Massachusetts Iron Co. v. Hooper

61 Mass. 183
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 61 Mass. 183 (Massachusetts Iron Co. v. Hooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Massachusetts Iron Co. v. Hooper, 61 Mass. 183 (Mass. 1851).

Opinion

Shaw, C. J.

The petitioners, a corporation established by law, apply to this court, exercising the powers vested in them by the insolvent laws, in the nature of a summary proceeding in equity, to revise a decision of the master in chancery, made in the proceedings in insolvency pending before him, in the case of Horace Gray and Nathaniel Francis, insolvent debtors.

The substance of the petition to the master was, that the Massachusetts Iron Company was incorporated by an act passed in March, 1847; that between that time and the actual organization, which took place on the 5th of May, 1847, to wit, on the 26th of March, 1847, it was agreed between said Horace Gray and Benjamin T. Eeed and others to accept the act, to fix the amount of the capital stock at $300,000 and the proportion in which it should be taken and held by the associates, and to organize the corporation and carry on the business, for which it was established; that Gray agreed to take 150 shares at $1000 each, and the other associates and parties to take severally different sums, amounting in the whole, to $150,000, being the whole amount; and it was a part of the agreement, that the company to be organized should purchase, and Gray should sell to them, his estate at South Boston, with the buildings he was then erecting thereon, with fixtures and machinery specified, for the sum of $200,000, he to complete, finish, and furnish the same in the manner de scribed. It appears that pursuant to this agreement, tht company was organized on the 5th of May; and on the 15th of May, Gray executed a deed conveying the said estate to said corporation, but the buildings, fixtures and machinery, were not [185]*185then complete; that the company expended large sums stated, to finish and complete the work Gray had stipulated to do; also that Gray paid $130,000 and over towards his shares of $150,000, but that $18,000 and more still remained due on the shares, when Gray became insolvent and these proceedings were instituted, in November, 1847. No certificate of shares had been issued to Gray, when he became insolvent. The prayer of the petition of this company to the master was, to have a lien on his shares declared in their favor, not only for the arrears due on the shares, but also for all the sums which they had been compelled to pay, either before or after Gray so became insolvent, to complete the said buildings and furnish the same, which Gray, by virtue, of his contract, ought to have done;' and they deny that the assignees, or any other person claiming under Gray can equitably claim the benefit of such shares, or sell or dispose of the same, until the company are first repaid the sum due to them as aforesaid, and which Gray ought to have paid.

The answer of the assignees admits most of the facts. It admits that the company have a lien on the 150 shares, for the arrears of assessment; that is, it admits, that the company have the right to sell a sufficient number of said shares to pay those arrears, if not otherwise paid, but denies that such a lien can be declared or enforced by this process. It denies that the company can claim a lien, in any form, on these shares for any sums due the company by contract; it denies that the company was a party in form to the agreement referred to, which preceded the organization, and insists that whatever balance is due from Gray to the company, is a debt to be proved in common form.

The master decided against the allowance of the petition; and this is a petition to this court in nature of an appeal from that decision

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Bluebook (online)
61 Mass. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-iron-co-v-hooper-mass-1851.