J. B. Wheeler Banking Co. v. Holden

11 Colo. App. 292
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1898
DocketNo. 1378
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Colo. App. 292 (J. B. Wheeler Banking Co. v. Holden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J. B. Wheeler Banking Co. v. Holden, 11 Colo. App. 292 (Colo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Thomson, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Benjamin Ferris, as assignee for the benefit of its creditors, of the J. B. Wheeler Banking Company of Aspen, brought this action against Edward R. Holden and Richard Cline, as directors of the Holden Smelting and Milling Company, a corporation, to recover from them an indebtedness due to the banking company from the milling company; the ground of the defendants’ liability being, as alleged, the failure of the milling company to comply with the requirements of section 252 of the general statutes, which provides that where the president and directors of a corporation have not made and recorded in the office of the secretary of state, and in the office of the recorder of deeds of the county in which the business of the corporation is carried on, a certificate showing that its capital stock has been fully paid in, unless the corporation shall, annually, within sixty days from the first day of January, make and file with the recorder of deeds, a report showing the amount of its capital stock, the proportion actually paid in, and the amount of existing debts, its directors [294]*294shall he jointly and severally liable for all its debts contracted during the year next preceding the time when the report should have been made, and until it shall be made.

The answer admitted the failure of the milling company to make and file the report, but set up some matters which were intended to be in avoidance of the effect of the default. These however, need not be noticed, because they cut no figure at the trial, and all claim on account of them is abandoned here. The answer also admitted the existence of the indebtedness against the milling company at the time of the commencement of the action, but alleged a subsequent contract of novation, whereby it was discharged from liability, and a corporation called the Aspen Union Smelting Company substituted as the banking company’s debtor.

Before the trial the assignee made final settlement of the trust estate and was discharged, and the banking company having resumed business, was, on motion, substituted as plaintiff. The trial court found a novation as alleged, and rendered final judgment against the plaintiff, from which it prosecutes this appeal.

The only question presented to this court, and the only question which remains in the case, is whether the liability of the milling company was transferred to the smelting company in such manner that, as against the former, the indebtedness was canceled, and the latter became the sole debtor. The facts are not in dispute, and in order to an understanding of the positions which counsel of the respective parties have assumed in respect to them, it is necessary to give them somewhat in detail.

The Holden Smelting and Milling Company constructed, and for some time operated, works at Aspen for the treatment of ores. While constructing and operating its works, this company contracted indebtedness to R. W. Woodbury, in the sum of $46,698.92; to the Union National Bank of Denver, in the sum of $41,955.53; to the State Bank of Denver, in the sum of $31,120; and to the plaintiff, in the sum of $13,606.05. Charles H. Graham of Philadelphia had loaned [295]*295to the defendant, Holden, $100,000. Holden was a director in the milling company, and also its president. He held all of its stock but a few shares, and this he pledged to secure the loan. He held the notes of the company in sums aggregating about $200,000, for advancements which he had made on its account; and, being pressed by Graham for payment, Holden transferred these notes to him as additional security. The other creditors, inckiding the appellant, were pushing the company on their claims; and to secure them, and for their benefit, it executed a mortgage of all its property at Aspen to a trustee. Mr. Graham brought suit by attachment upon the notes which had been transferred to him, and the mortgagees commenced proceedings for the foreclosure of their mortgage. The mortgage and the attachment covered the same property. A litigation ensued between Mr. Graham and the mortgagees, each party claiming priority of lien, to determine who was entitled to satisfaction first out of the property. Priority was adjudged to the mortgagees, and a decree of foreclosure entered in their favor. Mr. Graham took steps to make and perfect an appeal. On the 16th day of April, 1895, the property was sold pursuant to the decree, Mr. Woodbury being the purchaser for himself and the other mortgagees. On that day Mr. Graham and the mortgage creditors entered into a contract which provided that, for the purpose of settling their dispute amicably, a new corporation should be formed, to which, upon its organization, Mr. Wood-bury should convey the property he had purchased, and to which Mr. Graham should cause to be conveyed all the right, title and interest in the property of the Holden Smelting and Milling Company, and that the capital stock of the company should be divided among the parties to the contract in proportion to the amounts due them respectively. The contract further provided that after the organization of the company, it should make an agreement with the parties to the contract that it would divide its first profits among the parties, except Graham, in proportion to their respective claims, until their claims, without interest, should be paid in full; that then [296]*296the profits should go to Graham until his claim should be paid in full; but that if the mortgage creditors should not be paid in full on January 1, 1899, thereafter, the profits should be shared by all the parties to the contract, and that when they had received full payment, the profits should belong to the stockholders according to their holdings. The proposed new corporation was accordingly organized as the Aspen Union Smelting Company, the conveyances provided for were made, and on the 24th day of April, 1895, the corporation entered into the agreement with the parties to the first contract for which that contract made provision.

Mr. Holden testified that shortly before the incorporation of the Aspen Union Smelting Company, Mr. Graham approached him and stated that the latter company was about to be formed, and would assume all the debts of the Holden Smelting and Milling Company, and submitted a proposition to him as president of the milling company that it waive its rights of redemption by executing a deed of the property to the smelting company in consideration of its release from its indebtedness; that Mr. Graham exhibited to the witness a copy of the contract of April 24, but that the contract of April 16 was not seen by him; that the witness finally agreed with Mr. Graham that the smelting company should assume all the debts of the milling company, and that the latter company should be released and discharged from liability on their account, and should execute the deed required, and that the deed was executed in pursuance of this agreement. The sum which was bid for the property was apportioned among the mortgagees, and the share allowed to the J. B. Wheeler Banking Company was sufficient to reduce its claim, which originally was •113,606.05, to $8,211.19.

It is earnestly and ably argued that the facts in evidence established the assumption by the smelting company of the debt of the milling company, and the extinguishment of the latter company’s liability. Of course if such was the case, the discharge of the milling company’s obligation carried with it the resulting liability of the directors. Counsel find the [297]

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Bluebook (online)
11 Colo. App. 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-b-wheeler-banking-co-v-holden-coloctapp-1898.