Hurst v. American Ass'n

49 S.W. 800, 105 Ky. 793, 1899 Ky. LEXIS 274
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMarch 1, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 S.W. 800 (Hurst v. American Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurst v. American Ass'n, 49 S.W. 800, 105 Ky. 793, 1899 Ky. LEXIS 274 (Ky. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

JUDGE BURNAM

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff alleges that it is a foreign corporation organized under the laws of Great Britain; that the sale whmh [794]*794it seeks to enjoin is under an execution which issued against Alex. A. Arthur, trustee, and J. M. Brooks, security, on a sale bond executed by them as purchase-money of a tract of land sold under a decree of the Bell Circuit Court, belonging to the heirs of Robert George; that at this sale, on August 5, 1S90, the property was purchased by Fish and Percival, and that these parties failed to comply with the terms of the sale, and afterwards transferred the benefit of their bid to Alex. A. Arthur, trustee, who executed the two bonds as purchase-money for the property, each in the sum of $10,827.25, dated February 5, 1891, and upon one of these bonds the execution sought to be enjoined was issued.

It further alleges that it had no connection with the purchase of this property; that ‘"'Alex. A. Arthur, trustee, was -not acting for it in any capacity whatsoever with reference to the said lands, but was acting for himself, and for persons other than the plaintiff; . . . that while said Alex. A. Arthur did, from time to time, purchase property with the money of this plaintiff, and take the title to himself in the name of Alex. A. Arthur, trustee, yet the said Alex. A. Arthur was at the same time acting in a« similar capacity for divers other corporations and persons, using their money for tlie purchase of property, and taking the title for their benefit into his own name as Alex. A. Arthur, trustee; and that the said Alex. A. Arthur, at the date of the execution of the bonds, had no right to bind plaintiff by the execution of said sale bonds.”

The defendants, by ivay of answer, allege, in substance, that at the date of the sale of the lands under the decree of the Bell Circuit Court, and at the date of the transfer of the bid of Fish and Percival, Alex. A. Arthur was the general agent of plaintiff in the development of the city [795]*795of Middlesborough, and many other enterprises connected therewith; that he made the purchase in question for appellee, and that he had frequently exercised similar powers for plaintiff theretofore, and had been held out by it to the public as having such power and authority, and that appellee was bound by his acts.

It appears from the uncontradicted testimony of Alex. A. Arthur that he was the general manager of the appellee corporation from the fall of 1887 to the winter of 1891, and that he had full power “to buy, sell, and give away land,” to make contracts, and generally to perform for appellee, in the United States, the duties and acts commonly performed by a board of directors; that this power was confided to him by the stockholders and board of directors in London, England, when he was first appointed to the position of general manager, and that his authority was never questioned, and that he exercised this general authority for appellee until December, 1891; that appellee corporation desired to own the George lands, and that the board of directors had on two previous occasions directed their purchase, but that he did not buy them, only because the price was too high, but that he considered their ownership so important to the welfare of the company that a short time previously to the execution of the bond in question he again brought the matter of the purchase of this property to the attention of the board of directors at a meeting held in the city of London, England, and that they, after a careful consideration of the matter, directed that H. F. Pollock, the managing director in London, and he (Arthur), should promote the formation of a new company in connection with certain parties in Glasgow, Scotland, to be known as the Scottish Middlesborough Land Company, for the express purpose of purchasing the George lands; [796]*796that, after a full and clear understanding with the association board and with its managing director in London (Pollock), he (Arthur) instructed the company’s local attorney, Easton, to purchase the George lands in his name as trustee, to be held until the organization of the Scottish Middlesborough Land Company, at which time the property was to be turned over, and be finally paid for by the new company, and that in the meantime he was to make the first payment on the land; that it was necessary to have an intermediary in the deal, because "the price of the land was to be added to, so as to embrace the expenses of the promotion of the Scottish Middlesborough Land Company, to refund advances made by the American Association, to pay fees and cover profits in which others were interested, and to make provision for the payment to appellee corporation of the $10,000 which it was to get out of the deal.

He testifies that it was clearly understood by the directors of appellee corporation that the purchase was to be made so as to prevent a loss of the opportunity to acquire the property, and the directions to Easton to make the purchase were all made during his absence in London,- and that upon his return to Middlesborough he reported the whole transaction to Malcolm, the assistant manager, and Cary, the cashier, of appellee corporation, and to the attorneys of the company.

This witness testifies that there was no difference whatever between this deal and other transactions of a similar character, promoted and carried out by him in the interest of the association which were never interfered with or questioned; and that later, when it became known that the Glasgow company would not materialize, as general manager of the associa[797]*797tion — after having fully reported the failure of the deal to the chairman, secretary, and board of directors in London, which was done by him personally during his visit there in 1891 — he instructed the company’s cashier to charge up the obligation to the association, and to enter up the debt in his estimates of requirements for cash for current obligations, which estimate was sent monthly to London; that subsequently, while he was in the exercise of all the powers, rights, and privileges of general manager, he directed the company’s local attorney to prepare a declaration of trust for this property, as was his custom in all purchases for the association, which he in due course executed, and directed to be put on record.

None of these statements contained in the deposition of this witness are contradicted by any of the home directors of the company.

Hurst, the commissioner, testifies that Arthur, as general manager of appellee corporation, several years before the purchase of the land in question, requested witness to look up the title to the property, informing him that he wanted to buy it for his company; that he frequently wrote and told him to let him know when the title to the land was perfected, and what it could be bought for; that he did let him know when the suit was pending, and that he employed attorneys of the corporation to keep track of the proceeding's, and see that they were regularly taken; that in all these conversations he informed him that he wanted to purchase the property for appellee corporation; that at the time of the sale of the land Arthur was absent in London, but that. Easton, the local attorney of appellee corporation, and the party who had the custody of all its records, attended the sale, and bid on the property, hut that it was knocked down to Fish and Percival; that sub[798]

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W. 800, 105 Ky. 793, 1899 Ky. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurst-v-american-assn-kyctapp-1899.