Mercantile Commercial Bank v. Southwestern Indiana Coal Corp.

169 N.E. 91, 93 Ind. App. 313, 1929 Ind. App. LEXIS 455
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 6, 1929
DocketNo. 13,399.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 169 N.E. 91 (Mercantile Commercial Bank v. Southwestern Indiana Coal Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercantile Commercial Bank v. Southwestern Indiana Coal Corp., 169 N.E. 91, 93 Ind. App. 313, 1929 Ind. App. LEXIS 455 (Ind. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

Nichols, J.

Action by appellant, as receiver of the Vulcan Coal Company, upon the demand of a stockholder in said company, to recover assets of it, which it had wrongfully and illegally attempted to transfer or convey to appellee Southwestern Indiana Coal Corporation and which said appellee had leased to appellee Enos Coal Mining Company.

The complaint in one paragraph is very long, covering, with its exhibits, 54 pages of the record. For the purposes of this decision, it may be epitomized as follows: Appellant, receiver, was duly appointed and authorized to bring this action; the Vulcan Coal Company is a corporation duly organized to conduct the business of mining coal and to do all things incidental to such business and properly connected therewith. In March, 1921, appellees Lucas, O’Brien, Low, Biddle, Lewis, Cohen and Buckingham, hereinafter called “the Ohio parties,” residing in Ohio, and for whom appellee *316 Buckingham was trustee, held options on lands in Pike County, Indiana, to the amount of 1,035 acres, which lands were underlaid with coal near the surface and were suitable for strip mining. The Ohio parties had paid $10 per acre therefor, which gave them the right to purchase for $125 per acre, with a provision that the $10 per acre should be credited on the purchase price, leaving a balance of $115 per acre to be paid, further providing that another $10 per acre should be paid on or before June 18, 1921, which would leave a balance of $105 per acre, and that, when an additional $35 per acre, being one-third of said balance, was paid, the landowners would convey the lands to the holders of the options and take notes for the unpaid balance of $70 per acre, secured by mortgages. In March, 1921, the Vulcan Coal Company, hereinafter called “Vulcan,” through its directors, entered into a contract with said option holders, in which it was agreed that said company should assume the unpaid balance of $115 per acre, and pay to such holders the further sum of $210 per acre, making the price of said lands to said company $325 per acre. Said $210 per acre was to be paid in two notes of $25,000 each, one due on June 1, 1921, and the other due September 1, 1921, and the balance in stock of the Vulcan at the par value thereof.

On January 3, 1922, a contract was signed by the Vulcan, through its president, in which it was provided that said company should be designated as the party of the first part, appellee Julian should be designated as party of the second part, and appellees Quarrie, Reeve and Phillips, all of Chicago, Illinois, should be designated as parties of the third part, and that the said parties of the third part, hereinafter called “Chicago parties,” should loan to the Vulcan $18,000 to enable it to pay the $35 per acre, amounting in all to $35,500, necessary to secure deeds to said lands, the $10 per acre *317 due on June 18, 1921, having been paid by the Vulcan; and said contract further provided that the Chicago parties should purchase from the Ohio parties for $26,300 the notes of the Vulcan for $50,000 and $90,000 worth, par value, capital stock of the Vulcan, all held by said Ohio parties, and that, when said $35 per acre was paid by the Vulcan, the land should be conveyed to the said L. G. Julian, as trustee, and that, on the performance by Vulcan of its part of said contract by April 3, 1922, and the payment of all its indebtedness to said Chicago parties, Julian, trustee, should convey said lands to the Vulcan, but that, on default on April 3, 1922, of said company in the payment of any of said indebtedness or performance of any of the conditions of said contract, Julian, trustee, should convey said property to the Chicago parties. There was included in this contract an additional 114-acre farm. Said contract was not authorized by the stockholders of the Vulcan at any regular meeting or at any special meeting called for that purpose, and was never consented to individually or collectively by said stockholders.

Thereafter, on May 12,1922, an agreement in writing in two parts was signed by the Vulcan by its president and by appellee Reeve, as trustee for said Chicago parties, in which, after reciting that Julian, trustee, had conveyed said lands to said Chicago parties, and that there was doubt as to whether said Vulcan had any equity in or rights to said lands, and that, as it was desired to compromise and adjust said matters, the time for the purchase of said lands should be extended for. a period of 60 days on certain terms and conditions therein set out.

Said contract was not authorized by the stockholders of the Vulcan at any regular meeting, or at any special meeting called for that purpose, and was never consented to individually or collectively by said stockhóld *318 ers, and was never at any time ratified or approved by the stockholders in any manner.

At the expiration of said 60-day period, the Vulcan, not having paid said notes, the Chicago parties took possession of the lands under claim of ownership. In January, 1923, the Chicago parties made a written proposition to the Vulcan to enter into a certain contract with it, which proposition was tendered to the Vulcan at a meeting of its stockholders held on January 29, 1923, at the McCurdie Hotel, Evansville, Indiana, by which they proposed to organize a new corporation which was to take title to the 1,035 acres of coal lands owned by the Vulcan, by Reeve, trustee, advancing all necessary sums of money required to clear said coal lands of all incumbrances thereon. The new corporation was to give its note in payment of the indebtedness of Reeve, trustee, and his associates against said property, which amounted to approximately $122,000, plus expenses incurred to date and accrued interest, plus such sums as might be advanced by Reeve and his associates to clear said coal lands of incumbrances thereon, as above provided for, together with interest thereon. This note was to be secured by a first mortgage on the property.

The new company was to issue preferred stock having par value equal to the indebtedness to Mr. Heerdink and Mr. Julian in payment to them of the indebtedness amounting to approximately $25,000 owing them by the Vulcan, this to cover money actually loaned to the Vulcan, but did not include moneys which they had paid to the Vulcan for stock.

The new company was to transfer to the Vulcan 49 per cent of its common stock, to be in full satisfaction and discharge of all claims of the Vulcan and of its stockholders of any kind or character in and to said property. The new company was to issue 51 per cent *319 of its common stock to Reeve, trustee, and his associates. The Vulcan, upon receipt of the 49 per cent of the common stock of the new corporation, was to give a quit-claim deed to said property. There was at that time about $45,000 yet due the farmers on a portion of this property. Most all of these farmers had commenced suit against Julian, the Vulcan and Reeve, trustee, to foreclose their mortgages. The action of certain stockholders of the Vulcan in starting litigation had clouded the title of the property, and, therefore, the Chicago syndicate did not intend to finance the proposition further until a new arrangement could be made whereby the title to the property could be cleared in. order that it might be sold, or that an arrangement might be made to operate it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
169 N.E. 91, 93 Ind. App. 313, 1929 Ind. App. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercantile-commercial-bank-v-southwestern-indiana-coal-corp-indctapp-1929.