Natalbany Lumber Co. v. Countiss

99 So. 262, 134 Miss. 511, 1924 Miss. LEXIS 294
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1924
DocketNo. 23893
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 So. 262 (Natalbany Lumber Co. v. Countiss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Natalbany Lumber Co. v. Countiss, 99 So. 262, 134 Miss. 511, 1924 Miss. LEXIS 294 (Mich. 1924).

Opinion

Holden, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Natalbany Lumber Company of Hammond, La., sued G. B. Countiss, T. B. Abbey, W. M. Simpson, E. V. Catoe, B. L. Neal, H. E. Wherry, M. T. Bynum, F. T. Gerard, Mrs. P. T. Gerard, S. J. Simmons, and J. C. Wilson, as copartners, in the circuit court of Tallahatchie county, Miss., upon three certain promissory notes, each in the sum of six hundred ten dollars and seventy-nine cents executed at “Webb, Miss., August 1, 1921, and due the plaintiff October 15, November 15, and December 15, 1921, by the Webb Lumber Company, by E. L. Quinn.” Interest and attorney’s fees were also claimed; and credit was given for certain payments upon the notes.

The defendants pleaded to the effect that a charter of incorporation had been duly issued to them; that the Webb Lumber Company was a corporation, and not a copartnership; and that, long before the suit was filed against them, the lumber company was duly adjudged a corporation and a bankrupt as such in the United States district court; and, because of such adjudication, acquittance and release of the indebtedness claimed was consequently had. Further plea was made that the plaintiff filed its claim in the bankruptcy court; against the Webb Lumber Company, participated in the distribution <of the proceeds of the sale of the assets by said court, .and otherwise and generally entered its appearance in :said bankruptcy cause; and that the judgment of the bankruptcy court that the lumber company was a corporation was a final judgment, binding against them. The defendants exhibited certified copies of the proceedings in the bankruptcy court, from which it appeared that on March 21, 1922, the Webb Lumber Company, Incorporated, filed its petition therein, praying that it be adjudged a bankrupt. On March 23rd, the referee in bankruptcy, to whom the case was duly referred by the clerk of the court, adjudicated the Webb Lumber Com[517]*517pany to he bankrupt, but the adjudication does not state whether the petitioner was, or was not, a corporation. The affairs of the bankrupt were administered by the bankruptcy court; appellant participated therein, and received its pro rata of the assets. No objection was raised in the bankruptcy court by appellant as to the regularity of the proceedings there had; nor was any motion there .made by appellant to have the adjudication of bankruptcy set aside, if properly made; nor was any appeal had from the order of adjudication of bankruptcy.

The defendant further pleaded that plaintiff could not maintain its suit for the reason that the lumber company was a corporation authorized to do business as such, as shown by the charter of incorporation granted by the state, copy thereof being attached as an exhibit to the plea. Further plea was filed by defendants to the effect that the notes sued upon were not the notes of the defendants, but those of the Webb Lumber Company, Incorporated.

Eeplication to these pleas was filed by the plaintiff as follows: That the defendants were each liable because the notes sued upon were not the notes of the lumber company as a corporation, but those of each of the defendants ; for the reason that the alleged corporation had failed to report its organization to the secretary of the state of Mississippi as required by section 930 of the Code of 1906; and that because of such failure the charter of the alleged corporation was void, and the stockholders were liable as copartners under said statute.

A demurrer was also filed by appellant to the effect that defendants’ pleas, with exhibits thereto attached, made no defense to the cause of action-; and, further, that the exhibits showed that no court of competent jurisdiction had adjudged the Webb Lumber Company to be a corporation; and that said court had not adjudicated the lumber company as a corporation to be bankrupt.

[518]*518Appellees rejoined that the lumber company was a corporation and duly adjudged so to be by' the court of bankruptcy; that said court was one of competent jurisdiction over the parties and the subject-matter; that appellant was a party to the proceedings in the said court, proved its claim therein, and participated as such party in the matter of the estate of the lumber company as a corporation.

Appellant demurred to the rejoinder of appellees, and contended that the pleas and exhibits of the defendants showed that no court of competent jurisdiction had adjudged the lumber company to be a corporation.

The trial court overruled appellant’s demurrer; and the parties to the suit having submitted the same to the court upon the agreed statement of facts hereinafter set out, a judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants, from which this appeal has been taken.

Agreed Statement of Facts.

“Now come both the plaintiff and the defendants, who hereby agree that the above-styled cause shall be submitted to the court for trial and judgment upon the facts of the case, which are as follows:

“That on the-22d day of December, 1919, there issued to B. L. Neal, M. T. Bynum, E. V. Wilson, Sam J. Simmons, and F. T. Gerard a charter of incorporation under the laws of the state of Mississippi, authorizing the incorporation and the holders of stock in the corporation to engage at Webb, Miss., in the business of buying and selling lumber, brick, lime, cement, and all other building materials of every kind and character, and to buy and sell real estate, and to erect houses and to do general business, and in addition to operate sawmills, and to buy and sell coal under the corporate name of Webb Lumber Company, and the corporation enjoyed the privileges of a corporation under the statutes of the state of Mississippi.

[519]*519“At all times mentioned in this suit, and for all the purposes of this suit, the owners of the stock in said corporation were G. B. Countiss, T. B. Abbey, W. M. Simpson, E. V. Catoe, B. L. Neal, R. E. Wherry, M. T. Bynum, F. T. Gerard, Mrs. F. T. Gerard, S J. Simmons and J. C. Wilson.

“That the defendants did business in said corporate name from the date of its charter until the 21st day of March, 1922, when there was filed in the district court of the United States for the Delta Division, Northern District of Mississippi, in the matter of Webb Lumber Company, Incorporated, voluntary bankruptcy No. 525, the voluntary petition of the Webb Lumber Company, Incorporated, setting up that the said corporation was insolvent, and praying to be adjudicated a bankrupt and to have its affairs adjudicated in accordance with the bankruptcy laws. That said adjudication was in all things regular. That there was at all times only one Webb Lumber Company at Webb, Miss.

“That prior to the said adjudication and during the time the said Webb Lumber Company, Incorporated, was doing business under its said corporate name, the said Webb Lumber Company became indebted to the plaintiff in the sum mentioned in the plaintiff’s declaration herein filed, and in addition thereto became indebted to a large number of other creditors in divers sums!

“That on said petition there issued and was duly served to the creditors a notice as provided by the Bankruptcy Act, and that, in strict compliance with the bankruptcy acts, on the 23d day of March, 1922, the said Webb Lumber Company was duly adjudged a bankrupt, unless the adjudication's insufficient by reason of the fact that the order making the adjudication does not specifically set out that the Weblj Lumber Company was a corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
99 So. 262, 134 Miss. 511, 1924 Miss. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/natalbany-lumber-co-v-countiss-miss-1924.