Huston v. Clark

18 A. 419, 127 Pa. 620, 1889 Pa. LEXIS 1153
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 7, 1889
DocketNo. 138
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 A. 419 (Huston v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huston v. Clark, 18 A. 419, 127 Pa. 620, 1889 Pa. LEXIS 1153 (Pa. 1889).

Opinion

Opinion,

Mr. Justice Mitchell:

Owing to the number of the exceptions to the report of the master, and the brevity of the opinion of the court below, sustaining them as a whole without separate consideration, this case is presented in the form of a review of the master’s report rather than of the judgment of the court itself. But a detailed consideration of the eighty-one assignments of error, or even an attempt to classify them, would be tedious and unprofitable, and we therefore prefer to present our view of the whole case, in the natural order of the substantial questions raised.

1. We proceed therefore to consider, first, the parties and the situation.

The parties were the owners of practically the whole stock of the Midvale Steel Works, and had made advances to carry on its operations which had been unsuccessful. Appellant was the president of the company and had advanced a very-large portion of his private fortune to sustain it. The other parties had also made advances, but not nearly to the same extent, either in actual amount or in proportion to their other [628]*628means. It is not shown that there was any duty to make these advances, or that they were not entirely voluntary. The questions therefore of the relative amounts advanced by the different parties, and by whose fault such advances were made necessary, discussed before the master, are not of any importance. Nor, in view of the subsequent agreement is it at all material whether or not there was any express promise of contribution at the time appellant made his principal advances.

In January, 1873, appellant, finding his means exhausted and his health failing, called upon the appellees for further financial aid. The result was that the advances of all the parties to the company were liquidated and settled, to that date, by the issue to all of them of additional stock, and to appellant the issue also of certain first mortgage bonds and a note of the company. Thereupon appellees assumed the active administration of the company’s affairs, and began to make large additional advances of money. Matters continued thus until May, 1873, when the appellant’s mental health having become seriously impaired, and the appellees having made very large advances, a consultation was held which resulted in a written agreement.

Before proceeding to the consideration of this agreement it may be well to dispose of a collateral matter. It is set forth in the bill that in January, 1873, “the plaintiff was not in the condition of mind to be able intelligently to protect his interests,” and that on the 13th of May (the day of the signing of the agreement), “plaintiff’s mind was so seriously affected that he was totally incapable of understanding any business matters whatever.” It would be sufficient to say that these are mere obiter suggestions which are not made the ground for asking relief, and which might therefore be passed over as surplusage. No averment is made that any fraudulent advantage was taken of appellant’s condition, or that any other or more beneficial arrangement was proposed for his interests, nor is there any prayer for the rescission or re-formation of the agreements. But it is proper to say that even now, with all the light that full investigation and subsequent developments give us, it does not appear what better arrangment for appellant’s interest could have been made. The corporation was clearly insolvent if not bankrupt. Two courses only were [629]*629open; either to wind up the corporate business at once and face the loss directly, or to go on and put more money in, with the hope of ultimate recoupment. By the former, appellant would occupy the position of a preferred creditor (and apparently the only one at that time) on first mortgage bonds for $50,000, and on general account for $51,000 on note; but, on the other hand, he had made himself personally liable to such an extent that if there should be a deficiency of assets on the liquidation, his whole private fortune was gone, and his right to any contribution from appellees at least doubtful. The appellees chose to go on, in the hope of a smaller loss in the future, if indeed they can be said to have had a choice at all. In the language of one of them, William Sellers, “ it was our desire to sell the works, and close out, but we had so much invested that we could not afford to stop, provided we could go on and retrieve ourselves at all.” From this course however, appellant, even if he had preferred it, was apparently barred by want of means, as well as by his condition of health. In this situation he accepted the agreement of the appellees to indemnify him from all further liability, and took his chances of ultimately saving something from his bonds and stock.

In making this agreement appellant was represented by his brother and son, and by his counsel, as competent, strenuous and indefatigable an adviser in complicated business matters as this bar could furnish, the late Chapman Biddle. The draft of the agreement is in his handwriting, and it would be difficult to convince any one who ever knew him professionally, that any point in his client’s favor was either overlooked or surrendered without a full equivalent.

The allegations as to appellant’s mental condition cannot therefore be taken as any part of the substance of the present bill, and the agreement of May 13, 1873, must be accepted as the foundation of the subsequent rights of the parties.

II. The agreement and the respective rights of the parties under it.

The agreement stipulated for two things, first, the assignment by appellant to appellees of all his stock, bonds and note of the corporation, and all his other property theretofore pledged for its debts; in consideration of which appellees indemnified him against all personal liability for the debts of the corpora[630]*630tion, and all demands against him “ arising out of his relation to or connection with the said steel works;” and secondly, appellant’s bonds and note of the corporation, and his other pledged stock (not including his steel works stock), together with like amounts of the same or equivalent securities to be contributed by each of the other parties, were to constitute a “ guarantee fund for paying the debts of the said works, other than the debts constituting or belonging to the said guarantee fund itself.” And if there should be any surplus, it was to be devoted first to the return, in kind or value, of the outside stocks contributed by the parties, next to the parties in proportion to their company bonds and stocks in the fund, and lastly pro rata to all the stockholders of the steel works.

The intent of this agreement is perfectly clear. Appellant, who had been succeeded by Mr. Sellers in the presidency of the company three days before, retired from all participation in the conduct of the business, and surrendered the control of his stock and bonds to the appellees. In consideration therefor, he was indemnified from further liability, but retained his right to a share of the surplus, should there be any after settlement. On the other hand, appellees took upon themselves the conduct of the works, either to wind up or to continue, with unlimited control over the whole business and assets, including appellant’s bonds, notes and stock, subject only to the restrictions as to the guarantee fund, and to the duty to indemnify and account.

The guarantee fund, except to the comparatively insignificant extent of appellant’s Phila. Ins.

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Related

Huston ex rel. Perot v. Clark
29 A. 866 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
18 A. 419, 127 Pa. 620, 1889 Pa. LEXIS 1153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huston-v-clark-pa-1889.