Larwill v. Burke

19 Ohio C.C. 449
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 Ohio C.C. 449 (Larwill v. Burke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Larwill v. Burke, 19 Ohio C.C. 449 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Caldwell, J.

íhe plaintiff, John C. Larwill, brings this action against Stevenson Burke, Charles G. Hickox, as administrator of Charles Hickox,deceased, The Snow Pork & Cleveland Coal Company, W. D. Lee, Eli Hull and others; and in his amended petition he states for his cause of action that about the month of August, 1873,-The Snow Fork & Cleveland Coal Company was organized as a corporation under the laws of Ohio, for purchasing and holding mineral lands and mining and shipping coal and iron ores in the Hocking Valley in said state, That for this purpose it purchased the fee simple title to 5619.86 acres of valuable coal and iron ore lands situated in the Hocking Valley and on the line of the Columbus,Hocking Valley & Toledo Railway Company; that the capital stock of the company was 30,000 shares of $100 a share, and there was subscribed and paid up 27,849 shares, and no more.

The plaintiff "claims that he is the owner of 2,860 shares, fully paid up,of the capital stock of The Snow Fork & Cleveland Coal Company. He sets out the numbers of his certificates representing the shares that .he holds, and says that all of his certificates bear date of February, 24, 1874, ex[452]*452cept one which bears date of June 10, 1874.

On the 30th day of September, 1881, and for some years prior the defendants Burke, Lee, and Oharles Hickox, were directors and also comprised the executive committee of the Snow Fork <te Cleveland Coal Company, and Burke was the president and Hickox was the vice president. And that in the summer of 1881, Burke and Hickox became largely interested as stockholders and otherwise in the Columbus, Hocking Valley & Toledo Bailway Company, a corporation at that time formed by the consolidation of three railway companies of Ohio, known as The Columbus, & Hocking Valley Railway Company, The Columbus & Toledo Railway Company, and the West Virginia Railway Company.

That the defendants, Burke and Charles Hickox, with their associates in The Columbus, Hocking Valley & Toledo Railway Company, desired to borrow money for the same and proposed to secure a loan by a mortgage on ali the property and franchises of said railway company; and for the purpose of further securing the proposed consolidated loan and of effecting an advantageous sale of said lands, they desired to subject to the lien of said railway company’s mortgage a large body of said railway company’s lands — coal and iron lands — situated on said railway, which said coal and iron lands included those belonging to said Snow Fork & Cleveland Coal Company; and for this purpose, Burke, Hickox and others sought to get control of the majority of the capital stock of the said Snow Fork& Cleveland Coal Company, and did purchase and get control of at leas.t four-fifths of the capital stock of said company. That shortly prior to the 30th day of September, A. D. 1881, for the purpose of enabling themselves to subject the said lands of the Snow Fork and Cleveland Coal Company to the said consolidated railway company’s lien and thereby enabling them in the manner hereinafter mentioned, to sell and dispose of the said lands upon desirable and advantageous terms, the defendants Burke and Hickox and others acting in their behalf and under their directions, organized under the laws of the state of Ohio a corporation called The Hocking Coal & Railway Company, and on or about September 29, 1881, said Burke and Hickox and Joseph Perkins-being a special committee of the directors of said company, appointed for that purpose, sold the said lands to the Hocking [453]*453Coal & Railway Company, wbioh sale was consummated on the 30th day of September, 1881, by the conveyance of said lands by deed executed and delivered to the railway company by Burke as president and Charles G. Hickox, son of Charles Hickox, as secretary of the Snow Fork & Cleveland Coal Company,

That the lands comprised all the property, assets and estate of The Snow Fork and Cleveland Coal Company. That the nominal consideration therefor was $842,979, but the real consideration received therefor being a portion of the capital stock of the said Hocking Coal & Railway Company, to-wit: $842,979 in amount at the par value thereof.

That on the day following the delivery of said deed to the said Hocking Coal & Railway Company, to-wit: on the 1st day of October, 1881, the Hocking Coal & Railway ' Company, at the instance and under the direction of said Burke and Hickox, united with the consolidated railway company in the execution and delivery of a mortgage qr deed of trust to the Central Trust Company of New York as trustee to secure the payment of $14,500,000 bonds of the said consolidated railway company; each for the sum of a thousand'dollars; by which said mortgage or deed of trust the said Hocking Coal & Railway Company conveyed to the said Central Trust Company the whole of said lands before then owned by the Said Snow Fork & Cleveland Coal Company.

That the said Central Trust Company upon the execution and delivery of the mortgage or trust deed accepted the trust. On or about the 1st day of October, 1881, for the purpose of effecting the sale of said lands at a desirable and advantageous price as aforesaid, and as a part of said plan, the said Burke and Charles Hickox exchanged the said stock received from the said The Hocking Coal and Railway Company, with the said consolidated railway company, for the mortgage bonds of-said last named company of the par value of $4,495,888.

That in carrying out their said plans and purposes, said Burke and Charles Hickox at once sold a large portion of said bonds, the plaintiff being unable to state the precise amount, and with the proceeds realized from such sale and [454]*454in pursuance of their said plans, purchased a large amount of the capital stock of the said consolidated railway company, the precise amount of such stock the plaintiff is unable to state; and they continued to hold such stock until the year 1885, or thereabouts, at which time they began and thereafter continued to dispose of portions thereof at large profits until about the year 1891; the plaintiff being unable to state what disposition, if any, has been made of such stock.

The plaintiff says that a portion of said bonds so as aforesaid received by the said Burke and Hickox, remained in their hands until about the 18th day of August, 1882, when they sold a portion thereof; the plaintiff being unable to state the consideration therefor, and further being unable to state whether the balance of said bonds has been sold or still remains in their hands,

The plaintiff sets out that in all that was done in and about this matter as before stated, Burke and Hickox acted in their official capacity as directors, officers, and members of the executive committee of the Snow Fork & Cleveland Coal Company, and received and held stock and bonds and the proceeds thereof in trust for said company and for each and all of its stockholders, and they so continued to hold and manage said properties in said trust character until the death of said Charles Hickox, which occurred in the year 1890, And that thereafter the defendants Burke and Charles G.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Ohio C.C. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/larwill-v-burke-ohiocirct-1900.