In re Georgia Steel Co.

240 F. 473, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1385
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 8, 1917
DocketNo. 402
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 240 F. 473 (In re Georgia Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Georgia Steel Co., 240 F. 473, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1385 (N.D. Ga. 1917).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge.

The matter for consideration here now grows out of an application to review a certain decision of C. D. McCutchen, referee in bankruptcy, as to the allowance of a claim made by certain bondholders and the trustee for the bondholders to prove their bonds and to have a lien on the property of the Georgia Steel Company declared in their favor. Perhaps the question here would be better stated by an order made by the referee in the case, which is as follows:

[475]*475“Georgia Iron & Coal Co., Joel Hurt, Mrs. Joel Hurt, Mrs. Mabel Bickerstaff, Mrs. Eva L. Simms, H. L. Woodruff, C. E. Buek, Equitable Trust Co., of New York, Bondholders, Trust Company of Georgia, Trustee for the Bondholders under the Mortgage, vs. O. T. Peoples, Trustee in Bankruptcy.
“Proof of Claim of Secured Debt and Objections Thereto, Before Honorable C. D. McCutchen, Referee in Bankruptcy.
“The above-named bondholders and the trustee therefor having filed in the office of the referee a proof of claim against the estate of the above-named bankrupt, as a secured claim, secured by a mortgage on the property of the bankrupt in the sum of $897,000, principal,. besides interest at the rate of 5 per cent, per annum from October 1, 1910; the alleged indebtedness being claimed as the unpaid purchase price of the property of the Georgia Iron & Coal Company now standing in the name of the bankrupt; and the evidence of said claimed indebtedness being said bonds of the bankrupt held by the above-named bondholders secured by a trust mortgage; and said claim, bonds, and mortgage having been objected to by the trustee in bankruptcy, and the objections having come on for hearing before me, and testimony having been offered in behalf of said bondholders and the trustee therefor in support of said claim, and by the trustee in bankruptcy in opposition thereto; and due deliberation'having been had;- and after hearing C. L. Anderson, D. W. Rountree, and A. C. King, Esquires, attorneys for said bondholders and tne trustee therefor, in support of said claim and mortgage, and S. M. Chambliss and Paul F. Akin, Esquires, attorneys for the trustee in bankruptcy, in opposition thereto: It is ordered that the said claim and mortgage be, and the same are hereby, disallowed. and the objections thereto sustained, and the several claims of each of the said bondholders and the trustee therefor are disallowed and the objections thereto sustained.”

The referee, in his certificate goes thoroughly and elaborately into the questions involved in the case. On the objection of the trustee in bankruptcy, as will be seen, the referee refuses to allow the bonds to be proven. In order to reach this conclusion the referee heard a large amount of testimony, pro and con, heard extensive argument by counsel, and made a very elaborate report and opinion on the facts and legal questions involved in the certificate filed by him in the case.

The bonds were given for the purchase money of the property of the Georgia Iron & Coal Company, sold by it to the Southern Steel Company, a foreign corporation, the purchasers subsequently becoming incorporated as the Georgia Steel Company, a domestic corporation,-' because of the difficulty of a foreign corporation holding lands to the amount necessary to carry out the purchase and to the extent involved in the purchase.

The objections to the proof of the bonds were upon the grounds, stating them briefly and without- quoting :

First, that there,was misrepresentation and fraud as to the value of the property sold by the Georgia Iron & Coal Company to the vendee •on the part of the vendor company; second, that there was secret commissions paid by the vendor company to certain officers of the vendee company for the purpose of bringing about the sale, which were fraudulent and rendered the contract invalid and unenforceable.

The Georgia Iron & Coal Company sold a very large amount of property, consisting of tracts of land in various counties in North Georgia, the land conveyed amounting in all to something like 50,000 acres. One part of the property sold was property supposed to contain coal, and which had been largely mined for coal, and was then being [476]*476mined. A large amount of appurtenances and outfit which are usually attached to coal mining properties were .included in one part of the state, in Dade county mainly, and another part, containing iron ore, in other counties, and especially and principally in Bartow county. A full description of all this property is set out in the pleadings and the proof, and it is unnecessary to refer to it more particularly in deciding tire questions which are here for determination.

It appears that in the spring or summer of 1906, the Georgia Iron & Coal Company had become considerably indebted, and its creditors were pressing it to some extent for the collection of their debts. A creditors’ committee, it seems, was formed, consisting of Mr. Charles E. Currier, president of the Atlanta National Bank, Mr. Ernest Woodruff, of the Trust Company of Georgia, and Mr. Thos. D. Meador, vice president of the Dowry National Bank. Mr. Meador seems to have been intrusted by that committee, acting apparently through Mr. Currier, with the task of selling the properties of the Georgia Iron & Coal Company. Mr. Meador, from the evidence, seems to have gone about the work earnestly, and in doing so secured the services of one C. E. Buek, whom it is said, in turn secured the services of one Oakleigh Thome, to assist him in making the sale. It is to these two last-named parties, Buek and Thorne, that it is claimed the secret commissions were improperly paid.

Mr. Meador proceeded with the work of making a sale, and finally made a sale on September 12, 1906, to the Southern Steel Company. He seems to have been ’dealing mainly with Moses Taylor • and R. B. Van Cortland, as representatives of the Southern Steel Company. Meador made the contract for the sale of all the properties apparently for an amount and on terms which he thought would be satisfactory to Mr. Joel Hurt, who was the main representative of the Georgia Iron & Coal Company and the person mainly interested in it and in the sale. After Meador had made the sale to the Southern Steel Company and when Mr. Hurt heard of the sale, he very earnestly objected to the sale and refused to carry it out, declining positively, it seems, to execute the contract, claiming that Meador did not have the authority to make the sale, and that the terms agreed upon were not satisfactory to him.

It appears clearly from all tire evidence that Hurt protested vigorously against the sale made by Meador. It seems that Hurt, at the time he heard of the sale by Meador, was in Cincinnati, and he says in his testimony that when he heard of it he wired Meador at his hotel in New York, protesting against any attempt of a sale of these properties by him. He says also:

“I wired George (that is, his son George Hurt) to follow up Woodruff and Meador and protest to both of them against any interference on their part with the sale of these properties; that X was then negotiating at a price I had no idea they would obtain, no shch price, I think, is my recollection. I sent several telegrams to him and to Mr. Meador, all protesting. At the same time I sent a telegram to Mr. Currier, asking him "if he had given Meador any authority to withdraw it, because I would not permit such a sale to go through.

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Bluebook (online)
240 F. 473, 1917 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-georgia-steel-co-gand-1917.