Mobile & Cedar Point R. R. v. Talman & Ralstons

15 Ala. 472
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 15 Ala. 472 (Mobile & Cedar Point R. R. v. Talman & Ralstons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mobile & Cedar Point R. R. v. Talman & Ralstons, 15 Ala. 472 (Ala. 1849).

Opinion

CHILTON, J.

This bill was filed by George F. Taiman, Ashbel Ralston and Gerard Ralston against the Mobile and Cedar Point Rail Road Company, Miguel De Eslava, Alexis D. Durand, and Michael Portier, and*charges that on the 19th June, 1839, the Mobile and Cedar P. R. R. Co. being indebted to the American Life Insurance and Trust Co., a corporation situate in the State of Maryland, in the sum of $5,810 50, the better to secure the same, executed to said Trust Co., of that date, a mortgage, granting to said Company certain real estate in the city of Mobile, to secure the payment of said indebtedness, which was evidenced by note, due the 16th day of June, 1840. That Taiman is the assignee of said note note and mortgage, which remains unpaid, and the mortgage has become forfeit.

A. and G. Ralston represent, that on the 16th July, 1836, the Mobile & C. P. R. R. Co., by resolution passed on the 14th July, 1836, authorized one Moore to pledge all the real and personal estate of said company, in procuring for said company by contract, iron, locomotives, tenders, cars, &c. That Moore applied to said A. and G. Ralston to furnish the iron, and offered to pledge the company’s real and personal estate for any advances they might make. That they (A. & G. Ralston) did agree to furnish the iron upon the pledge by Moore of all the real and personal estate of the company, and on the 31st August, 1836, said Moore, by virtue of a resolution of the corporation, and a letter from the president, secretary and treasurer thereof, requesting him to conclude the purchase, and authorizing him to pledge the estate of the company, entered into a written agreement, signed by him and A. and G. Ralston, by which the Ralstons as agents of the company, agreed to purchase and pay for a certain amount of rail road iron in England, and caused it to be insured and shipped to Mobile, and the Mobile and C. P. R. R. Co. agreed •' to pay to their said agents, the said A. and G. Ralston, or order, in cash, in Philadelphia, or equivalent thereto, at the rate of exchange on London, at which the Bank of the United States at Philadelphia may be then drawing, upon the arrival of the iron at Mobile. The bills for the same, including one per cent, banker’s commissions, and interest from the time of payment in England, up to the time [481]*481requisite to reimburse the same in London, at the rate of six per cent, per annum; together with a commission of five per cent, on the amount of the invoice, and charges for purchasing and shipping the said iron.” The agreement then states, “for the faithful performance of this contract on the part of the Mobile and C. P. R. R. Co., the said J. B. Moore, engineer for said company, pledges the real and personal estate of said company, as authorized to do by the instruction of F; Ravisies, president, A. J. Durand, secretary, and A. C. Hollinger, treasurer, committee appointed- on the 16th day of July, 1836, to purchase materials for said road, as per documents annexed. Dated at Philadelphia. (Signed,)

. J. B. Moore,

A. & G. Ralston.”

The Ralstons then aver, that there is ■due to them, and unpaid from the company, on account of the purchase of iron under said contract, the sum of $7,000 and upwards, accruing under said contract. They charge, that in addition to the real estate embraced in the mortgage, which comprises a lot of about one acre, in the city of Mobile, the company owned at the time of the agreement", and which they alledge is subject to their equities, a tract of land, situate on Mon Louis Island; containing fourteen hundred acres, and which the bill particularly describes, besides another tract, which is described as containing sixteen hundred and fifty acres. These complainants (A. and G. Ralston) insist that the company were also possessed of a large portion of iron, -steam engines, cars, &c., which were pledged by said agreement. Complainants charge, that Miguel D. Eslava has converted said chattels, or a large portion thereof, to his own use, having a full knowledge of the complainants’ equities. That said company, using the name of the Mobile and New Orleans Rail Road Company, on the 9th January, 1840, conveyed all their before mentioned estate to Michael Portier, Miguel D. Eslava and Alexis D. Durand, with full power to sell and dispose of the same, the proceeds of the sale to be applied to the payment of certain debts due from the company to certain of the stockholders thereof. That these persons took the conveyance with a full knowledge of complain[482]*482ants’ equities, and that said conveyance was executed in subjection to their prior lien.' That Eslava also claims to hold a portion of said estate under a purchase at sheriff’s sale, but they charge his right is subordinate to theirs. The bill prays an account to be taken of the amount due on the mortgage of Taiman, and to A. and G. Ralston. That Talman’s mortgage be foreclosed by sale of the property — the surplus, after satisfying his demand, to be applied to the payment of Ralston’s claim. That the other estate of the company be sold, the equity of redemption of all parties be foreclosed and barred, and that Eslava bring into court the sums he may have received from sales made of said personal estate ; that the same be paid on Ralstons’ demand.

By a resolution of the company, a copy of which is exhibited with the bill, it appears, the persons who wrote the letter to said Moore, requesting him to procure the materials, &c. for the road, were appointed a committee to procure said materials, with power to make an agent or agents, to effect the object proposed.

The deed of trust under which the defendants below claimed, was executed to Michael Portier, Miguel D. Eslava and Alexis D. Durand, the 9th January, 1840, and purports to have been done by resolution of the board, entered into the day previous to its execution, which recited that the company, having failed to negotiate a loan, by virtue of a previous resolution, to meet the exigencies .of the company, did, on the 7th July, 1887, resolve that the real and personal estate then belonging to it, should be pledged to indemnify and save harmless, such of the stockholders as should, from time to time, lend their names to the company, for the purpose of raising money for its use. That in virtue ■ of this last resolution, F. Ravisies and Alexis D, Durand, on the 10th July, 1837, executed their note, payable to, and indorsed by M. D. Eslava, for $3,000, which was negotiated in the Branch of the Bank of the State of Alabama at Mobile, and the proceeds applied to pay off the debts of the company. Another note, made about the same time, was negotiated and applied in the same, manner, made by E. De Vandell and Du-rand, and indorsed by M. Portier, for $200. A third note discounted at the Bank of Mobile, and the proceeds in like [483]*483manner applied, was made by M. Portier, payable to, and in-' dorsed by S. H. Garrow, and further indorsed by Durand, Joseph Hall and M. D. Eslava, for $5,000. A fourth note, made by Eslava, and indorsed by Isaac H. Erwin and A. S. Dumee, discounted at the Planters’ &' Merchants’ Bank of Mobile, dated 28th July, 1737, and due at ninety days, was applied to the payment of the company’s debts. The resolution further recites, that F. Ravisies, being president of the company on the 22d August, 1837, drew a draft on the company, and accepted it as president thereof, in favor of, and indorsed by Eslava, and also indorsed by Durand, payable at New York, the 15th March, 1838, and purchased by Geo. Poe, jr. and the proceeds thereof ($5,000) applied to the extinguishment of the debts of the company.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ala. 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mobile-cedar-point-r-r-v-talman-ralstons-ala-1849.