; Currie v. Knight, 7 Stew. Eq. 485, 486. The claims of creditors fastened upon the property of the insolvent company upon the appointment of the receiver. Graham Button Co. v. Spielman, 5 Dick. Ch. Rep. 120.

Of the bonds, $184,500 in face value were issued, and of that amount, $142,000, together with thirteen thousand two hundred and fifty-five shares of capital stock, of the par value of $264,500, went to the New York Cattle Company (Limited), and were divided among its stockholders.

The property thus sold by the New York Cattle Company (Limited) to the Southwestern Land and Cattle Company, with the exception of some cattle bought of one Creswell by the note of $29,000, which the Southwestern Land and Cattle Company subsequently paid, was substantially the same property which the New York Cattle Company (Limited) had previously, in April, 1883, bought, through one Sandford, from a corporation called the Jackson Cattle Company (Limited), of Goshen, for the stated consideration of $25,000. An examination of the books and papers of the several owners of these assets reveals a progressive inflation of the valuation of them as they passed from owner to owner to the enormous sum of $499,500. The assets thus purchased are entered and valued in the books of the Southwestern Land and Cattle Company in an inventory in this form:

1. Lease and good will of New York Cattle Company... 5400,000
2. Cattle account.................................................. 175,000
3. Horse and mule account.................'.................... 10,000
4. Supply account.............................'................... 5,000
5. Fixtures and outfit........................... 9,500
6. Franchise.................. 200,000
5>499,500

What the real value of the assets purchased was is not shown by determinative proofs, but the strong indications are that it did not exceed one-twentieth part of $499,500.

[23]*23William E. Hebberd, who appears to have been the sole clerk or factotum of the company’s principal office in New York city, testifies that the last item of the statement or inventory, Franchise, $200,000,” was a fiction of .his inventory to force the valuation to the desired $499,500, and also that the first item of the inventory, “ $100,000 for the lease and good will,” was made in face of the fact that the New York Cattle Company had been operated at a loss. He further testifies that George F. Damon, the leading spirit of the fabrication and the president of the company, some time after the organization, declared that the valuation should not have been put higher than $150,000; that it was a mistake to put it so high as half a million.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 N.J. Eq. 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hebberd-v-southwestern-land-cattle-co-njch-1896.