Home Powder Co. v. Lively

168 S.W. 351, 182 Mo. App. 130, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 398
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 27, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 168 S.W. 351 (Home Powder Co. v. Lively) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Powder Co. v. Lively, 168 S.W. 351, 182 Mo. App. 130, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 398 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

FARRINGTON, J.

A creditors’ bill was filed by the plaintiffs to subject to the payment of their two judgments certain property alleged to have been fraudulently transferred by a bill of sale, assignment, deed of trust and notes secured by same, agreement between the stockholders and officers of the Old Judge Mining Company, and a letter written by the stockholders of the Old Judge Mining Company to the alleged purchasers, all bearing date of June 15, 1909. The deed of trust purported to secure notes aggregating six thousand dollars, but the evidence shows that the real consideration was probably fifty thousand dollars. The chancellor granted the relief sought and the defendants have appealed.

The facts of the case may be stated as follows: The Old Judge Mining Company, a Missouri corporation, owned and operated a certain-mining mill and machinery on a leased tract of land. Two officers of that company were Y. T. Price (president), and O. M. [132]*132Olmsted (secretary). Realto Price, James E. Corlett and H. J. Grotwohl were also stockholders, and some were directors. There was a directors’ meeting authorizing a sale of the property to F. O. Stover and F. W. Wonn, one of these parties residing in Chicago and the other in Wisconsin. At this directors’ meeting, V. T. Price, the president of the company, was authorized to draw up the proper papers to carry out the deal, the secretary, Olmsted, testifying, “on certain conditions;” he did not remember the conditions, hut later in his examination stated two of them. He denied that the president, Price, was ever authorized to execute on behalf of the corporation an instrument hereinafter set forth and referred to as the triplicate agreement, or to write a letter on behalf of the corporation, also referred to. Although he says minutes of the meeting were kept hy him as secretary, he does not know what the directors did authorize, and the minute book had been at the time of the trial and for a long time prior thereto in the hands of the officers of the defendant company in Iowa and was not produced at the trial. The appellants naturally would not deny the validity of the deed of trust, assignment of the lease, or bill of sale of all the property of the Old Judge Mining Company, as these are the foundation for their claim on the property under the deed of trust. At all events, the deed of trust, bill of sale, and the assignment of the lease, were executed, which, together with the triplicate agreement and the letter, were sent by the president, Y. T. Price, after drawing up the same, to the secretary of the Old Judge Mining Company, Olmsted, and were by him or by his direction recorded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds of Jasper county, Missouri.

It may be said that the assignment, the deed of trust, the notes, and the hill of sale on their face have the stamp of good faith. The property referred to, being all the property of the Old Judge Mining Com[133]*133pany, was sold to Messrs. Stover and Wonn. These two men took possession of the property and operated it in their names for quite a while and afterwards by their direction it was operated in the name of the Red Wing Mining Company, a corporation. It was while the property was being operated in the name of the Red Wing Mining Company that the debts were contracted which were afterward placed in judgment and which are the basis of plaintiffs’ claim in this suit. Messrs. Stover and Wonn hired a superintendent who operated the mine for them. It clearly appears in evidence that they directed at a certain time that their superintendent (Graham) run the mine in the name of the Red Wing Mining Company, and that they also informed these creditors that they desired the account changed from their names to that of the Red Wing Mining Company. Checks were issued for the expenses of operation in the name of the Red Wing Mining Company. There is evidence tending to show that a contract was made with the Old Judge Mining Company allowing (as the triplicate agreement provided) the Red Wing Mining Company to he substituted for Stover and Wonn, and this agreement was afterwards returned to Graham, the superintendent of the mine. The triplicate agreement which was made on June 15, 1909, the day on which the other instruments referred to were executed, purports to he between the stockholders of the Old Judge Mining Company, as parties of the first part, and Stover and Wonn —the assignees of the property mentioned in the bill of sale as that of the Old Judge Mining Company— as parties of the second part. It appears that the stockholders sold fifty thousand dollars of the stock less eight shares (which was all of it except the eight shares), to Stover and Wonn. We here set forth enough of this instrument to disclose its nature: :

“Witnesseth: That parties of the first part being holders and owners of all stock in the Old Judge Min[134]*134ing Company, save and except eight shares, do in part consideration of the covenants and agreements on the part of second parties contained in a certain trust deed of even date herewith by and between the Old Judge Mining Company and-the parties of the second part, hereby covenant and agree to deposit our said stock in the Old Judge Mining Company in the First National Bank of Elkader, Iowa, for the faithful fulfillment and performance of this supplementary agreement.

“The first parties covenant and agree that the cashier of said bank shall .issue to second parties receipts for each and all money payments made by second parties to the Old Judge Mining Company pursuant to the terms of the aforesaid trust deed.

“That whenever the trust deed aforesaid shall be terminated in any way, shape or manner, then and in that ease parties of the first part on presentation of said receipt or receipts by second parties will transfer and assign to said second parties shares of stock in the Old Judge Mining Company of the par value of the cash payments made pursuant to' said trust deed as evidenced by said receipts.

“That parties of the second part shall not by reason of said payments or the said shares of stock so acquired by them or any interest in the Old Judge Mining Company acquired under this contract have any right, claim or interest in, to, or upon the money so paid to the Old Judge Mining Company. It being expressly covenanted and agreed that said payments for the purposes of this contract shall be deemed payments made first party for personal stock in said company and that the proceeds of said payment may be distributed among the first parties in proportion to their several holdings of stock without let, hindrance or objection from second party.”

On the same date there was a letter written (which was also recorded in the recorder’s office) signed by [135]*135the president, Y. T. Price, for himself and the stockholders hereinbefore named. It also throws some light on the character of the transaction under review, and it is therefore set forth:

“June 15,1909.

“F. C. Stover and F. W. Wonn,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 S.W. 351, 182 Mo. App. 130, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-powder-co-v-lively-moctapp-1914.