Hope v. Valley City Salt Co.

25 W. Va. 789, 1885 W. Va. LEXIS 36
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 25 W. Va. 789 (Hope v. Valley City Salt Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hope v. Valley City Salt Co., 25 W. Va. 789, 1885 W. Va. LEXIS 36 (W. Va. 1885).

Opinion

Woods, Judge :

The questions presented for our consideration are:- — ■

Was the deed of trust made to secure Peter Harpold his alleged debt of $14,368.46 fraudulent in law or in fact?

Was the deed of trust to Howard, trustee, dated August 13,1878, to secure E. C. Harpold, his alleged debt of $12,000.00, fraudulent in law or in fact, and if said deeds or either of them, was for any cause fraudulent or void, how, and to what extent have the rights of the appellant been affected by the several sales and conveyances made under said deeds .of trust ?

What rights, if any, did E. C. Harpold or his vendee, the .¿Etna Coal and Salt Company acquire under the conveyances made to them respectively ? Correct answers to these questions must be couclusive in this controversy.

It is contended by the appellees, Hope and wife, that the deeds of trust to Myers for the benefit of Peter Harpold, and to Howard for the benefit of E. C. Harpold, are fraudulent in law and in fact, and therefore void. Their counsel in argument contend that the corporation could not lawfully contract with Peter Harpold, nor with E. C. Harpold, because they were members of the corporation ; they were in effect contracting with themselves, and that this was especially true of the alleged note of $12,000.00, and the deed of trust to Howard, as E. C. Harpold was at the time, the president, general manager and a director of the corporation.

It seems to us that it can not be successfully maintained that a corporation aggregate, can not lawfully enter into a contract with or borrow money from its own stockholders, and that if it does do so, the contract entered into, the obligation executed, and the deed of trust or mortgage made to secure the same is for that cause alone fraudulent and void. Few corporations aggregate created for the purpose of carrying [797]*797on any important branch of manufacturing or mining industries, have ever been formed, or will probably ever be formed, which have not been obliged in the earlier stages of development to borrow money, and frequently large amounts of money, to put the business upon a paying basis. Under such circumstances it would on business principles alone be unreasonable to expect strangers wholly unacquainted with, and uninterested in the proposed enterprise to advance such necessary. funds without security other than that of the corporation, and if to be secured by others, by whom so natui’ally as by the individual stockholders of the corporation, who were personally interested in, and had at least partial control over the conduct and management of its business. If such a liability be incurred to a stranger, so secured by individual stockholders, why may not the corporation further secure him and such sureties by a deed of trust or mortgage on part of its property, unless prohibited by law from doing so, and if such sureties may be so secured collaterally, what good reason can be given why the loan may not be made by stockholders to the corporation, and secured by it to him in like manner?

This is no now doctrine, for as by the common law a corporation aggregate can contract with persons who are not members, so it may contract with persons who are members of it, and the contract will not on this account alone be invalid, as a member of a corporation contracting with it, will be regarded as a stranger. The same is clearly laid down by Judge Story in the Dartmouth College case, where he says : A corporation aggregate is an artificial person existing in contemplation of law, and endowed with certain powers and franchises, which though they must be exercised through the medium of its natural members, are yet considered as subsisting in the corporation itself as distinctly as it it were a real person.” Hence such a corporation may sue and be sued by its own members, and may contract with them in the same manner as with strangers. Angell & Ames on Corporations, section 233; Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat 518-667; Merick v. Peru Coal Co. 61 Ill. 472.

The same reason applies with equal force to the trust-deed to Howard, trustee, for the benefit of E. C. Harpoldso far as the validity of the same is called in question • upon the sole [798]*798ground that he also was a stockholder in said corporation. It is not alleged that the deed of trust of February 7, 1870, to Myers, trustee, is void because Peter Harpold the beneficiary therein was at the time of the execution thereof a director of the Valley Oity Salt Company, or because he then held or occupied any other fiduciary relation to it, but its validity is assailed upon the ground that his pretended debt had no existence; that he had never advanced or loaned to the com - pany the sum of $14,386.46, or any part of it, and that the obligation executed to him for that sum and the deed of trust to secure the same, were made without any valuable consideration, andtherefore were fraudulent and void as to the plaintiffs’ demand. All these, and evei’y other allegation of the bill calling in question the validity, and good faith of the whole transaction are explicitly denied by the answer, and aside from the record-evidence of the execution of the obligation and of the deed of trust to Myers, trustee, the plaintiff's have not offered the testimony of any witness, nor does there appear in the record any evidence whatever, that the said company on February 7,1870, did not justly owe Peter Har-pold the debt of $14,386.46, or that the execution of the obligation to him for that sum, and the execution of the deed of trust to secure the same, were not made to and accepted by him in perfect good faith. The company was incorporated on the 4th day February, 1869; the lands purchased by the company, upon which it constructed its furnaces, &e., were all purchased in April, 1869, and the same were conveyed in trust to Myers on February 7, 1870, to secure said debt oí $14,386.46, and while it does not appear exactly when the $90,000.00 expended by the company in the construction of its furnace, sinking wells, &c., was done, yet we may reasonably conclude that as the whole capital-stock of the company was only $33,700.00, in making the expenditure of $90,000.00, it must have borrowed large amounts of money from some person, and as Peter Harpold was one of the corporators, and subscribed for forty shares ($4,000,00,) of the capital stock of the company, it would not seem unreasonable or improbable that the company should become indebted to him in an amount as large as that secured to him. Npon the three small parcels of land embraced by his trust-deed were erected [799]*799improvements, which by the admission of all parties cost the sum of $90,000.00, and he evidently at that time, and always afterwards until and at the sale thereof on October 7, 1878, considered the same an ample security for his debt, which when contracted was payable in one or two years after its date at the election of the debtor. He permitted this large debt to remain unpaid, contenting himself the first five years with the annual interest thereon, and thereafter until the sale under the trust with less than half the annual interest. At the sale he purchased the land for $6,100.00, which w'as less than one third of the balance remaining unpaid on the trust-debt.

It being lawful for the corporation to borrow money from or enter into a contract with one of its stockholders, and no evidence being adduced to show that this transaction was not perfectly fair, we are of opinion, that the obligation of the Valley City Salt Company to Peter Harpold, and the deed of trust executed to J ohn H.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Finefrock v. Kenova Mine Car Co.
37 F.2d 310 (Fourth Circuit, 1930)
Wiggington v. Auburn Wagon Co.
33 F.2d 496 (Fourth Circuit, 1929)
Campbell v. Hutchinson Lumber Co.
145 S.E. 160 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1928)
Wyoming Coal Sales Co. v. Smith-Pocahontas Coal Co.
144 S.E. 410 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1928)
Twentieth St. Bank v. Sharitz
296 F. 24 (Fourth Circuit, 1924)
Ohio Finance Co. v. Mannington Window Glass Co.
103 S.E. 333 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1920)
Tierney v. United Pocahontas Coal Co.
102 S.E. 249 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1920)
Poole v. Camden
92 S.E. 454 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1916)
Arnold v. Knapp
84 S.E. 895 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1915)
In re Parsons Lumber & Planing Mill Co.
218 F. 674 (N.D. West Virginia, 1914)
Middleton v. Bowyer
83 S.E. 723 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1914)
In re Elletson Co.
174 F. 859 (N.D. West Virginia, 1909)
Elliott v. Farmers' Bank of Philippi
57 S.E. 242 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1907)
Hulings v. Hulings Lumber. Co.
18 S.E. 620 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1893)
Ruffner Bros. v. Welton Coal & Salt Co.
15 S.E. 48 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1892)
Howe v. Sanford Fork & Tool Co.
44 F. 231 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana, 1890)
Olney v. Conanicut Land Co.
5 L.R.A. 361 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1889)
Borland v. Haven
37 F. 394 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California, 1888)
Sweeny v. Sugar Refining Co.
4 S.E. 431 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1887)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 W. Va. 789, 1885 W. Va. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hope-v-valley-city-salt-co-wva-1885.