Muckle v. Fitts

5 F. Supp. 41, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1136
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedMarch 9, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 F. Supp. 41 (Muckle v. Fitts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muckle v. Fitts, 5 F. Supp. 41, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1136 (S.D. Ala. 1933).

Opinion

ERVIN, District Judge.

J. A. Blunt was president of the First National Bank of Greensboro and was also the president of the Planters’ Bonded Warehouse Company of Greensboro, Ala. The warehouse company was incorporated in Hale county in 1907, having a capital stock of $15,000, divided into shares of $100 each, and the shareholders were J. A. Blunt, H. C. Childress, and R. C. Oliver. Childress and Oliver each subscribed for five shares, and Blunt subscribed for the rest, and paid for those of Childress and Oliver. Very shortly after the incorporation of the warehouse company Childress and Oliver transferred their shares to Blunt, and Oliver seems to have gone out of the business altogether.

During this period and up to the time of his bankruptcy Blunt was very prominent in the financial circles around Greensboro, being reputed to be a wealthy man as he in fact was, and being engaged not only in managing the First National Bank of Greensboro and this warehouse company, but also several of the industries in and around Greensboro, and was also a large property holder in the city of Greensboro and was the financial advisor of a large portion of the citizens of Greensboro.

After the transfer of all the shares to Blunt he considered the whole property to be his, and managed it as though he held the legal title to the real estate as well as to the shares of stock. The property owned by the warehouse company was a site close to> the Southern Railroad station in Greensboro, on which the warehouse was formerly located and operated by Blunt and another. This warehouse burned and the insurance collected, and this, with the proceeds of a suit against the Southern Railroad Company for setting fire to the warehouse, paid off the owners of the cotton stored in it at the time of the fire, and probably left something over, but the proof of the amount is indefinite..

After the fire Blunt bought out his partner and shortly thereafter the present warehouse corporation was organized and the present structure, a brick building with reinforced concrete roof, was erected on the site of the old warehouse. In addition to storing cotton, Blunt conducted a business in the warehouse of selling coal, lime, cement, lumber, and some other commodities periodically, which business was run for him by H. C. Childress, until July, 1925, when all these side lines were abandoned and the warehouse was leased by Blunt to George C. Clements and R. Q. Clements for a term of ten years at the annual rental of $2,400, payable in four installments of $600 each. The lessee further agreeing to keep the property in good repair, reasonable wear and tear excepted, during the term of lease. .This lease recites: “By and between the undersigned, J. A. Blunt, who has been doing a warehouse business under the name and style of the Planters Bonded Warehouse Company, and who owns all of the property of said Planters Bonded Warehouse Company and is the sole owner of the said Planters Bonded Warehouse Company, party of the first part, and George C. Clements and R. Q. Clements, the parties of the second part.”

Subsequent to the lease* George C. Clements sold his interest in the lease to H. C. Childress, before the addition to the warehouse was built, and the business was conducted in the name of the Greensboro Warehouse Company, Inc.

The original minute book shows that at the first meeting each of the stockholders were elected as directors, and that J. A. Blunt was elected president and H. C. Childress elected secretary and treasurer. No other minutes appear until 1909 when the president and secretary and treasurer were authorized by the meeting to make a mortgage to Mrs. Ely to secure a loan of $6,000. The minutes of this meeting recite that the stockholders and directors were present and that J. A. Blunt then owned 120 shares, H. C. Childress 2Q shares, and R. C. Oliver 5 shares. According to the recital, 5 shares were then unaccounted for. Thereafter no further meetings are shown.

On December 13, lfl'lO1, a mortgage was executed to the .First National Bank of Greensboro, of which Blunt was president, by the Planters’ Bonded Warehouse Company to secure $11,965. This mortgage was signed by J. A. Blunt, president, and H. C. Childress, secretary-treasurer, and recited a meeting of the "stockholders and authorization by the stockholders and directors. It was recorded and later marked satisfied on the record, March 15,1912.

[43]*43On the second day of March, 1912, a mortgage was made to Mrs. Carrie M. Dickens to secure $12,000. It was signed Planters’ Bonded 'Warehouse Company by J. A. Blunt, president, and was not signed by Childress, and does not recite any authorization by the directors or stockholders, and is marked satisfied on the record, April 13,1929. Presumably this mortgage was made to get the money to pay the First National Bank, as its mortgage was marked satisfied on the 15th day of March, 1912.

On January 19, 1927, H. C. Childress died, and thereafter his wife found in his safety deposit box certificate No. 6 for 10 shares of stock in the warehouse issued to Blunt and indorsed by him.

On March 23, 1927, a deed was executed by the Planters’ Bonded Warehouse Company, by J. A. Blunt president, purporting to convey the warehouse property which was at that time all the property owned by the warehouse company to J. A. Blunt. This deed was recorded March 23, 1929', just two years after its date.

On March 20, 1929, J. A. Blunt executed to Grace McFaddin a mortgage conveying the same property to secure $5,000, which was assigned on January 16,1931, to Frank Fitts.

On December 29, 1930, J. A. Blunt executed a mortgage to H. A. Taylor to indemnify him against such loss as he might suffer because of his signing a bond as a surety of the First National Bank to Hale county. Taylor agreed to subordinate his mortgage to that of Fitts.

The county of Hale had deposits ranging from twenty to thirty thousand dollars in the First National Bank, and this bond was to secure the county for such money as it might have on deposit in the bank.

On January 15, 1931, Blunt executed a mortgage to Frank Fitts for $5,000. All these mortgages were on the same property.’

In the year 1926 an addition to the warehouse was erected at the request of lessees, who agreed to pay $100 a month additional rent, and upon the execution of the mortgages by Blunt to Frank Fitts a policy of insurance was taken oh the property in favor of Blunt, with loss, if any, payable to Frank Fitts, as his interest might appear, and in October, 1931, this new section of the warehouse was destroyed by fire. There were conflicting claims for this insurance between Fitts and the receiver of the First National Bank, and the insurance company paid under a compromise arrangement between these parties the amount of $1,224.20, which is now held by I. N. Hobson, clerk of circuit court of Hale eountj’’, to await determination of these claims.

Blunt borrowed money from Mrs. Herteiine R. Cryer and delivered to her a certain number of shares of stock in the warehouse company to secure the loan.

He also borrowed money from E. P. Walsh and delivered to him a number of shares of the stock as security.

He also borrowed from Mrs. F. T. Tumipseed, delivering a number of shares of stock to her as security, and up to the time of his bankruptcy these loans had not been paid.

Blunt was declared bankrupt on the 4th day of January, 1932, on an involuntary petition filed in this court on November 20, 1931, and on January 18,1932, Richard Muckle was elected as his trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Supp. 41, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muckle-v-fitts-alsd-1933.