Moore v. Drew

25 So. 402, 51 La. Ann. 740, 1899 La. LEXIS 462
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 23, 1899
DocketNo. 12,980
StatusPublished

This text of 25 So. 402 (Moore v. Drew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Drew, 25 So. 402, 51 La. Ann. 740, 1899 La. LEXIS 462 (La. 1899).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Blanchard, J.

The Cane River Lumber Company conducted a saw-milling enterprise at Chopin in Natchitoches Parish.

It was not prosperous, became involved in debt and insolvent.

Various creditors brought suits and recovered judgments for a large amount in the aggregate, some of the judgments carrying recognition of vendor’s privilege and special mortgage upon the property of the company.

Executions issued, the property was seized and at the sale which followed was adjudicated to E. F. Wasey on twelve months’ credit. Whereupon Wasey executed a twelve months’ bond for four thousand, six hundred and ten dollars, with the plaintiff, the defendant and two other persons as his sureties.

This was on June 3, 1893..

The sheriff assigned this bond to the New Orleans National Bank, the ranking creditor of the insolvent concern.

The bond described the property sold, for the purchase price of which, in part, it was given, and stipulated retention of the vendor’s privilege.

It was not paid at its maturity. Interest thereon, from time to time, was paid, and extensions had,' under circumstances, however, that did not operate to release the sureties.

This continued down to April 2, 1897, prior to which time Wasey, the principal, and Kelsoe and Sandidge, two of the sureties, had become insolvent.

This left plaintiff and defendant the only solvent obligors of the bond.

The bond had been placed in the hands of attorneys for collection, •and on the date last mentioned the plaintiff arranged with the attorneys to take up the bond, paying part of the amount due in cash, and ■giving his promissory notes for the remainder at short maturities, which notes he duly met.

Subsequently he brought this action against defendant, his co--sure-ty, to recover one-half of the amount he had so paid, alleging the -insolvency of the principal and the other two sureties.

[742]*742On behalf of defendant a plea to the jurisdiction of the court was tendered, on the ground that suit on the twelve months’ bond should have been instituted in the District Court in and for the Parish of Natchitoches, since it (the bond) had been given in the course of judicial proceedings there taken.

There is no merit in the plea. This is not a suit on the bond, but an action to recover money from defendant which plaintiff alleges he was obliged to. pay on his account, and was rightly brought in the' parish of defendant’s residence. The exception to the jurisdiction was properly overruled.

The defense, on the merits, is discharge from liability to plaintiff on account of the bond for the reason that by and through the acts and conduct of plaintiff defendant has been deprived of the right of subrogation to the vendor’s privilege, which the bond carried against property of sufficient value to have protected the sureties.

In an amended answer defendant charged, in substance, that by paying the bond plaintiff had merely satisfied his own debt; that Wasey, the nominal principal, in purchasing the property for which the bond was given, acted for the plaintiff; that the latter was the real principal in the obligation and not merely a surety thereon; and that defendant’s obligation on the bond was that of surety for plaintiff.

This amended answer was objected to by plaintiff on the ground that it contained defenses inconsistent with that set up in the original answer, thereby changing the issue.

The objection was sustained and defendant reserved a bill.

In the view we taire of the ease it is not necessary to pass upon the-question of practice here raised.

In June, 1893, shortly after the purchase of the Cane River Lumber Company’s outfit by Wasey at sheriff’s sale, a new corporation was organized, called the Lake Lumber &' Shingle Company, Limited. It became the successor of the old company.

Its incorporators were Moore, the plaintiff, Drew, the defendant, George Lock, E. E. Wasey and J. T. Sandidge. All of these parties-were named in the act of incorporation directors of the company.

The capital stock of the corporation was fixed in the charter at' sixty thousand dollars, divided into shares of one hundred dollars each, to be paid for when issued, and the company was authorized to-do business as soon as $25,000 of its stock was subscribed and paid for.

Neither in the act of incorporation, nor in any paper attached' [743]*743thereto, does there appear a list of subscribers to the stock, with the number of shares taken by each. The stock book of the company, however, shows certificates of stock issued to plaintiff for 199 shares, to Kelsoe & Sandidge for 88 shares, to George Lock, a business partner of plaintiff, for 1 share, to E. F. Wasey 1 share, and to defendant,. Drew, 1 share.

Not a dollar for any of this stock was paid into the treasury of the concern.

On the day of the incorporation the Board of Directors, named in the act of incorporation, met and organized by electing George-Lock, president, J. T. Sandidge, vice-president, and E. F. Wasey, secretary and treasurer.

No meeting thereafter of either directors or stockholders was held until May, 1897, four years later, when a quorum of the directors met and the secretary, he being one of the three directors at the meeting,, informed the other two that suits against the company had been filed by Lock, Moore & Co., and by H. C, Drew. Nothing was done at the-meeting.

Shortly after the incorporation, Sandidge, vice-president, disposed of his stock, as did Kelsoe, and the transfers were made on the books of the company. No other vice-president was, however, chosen.

Beyond adopting a charter, organizing a board of directors and issuing shares of stock never paid for, the company did nothing.

Wasey executed in its favor in August, 1898, following the incorporation, an act of sale, transfer and conveyance of the milling outfit and property which he had acquired on June 3, 1893, at sheriff's sale-in execution against the Cane River Lumber Company. The consideration was stated to be one thousand and twenty dollars cash and the-assumption of the twelve months’ bond he had given with plaintiff, defendant and others as sureties. No one appeared to accept this sale on behalf of the company, and no resolution was ever adopted by the board of directors, or authority given by the stockholders for this, purchase and assumption.

No effort whatever was made by the company to run the mill or-make use of the property thus conveyed to it. The mill lay idle in-charge of parties who seem to have been employed and paid by Lock, Moore & Co. Lock, Moore & Go. were not subscribers to the concern’s stock. What they had to do with the mill, or what interest they had in its affairs, justifying them in the expenditure of money in its [744]*744■behalf, does not appear, except by inference that they represent Moore, the plaintiff herein. Moore, as seen, was the principal stock.holder of the company, and he was the owner of more than one-third .of the shares representing the capital stock of Lock, Moore & Co., Limited, a large lumber manufacturing concern of Calcasieu parish.

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Bluebook (online)
25 So. 402, 51 La. Ann. 740, 1899 La. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-drew-la-1899.