Lewis v. Paola Telephone Exchange

241 P. 446, 119 Kan. 811, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 373
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 5, 1925
DocketNo. 26,249
StatusPublished

This text of 241 P. 446 (Lewis v. Paola Telephone Exchange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis v. Paola Telephone Exchange, 241 P. 446, 119 Kan. 811, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 373 (kan 1925).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.:

This proceeding was brought to foreclose a trust deed given to secure the payment of $25,000 of bonds issued by the Paola Telephone Company. It is alleged and shown that the telephone company had been operated by Alexander Hodges, who owned practically all of the stock of the company, and that prior to January 1,1917, it had bonds outstanding to the amount of $20,000 which matured during that year, and upon its application to the public utilities commission it obtained permission to issue $25,000 of new bonds, secured by trust deed, to take up the maturing bonds and to purchase necessary real estate, erect suitable buildings thereon in which to transact the business of a telephone exchange, and to make such other extensions and improvements in the plant as were reasonably necessary. The .new bonds to the amount of $25,000 were issued and the trust, deed executed by the company, C. F. Henson being named as trustee therein. On March 1, 1920, W. W. Finney negotiated a purchase of the telephone exchange with Alexander Hodges, contracting to pay $42,500 for the stock and plant, $17,500 of which wns paid in cash and Finney was to assume the entire outstanding bonds of the company amounting to $25,000. On the same day the parties made a supplemental agreement:

[812]*812“That if the trustee of the deed of trust securing the bond issue against this property shall not consent to Alex Hodges holding three thousand dollars of said bonds, then said amount of bonds shall be delivered to the purchaser of said property, W. W. Finney, and in lieu thereof Finney shall execute and deliver to said Hodges his note for three thousand dollars, payable on or before -years from this date, with interest at six per cent per annum payable semiannually. .Dated March 1,1920.”

On July 1, 1923, there was a default in the payment of interest, and at the instance of the bondholders the foreclosure action was begun. By agreement of parties a judgment of $22,000 and interest was rendered, and that six of the bonds of $500 each, about which a dispute had arisen, should be brought into court for cancellation. Upon motion of several of the parties, Alexander Hodges and Mrs. L. C. Hodges were made parties and given the right to set forth their claims to the $3,000 in bonds, and they alleged that these bonds had been delivered to Alexander Hodges, which were thereafter for a valuable consideration and before maturity transferred and delivered to Mrs. L. C. Hodges, and that she is now the owner and holder thereof, and she asked that a judgment be rendered in her favor foreclosing the bonds. The telephone company, and Finney acting for it, admitted liability for $22,000 of the bonds, but claimed that the company was entitled to the remaining bonds to the amount of $3,000, and asked that an order be made requiring the trustee to deliver them to the company. Henson, the original trustee, had previously died and the plaintiff, Lewis, had been appointed as his successor. Alexander Hodges died during the pendency of the litigation, and his wife not only claimed ownership of the bonds, but also that she had obtained possession of the same. There was much conflicting evidence as to her ownership of the bonds, and also as to their delivery to her. Upon the evidence the court made the following findings, of fact:

“1. On or about January 1, 1917, the Paola Telephone Company, after receiving authority from the public utilities commission of the state of Kansas, issued bonds in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000), making; C. F, Henson trustee under the deed of trust for the holders of said bonds. Twenty-two thousand dollars ($22,000) of said bonds are admitted by the defendant company to have been delivered and are the property of the respective holders thereof.
“2. The only question in dispute in this action is as to the delivery and ownership of the remaining three thousand dollars ($3,000) of bonds, being bonds numbered twenty to twenty-five, inclusive, for five hundred dollars ($500) each.
[813]*813“3. C. F. Henson died March 21, 1922, and W. H. Lewis was thereafter appointed trustee in his place. Since the beginning of this action Alex Hodges died. Mrs. L. C. Hodges is the widow of Alex Hodges, deceased.
“4. Prior to 1920 Alex Hodges and Henry Hodges were the owners of practically all the stock of said Paola Telephone Company, and in the spring of 1920 W. W. Finney bought the entire stock of said telephone company, and became the owner and president of the same, and is still the president thereof.
“5. By the terms of the contract of purchase and sale Alex Hodges was to receive the $3,000 of bonds, which are in dispute in this case.
“6. The evidence is very indefinite as to any physical delivery of the $3,000 of bonds prior to April, 1922, but on April 4, 1922, W. H. Lewis, trustee, made actual physical delivery of the said bonds to Alex Hodges, and the bonds were placed in the safety deposit box of Mr. and Mrs. Hodges.
“7. The defendant telephone company recognized the bonds numbered twenty to twenty-five, inclusive, by paying interest coupons up to January 1, 1923, the last payment being $485 in January, 1923, and this was done after there was some controversy as to the liability of the company on the said bonds and interest coupons.
“8. Mrs. L. C. Hodges claimed these $3,000 of bonds from, the time of the sale of the company, in consideration of eight years of service which she rendered for the company. The evidence does not show the actual, physical delivery of the bonds to- her, but she had the bonds in her possession in the early part of 1923, and Alex Hodges recognized her ownership of these bonds in the application to open up the former judgment in this case, and by his answer filed herein, and by statements to third parties.
“9. The whole issue of bonds was due in ten years, and interest at 6 per cent was due semiannually, on January first and July first. Said bonds are payable to bearer.
“10. I find that Mrs. L. C. Hodges, the intervener, was before the commencement of this action the owner and holder in due course for value of the said bonds numbered twenty to twenty-five, inclusive, for $3,000.
“11. The defendant telephone company defaulted in the payment of the interest coupons due and payable on July 1, 1923, of the entire $25,000 of bonds, and the same became due and payable and subject to foreclosure.
“12. The defendant telephone company has not shown that it is entitled to a judgment against said W. H. Lewis, trustee.”

The claim of the company and Finney is that the bonds were never delivered to Alexander Hodges. It is .admitted that they were handed to him and his attorney, but it is claimed that it was done merely to force a settlement with Finney. Hodges threatened that if interest was not paid on $25,000 the whole issue would be foreclosed, and to avoid that the company paid the interest on the whole amount. It is contended that the delivery was at most a conditional one. Second, it is contended that if there was a delivery to Hodges, there was not sufficient evidence to show a delivery by [814]*814him to his wife.

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Anderson v. Uncle Sam Oil Co.
186 P. 198 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 P. 446, 119 Kan. 811, 1925 Kan. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-paola-telephone-exchange-kan-1925.