In re Marcella Cotton Mills

8 F.2d 522, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1651
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Alabama
DecidedSeptember 23, 1925
DocketNo. 5186
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 8 F.2d 522 (In re Marcella Cotton Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Marcella Cotton Mills, 8 F.2d 522, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1651 (M.D. Ala. 1925).

Opinion

CLAYTON, District Judge.

This is a contest of the claim of Thomas Raby, Jr., and Mas Miller, as trustees of the original Marcella Cotton Manufacturing Company, a corporation, with its principal place of business at Eufaula, Ala. There were 1,000 shares of capital stock, of the par value of [523]*523$100 each; Thomas Raby, Jr., owning 999 shares, and Max Miller one share of this stoek. During a suspension of the operation of the mill in 1923, they made efforts to sell the whole property of the corporation. William G. Broadfoot came into possession of one of their circular letters, signed “Thomas Eaby, Ine.,” in which it was stated that a purchaser of the property was desired. Broadfoot answered this circular, went to Eufaula, made a survey of the property, and tendered an offer to Raby on December 11, 1923, to buy the property. On the 19th of that month Broadfoot’s proposition of purchase was accepted.

The agreed price of the assets, including the stock of the Marcella Cotton Manufacturing Company, was $60,000 par value of stoek, with certain preferences set out in the contract, in a new corporation to be organized by Broadfoot, and as a part of the contract the new corporation was to pay $50,000 in cash. Broadfoot organized the new corporation on December 23, 1923, under the name of Marcella Cotton Mills, which is the bankrupt here.

Inasmuch as the two corporations have similar names, for convenience one is hereinafter referred to as the old corporation, and the other as the new corporation. The articles of incorporation provided for the above-mentioned $60,000 par value of stoek, and the property of the old corporation was conveyed to the new corporation by Miller and Raby, using the name of the old corporation in the deed of transfer, for the title of the property was in that corporation. The deed recited full payment of purchase price. Because the stock was in their names, Raby and Miller transferred in blank all of the stoek of the old corporation to the new corporation and delivered the same to Broad-foot. Thereupon Raby and Miller filed articles of dissolution of the old corporation in the probate court of Barbour county, Ala., and they as directors became trustees, as provided by the law of Alabama in ease of the dissolution of a corporation. This completed the contract upon the part of Raby and Miller. In order to carry out the. contract upon the part of Broadfoot, the new corporation borrowed from other sources and paid to Raby and Miller $45,000 in money by check payable to Thomas Raby, Inc., and Thomas Raby, Jr., and paid the $5,000, balance of the $50,000 agreed upon as above stated, in goods of that value belonging to the new corporation, to Thomas Raby, Inc. Raby and Miller knew of the payment of the $5,000 in this manner. They were parties to it, and neither of them made any objection to it until January 15, 1925, a year afterwards. It was also understood between Thomas Raby, Ine., Thomas Raby, Jr., and Broadfoot, at the time of the organization of the new corporation, that Thomas Raby, Ine., a cotton factor in Philadelphia, should handle the product of the mill. This last-mentioned corporation was controlled and managed by Thomas Raby, Jr., and was. owned by Thomas Raby, Jr., and Max Miller. The details of all the transactions referred to, with the single exception of the proposition to purchase and the acceptance of the same, was had with and conducted, ®by Thomas Raby, Ine.

. Thomas Raby, Inc., directed on February 8, 1924, that the certificates of preferred stock be issued as follows:

Jacob Miller................. $15,000

Max Miller.......................... 16,000

Benjamin Ii\ Miller................... 5,000

Thomas Raby, Jr.................... 10,000

Thomas Raby, Jr.................... 0,000

Making the total of..............$60,000

Accordingly the certificates were issued, except that there was an error in the initials of one of the Millers. All the provisions specified in the contract were not incorporated in the certificates. Thomas Raby, Inc., made objection on that account, and Broad-foot answered by telegram that the desired changes would be made, and then went to Philadelphia for the purpose of getting the matter adjusted, and on returning to Atlanta had the certificates drawn as desired.

In handling the product of the mill, Thomas Raby, Ine., became indebted to the new corporation in the sum of about $19,000 for goods contracted for, and not taken and paid for when the market price of such goods declined. This caused a disagreement, for then Raby insisted upon thé delivery of the certificates and Broadfoot upon an adjustment of the matter before the delivery of the certificates.

This difference was adjusted between all the parties on May 9, 1924, and Thomas Raby, Inc., instructed Broadfoot to attach the certificates of stock, except those issued to Thomas Raby, Jr.s to a draft on Thomas Raby, Inc., for $10,000, which draft Thomas Raby, l'ne., agreed to pay. Upon the payment of the draft for $10,000, all the certificates were to be delivered to Thomas Raby, Inc., except the $19,000 par value certificates issued to Thomas Raby, Jr., and these latter were to be held as security for the balance of $9,000 agreed to be paid by [524]*524Thomas Raby, Ine. Accordingly, Broadfoot attached the; certificates issued to the Millers to the draft and forwarded all through the bank for collection. The draft remained in Philadelphia 10 days, but was'never paid by Thomas Raby, Inc. When claimants failed to carry put this agreement, a single certificate was issued to Thomas Raby, Inc., and this is the status of the matter of certificates. On July 18,1924, another futile attempt was made to settle the matter. Thus the affair stood, with different efforts to make settlement, until September, 1924, when Max Miller filed a bill in the circuit court of Barbour county, Alabama, in equity, setting up that Raby and Miller were then the stock-’ holders of the new corporation, and sought an injunction against the new corporation and its officers to keep them from delivering to Raby the certificates of stock, and undertaking to subject this stock to the payment of a debt of $16,000, which Miller alleged that the old corporation owed him. Injunction was granted and remained in effect until it was dissolved on the petition of the attorney for the trustee in the bankruptcy proceedings now before this court.

On October 28, 1924, Thomas Raby, Jr., assigned his stock in the new corporation to an attorney by the name of Mesirov. No action was ever taken by Thomas Raby, Ine., or by Thomas Raby, Jr., or by Max Miller, as individuals_pr as trustees of the old corporation, or by Mesirov, to rescind the eon- . tract upon which they became stockholders, or to-change their status from that of stockholders, until December 18, 1924, at which time Miller undertook to amend his bill for injunction above referred to, and by such amendment to change his position from "that of stockholder to that of creditor with a vendor’s lien. On January 15, 1925, Raby and Miller, through the agency of the original corporation, the Marcella Cotton Manufacturing Company, undertook to change their status from stockholders to that of creditors.

On January 18, 1925, the new corporation was adjudged ' a bankrupt.

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8 F.2d 522, 1925 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marcella-cotton-mills-almd-1925.