Hornor v. New South Oil Mill

197 S.W. 1163, 130 Ark. 551, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 438
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 22, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 197 S.W. 1163 (Hornor v. New South Oil Mill) 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
Hornor v. New South Oil Mill, 197 S.W. 1163, 130 Ark. 551, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 438 (Ark. 1917).

Opinion

HART, J.

On July 10, 1916, E. S. Ready instituted this action in the chancery court against the Yalley Oil Company, alleging that it was an insolvent corporation and praying for its dissolution and the settlement of its affairs. A receiver was appointed and its property was sold for enough to pay its debts in full.

Among the claims presented to the court for allowance was a claim for $29,700 filed by the New South Oil Mill, a copartnership.

E. C. Hornor, S. S. Faulkner and T. H. Faulkner, stockholders in the Valley Oil Company, filed exceptions to the allowance of the claim, and for grounds stated that E. S. Ready was an officer and stockholder in the Yalley Oil Company and that he had purchased the claims of four creditors aggregating $29,700, at thirty-three and one-third cents on the dollar and that they were transferred to the New South Oil Mill for himself. Their contention was that said claims should only be allowed for the price actually paid the creditors for them.

The chancery court allowed the claims in full with interest and Hornor and others have prosecuted this ap-. peal from that decree.

The facts upon which the decree was bas'ed are as follows:

The Yalley Oil Company was a domestic corporation doing business at Pine Bluff, Arkansas, with an authorized capital stock of $83,000, which was divided into 830 shares of the par value of $100 each. The stockholders and the amount of stock owned by them in the company are as follows:

E. C. Hornor.,..$19,000
Geo. W. Willey. 13,000
A. H. D. Perkins. 10,000
W..A. Short,. 10,000
T. H. Faulkner.$ 4,000
S. S. Faulkner. 4,000
Leon Berton. 3,000
John Meyers. 1,000
E. S. Beady. 19,000

Perkins, Beady, Hornor and S. S. Fanlkner, were directors of the corporation. Perkins was president and manager and Beady was vice president of the corporation. In 1915 the corporation owed debts to the amount of between fifty-seven and fifty-eight thousand dollars. Of these debts twenty-nine thousand seven hundred dollars were owed to creditors who were not secured. Hor-nor, Perkins and Willey endorsed the notes of the corporation for the balance of its indebtedness. In 1915 all these endorsers were insolvent except Beady. The officers and stockholders of the corporation regarded it as being in an insolvent condition, and in the fall of 1915, held a meeting at which the creditors of the corporation were present. An effort was made to get the unsecured creditors to take hold of the oil mill and run it until they had made sufficient profit to pay themselves. The creditors declined to do this. An offer was then made to buy the claims of the unsecured creditors at a discount' but the creditors refused tó take less than seventy-five cents on the dollar. This offer was refused by the stockholders of the corporation. In 1916 a committee, of which Beady was a member, was appointed to formulate a letter and send to the unsecured creditors offering thirty-three and one-third cents on a dollar for their claims. The draft of this letter was prepared by Beady and submitted to Perkins, the president of the corporation. Perkins sent the letter to the creditors and they replied by refusing the offer. Perkins was asked to resign because the company was insolvent and unable to pay him any salary. Perkins sent in his resignation, which was accepted on July 6,1916.

As above stated, the present suit was filed on July 10,1916. About the middle of June, 1916, the New South Oil Mill, a partnership composed of B. T. Doughtie and Mrs. Ready, the wife of E. S. Ready, began negotiations looking to the purchase of these unsecured claims. E. S. Ready acted as agent of the firm and secured the assignment of the claims of four creditors aggregating in amount twenty-nine thousand and seven hundred dollars' to the New South Oil Mill. The creditors were paid by a check of the firm signed by R. T. Doughtie and countersigned by E. S. Ready. Ready met the creditors in the city of New York in June, 1916, and there made the contract for the purchase of the claims at thirty-three and one-third cents on the dollar, cash. When he returned home the checks were sent in to the creditors at once. The New South Oil Mill was the successor of the South Oil Mill Company, which was a corporation. It had a capital stock of $50,000, divided into two thousand shares of stock, of which Ready owned eleven hundred and sixty-four. In the fall of 1912, the corporation was dissolved and its assets turned over to the New South Oil Mill, a partnership composed of R. T. Doughtie and Mrs. E. S. Ready. Ready gave to his wife his interest in the corporation. He was solvent at the time and has continued solvent ever since. He was a director in a bank in the city of Helena at that time. The bank became insolvent in 1913, and Ready was appointed receiver and wound up its affairs.

It may here he stated that it is the contention of the stockholders of the Valley Oil Company that Ready purchased the claims in question for himself and that their transfer to the New South Oil Mill was colorable merely. On this point Doughtie, being called by the appellants, testified that he and Mrs. E. S. Ready composed the firm of the New South Oil Mill, which operated an oil mill at Helena, Arkansas; that E. S. Ready had no interest in said firm; that Ready was paid the sum of $300 per month by the firm to act in an advisory capacity merely, hut that he, Doughtie, was the active manager of the firm; that all the checks of the firm were signed by himself and countersigned by E. S. Ready or by Mrs. E. S. Ready; that the Valley Oil Mill Company became indebted to his firm in the sum of $10,000 and in this way he became interested in the affairs of that corporation; that the corporation began to be regarded as insolvent in the spring of 1915; that differences had arisen between its stockholders and that he had been called in to help adjust these differences and in this way became perfectly familiar with the affairs of this corporation; that he knew a committee had been appointed to buy in the claims of the unsecured creditors at a discount and that their negotiations had been unsuccessful ; that about the middle of June, 1916, he first conceived the idea of buying the^e claims for his firm and in this way help to protect his firm in its own claim; that he mentioned the matter to Mr. Ready and got bim to undertake the negotiations for his firm; that pursuant to his directions, Mr. Ready went to New York City and met the representatives of the four unsecured creditors whose claims aggregated the sum of $29,700; that after some discussion of the matter, they agreed to take thirty-three and one-third cents on the dollar for their claims if they should be paid at once in cash. Ready agreed to this offer for the New South Oil Mill, and as soon as he returned to Helena, checks were sent to . the various creditors signed by R. T. Doughtie for the New South Oil Mill and countersigned by E. S. Ready as had been the custom. Doughtie stated positively that he first formed the design of buying these claims at a discount for his firm and so stated to .Ready.

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Bluebook (online)
197 S.W. 1163, 130 Ark. 551, 1917 Ark. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hornor-v-new-south-oil-mill-ark-1917.