Kinkel v. Harper

7 Colo. App. 45
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 7 Colo. App. 45 (Kinkel v. Harper) 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
Kinkel v. Harper, 7 Colo. App. 45 (Colo. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Bissell, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action started as a simple suit on a promissory note, dated the 15th of February, 1890, whereby one year after date the appellant Kinkle promised to pay The Bijou Reservoir and Canal Company $200 with a certain specified interest. In the original complaint Harper, the appellee, simply averred an indorsement and transfer to him as trustee, whereby, as he pleaded it, there came to him the right of action against the maker. On demurrer the complaint was held insufficient, apparently because it failed to state the terms of the trust out of which the trustee’s title sprung. We are not concerned with the regularity or propriety of this ruling. The plaintiff accepted the result and filed an amended complaint, which the defendant answered. The answers were demurred to and on the issue of law thus formed judgment was rendered for the plaintiff and the case is brought here by appeal. To apprehend the situation we are compelled to state the general features and allegations of the complaint as well as the substantive matters contained in the two defenses which were adjudged insufficient. The complaint set out the instrument whereby the trust was created. Omitting [47]*47such of the details as are not essential to the discussion, the instrument in general recited that the Reservoir and Canal Company on the date of its execution, March 1, 1890, assigned to John M. Wallace, as trustee, sundry notes of the stockholders of the company amounting to $20,000. The notes were stated to have been given by various persons and to bear date the 15th of February, 1890, and to be payable one year after date with interest. There was also a recitation of the transfer to the trustee of one hundred shares of the stock of the company of the par value of $10,000. The transfer of the notes and the stock was alleged in apt and legal terms and was stated to have been made to secure the payment of a series of sixteen debenture bonds of the value of $1,000 each, which the company issued on that date. These bonds were to be negotiated to raise funds for the purposes of the company. Whether arrangements for the disposition of the bonds had been antecedently made, or were to follow the execution of the trust and the delivery of the securities to the trustee, does not appear. There was attached to the writing creating the trust a list of the various notes. The complaint contained a copy of the receipt which was issued to each of the makers of the notes, which in general expressed the receipt of a note and its amount, together with a statement that it was one of a series of notes aggregating $20,000 taken for subscriptions to the stock of the company at the date named. According to the terms of the receipt, fifty per cent of the stock was to issue when the note should be paid. The remaining fifty per cent, to which the subscriber would be entitled if all the notes were paid, was subject to a deduction computed and based on the proportion which the unissued fifty per cent of the stock would bear to whatever amount of notes might be unpaid and uncollectible. From this it will be seen that fifty per cent of each subscriber’s stock was subject to an uncertain and an indefinite deduction, and only one half was to be delivered on the payment of his paper. The schedule of all the notes was annexed to the pleading. After setting up these facts, the plaintiff set [48]*48out the note and alleged that on the 1st of March, for a “ valid consideration,” the notes were sold and assigned to the trustee. The original writing provided for a successor in trust, and by proper averments it was made to appear that Harper, who brought the suit, was the legitimate successor. The pleader then averred that enough had not been collected from the notes and capital stock to pay the debenture bonds, and concluded witli an allegation that the greater part of the bonds were unpaid.

One of the difficulties in the case is rendered apparent by this statement. It springs from the failure of the pleader to state some facts which must appear to entitle him to recover. It likewise renders it exceedingly difficult to state what the .law is by which the rights of the parties must be measured and determined. There is no averment of the absolute issue and sale of the sixteen bonds. So far as can be gathered, the bonds were probably issued by the company, but whether they were disposed of and the cash received by the trustee or the company nowhere appears. The sale of the bonds and the receipt of the purchase price are facts absolutely essential to the application of the principles for which the appellee contends. They are likewise necessary to the ascertainment of the validity of the defenses, as will be very apparent from a succinct statement of their substance.

Two matters were pleaded separately. The first was a waut of consideration. The basis of the plea consisted of allegations respecting the terms and character of the subscription and the status of the capital stock of the company. The pleader averred a representation by the company of its possession of three hundred shares of unsubscribed capital stock of the par value of $100 per share. Two hundred shares were said to be open to subscription and the other one hundred was to be deposited with the trustee as collateral security for the debenture bonds about to be issued. So far as concerns the particular note in dispute, it was alleged to have been given in payment of a subscription for two shares of the capital stock of the Bijou Company. It was next [49]*49averred there was no unsubscribed capital stock in the treasury of the company or in its possession and open to subscription other than the one hundred shares, which, as stated, were issued and turned over to Wallace. There follows an allegation that the note was not transferred to the trustee in the due course of business, but that he took title in such way as to render the note in his hands open to the same equities and defenses as would be admissible were the suit brought by the company itself.

The second defense alleged a failure of consideration, and in much detail, which need not be repeated here, set up the scheme which led to this litigation. Stating no more than is necessary to make the matter plain, it was set out that the Canal Company had built a canal from the source of supply to a point a few miles outside of the limits of Fort Morgan. The company desired to continue the construction of the canal to a point beyond the town, whereby the water would be available to these various subscribers. The company advertised and stated its intention to continue the construction and to devote the money which would be realized from the sale of its bonds to this purpose, using this capital solely for this object. It was alleged the subscriptions were procured upon the faith and strength of these representations, and to secure the advantages which would result to the subscribers by the extension of the canal and the delivery of water. The answer then proceeded to set out in considerable detail the failure of the company to carry out its promises and the application of the funds to other uses than those to which the company had agreed to put them. It was stated the company had used the money to pay old debts, had totally failed to complete the canal and had never delivered the water according to its declared intentions and according to its agreement with the subscribers. To this answer the plaintiff demurred and the court rendered judgment in his favor.

The difficulties with which we are beset in any attempt to state the law which must control this case must be apparent from a careful consideration of this statement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Colo. App. 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinkel-v-harper-coloctapp-1895.