Lynch v. Southern Mining Land & Lumber Co.

117 S.W. 624, 135 Mo. App. 672, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 652
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 117 S.W. 624 (Lynch v. Southern Mining Land & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lynch v. Southern Mining Land & Lumber Co., 117 S.W. 624, 135 Mo. App. 672, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 652 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

The defendant corporation was organized on December 19, 1902, with a capital stock of $500,000, of which $150,000 was preferred stock entitled to a perpetual dividend of six per cent per annum. The par value of the shares of stock was one dollar and was subscribed for as follows:

“Common Stock.
Names and Residence. No. of Shares. Herman D. Brandt, St. Louis, Mo.'.150,000 William C. Young, St. Louis, Mo.100,000 Henry W. Femmer, St. Louis, Mo.100,000
[674]*674Preferred Stock.
Names and Residence. No. of Shares.
Herman D. Brandt, St; Louis, Mo.50,000
William 0. Young, St. Louis, Mo.50,000
Henry W. Femmer, St. Louis, Mo.50,000

The first board of directors consisted of the three incorporators. Young and Femmer surrendered their stock to the corporation and resigned as directors in 1903. Defendant Wurdeman and L. T. Sneed were elected to take their places, and Wurdeman was elected president of the company. The articles of incorporation stated that the capital stock had been “actually paid up in lawful money of the United States and is in the custody of the persons hereinafter named as the first board of directors.” The truth is, not a dollar in money was actually paid. The company was organized for the purpose of exploiting some mining properties in Jefferson county, Missouri, upon which Thomas F. Sneed had mining leases, all of which, and some others acquired thereafter, were for the term of ten years, and conveyed only the right to dig and search for minerals thereon, and were to become void unless an amount of money, ranging from three hundred to six hundred dollars per annum, was expended by the lessees in searching for minerals. The rents to be paid were stipulated royalties on the minerals actually mined from the property. To each of these leases was superadded an option to purchase the land itself at a stipulated price, at any time during the life of the lease. These leases covered between four and five hundred acres of land and were assigned to the corporation by T. F. Sneed, in December, 1903. The corporation, through Sneed, expended some money in prospecting for minerals on some of the properties but never took out any mineral. The properties were finally abandoned and the corporation became defunct. After acquiring the leases and after the company was incorporated, Sneed promoted the incorpora[675]*675tion of the St. Louis, Hillsboro & Southern Railroad Company, an -electric road to run from Carondelet to Hillsboro, in Jefferson county. This line of road, as projected, was to run through some of the leased land and near the remainder. Defendant Wurdeman was Sneed’s attorney in procuring the incorporation of the railroad company and loanee! him fifty dollars toward paying the incorporation tax, and also brought several condemnation suits at his request, to acquire right of way of the road. Wurdeman testified his services rendered Sneed in behalf of the railroad company were worth one thousand dollars but he had never been paid. The railroad was never built. In the spring of 1903, Sneed and defendant Brandt went to New York City for the purpose of raising money on the stocks or bonds of the mining company but failed in their endeavor. While in New York Sneed wrote Wurdeman the following letter:

“St. Louis, Mo., Jan. 9, 1903.
“Mr. G. A. Wurdeman,
Webster Groves, Mo.:
“Dear Sir: I herewith enclose you a certificate for $10,000 of the full paid non-assessable stock in the above Mining Company. This is the one I spoke to you about several weeks ago and that I was going to place you in the Board of Directors. I also send you prospectus.
“I am about to arrange now to have 100,000 of this stock sold in New York. If you should happen to find anybody that wants to invest in some of the preferred stock it would be appreciated, as I want to dispose of |50,000 wbrth of that here.
“If Brandt gets back in time we in all probability Avill call on you some time Sunday afternoon to talk things over; in that case one of us will telephone you in advance.
“Yours truly,
“T. F. Sneed.
[676]*676“You. need not laugh, this will be worth par before the end of 1904.”

The letter and certificate of stock for $10,000 were received by Wurdeman and he kept the stock. On July 17, 1903, Wurdeman, as president of defendant- corn-pay, and in the name and for the company, signed and, on August twelfth, acknowledged a deed of trust purporting to convey to the Missouri Trust Company of St. Louis, as trustee, four hundred and eighty acres of land in Jefferson county (land upon which Sneed had procured mining leases) to secure the payment of $300,-000 worth of bonds of the Southern Mining Land & Lumber Company, to be executed on the execution and delivery of the mortgage to the Missouri Trust Company. The mortgage purports to be executed in pursuance,, of a resolution passed by the unanimous vote of the board of directors, which resolution is copied in the mortgage. After the execution of the mortgage, Wurde-man also signed three thousand thirty-year bonds of the denomination of $100 each, secured by the mortgage, which he delivered to Sneed.

On. August 5, 1903, the Southern Mining Company and the Missouri Trust Company entered into the following agreement:

“The Southern Mining, Land and Lumber Company, incorporated under the laws of Missouri, and the Missouri Trust Company of St. Louis, agree and covenant to and with each other in the manner following, that is to say:

“Said Southern Mining, Land and Lumber Company is desirous to procure from said trust company the certificates of said trust company, due in thirty years, for the aggregate sum of fifty thousand dollars ($50,000), to be issued in denominations of one hundred dollars each, and agrees to- deposit with said trust company, for each certificate, at the time or before the same is issued, the sum of forty-one dollars and twenty cents [677]*677($41.20), and to pay said trust company presently for entering into this contract, the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars ($250).

“Said trust company agrees to accept said trust deposits, and to accumulate each of the same in thirty years, from forty-one dollars and twenty cents to the full amount of one hundred dollars. Any accumulation of said sum in excess of one hundred dollars, to be the sole property of said trust company; and in consideration of the premises, said trust company warrants the said sum shall be so accumulated by it as to amount to one hundred dollars in thirty years from the date the deposit is made with it of forty-one dollars and twenty cents, and said trust company is not to charge for its services hereunder any other or extra fee than as aforesaid.

“Said trust company agrees, when and as such deposits are made, to issue its certificate therefor, substantially in the following form.”

The bonus of $250 was paid -the trust company and a few deposits of $41.20 were made, for which the trust company issued certificates as it had agreed to do.

T. P.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Nelson v. Cotham
595 S.W.2d 693 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 1980)
Patzman v. Howey
100 S.W.2d 851 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1936)
Cook v. Smith
170 S.W. 672 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1914)
Peters v. Lohman
156 S.W. 783 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
117 S.W. 624, 135 Mo. App. 672, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynch-v-southern-mining-land-lumber-co-moctapp-1909.