National Bank of Union Point v. Amoss

87 S.E. 406, 144 Ga. 426
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 17, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 87 S.E. 406 (National Bank of Union Point v. Amoss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank of Union Point v. Amoss, 87 S.E. 406, 144 Ga. 426 (Ga. 1915).

Opinion

Exceptions to auditor's report. Before Judge Park. Hancock superior court. September 30, 1914.

The Sparta Cotton Mill and its directors, who also sued as stockholders, brought an action against the other stockholders and creditors of the corporation, for equitable adjustment of the stockholders' liabilities and for marshaling and distribution of its assets. The petition alleged that the persons named as stockholders undertook to form a corporation, and signed the following subscription agreement: "Sparta, Georgia, March 27, 1907. For the purpose of organizing the Sparta Cotton Mill, a corporation to be capitalized at $100,000, as follows: $50,000 of preferred stock, and $50,000 of common stock, each class of stock to be of the par value of $100 per share, we, the undersigned, subscribe, and will pay for as called by the directors of the corporation, the amount set opposite our respective names (whether subscriptions are for preferred or common stock to be designated below). The preferred stock shall have preference both as to principal and dividends, the dividends on the preferred stock to be seven per cent. per annum, and guaranteed, and no dividends shall be paid on common stock until after dividends on the preferred stock shall have been paid. In view of these preferences the preferred stock shall have no voting power, which power shall be vested entirely in the common stock, and the preferred stock shall not share in the profits of the corporation beyond its annual dividend of seven per cent.; any profits that may be earned by the corporation in excess of this guaranteed dividend is to be paid only to the holders of common stock. If deemed advisable by a majority in amount of the subscribers hereto, the proportion of the preferred and common stock herein before indicated may be changed so that there may be a greater proportion of common stock, but in no event shall the preferred stock be more than fifty per cent. of the capitalization stated above. It is understood and agreed between the subscribers hereto and R.F. Bryan and J.W. Griffin, that the last-mentioned party will, for and in consideration of the sum of forty-two thousand ($42,000) dollars, convey by warranty deed, free from all liens or incumbrances, to the subscribers hereto all the lands now owned by the Sparta Oil Mill, except the oil machinery and property strictly pertaining to the oil business and ginhouse and ginnery, same being detached and in no way interferes with the cotton-mill property, which is to be removed within a reasonable time from its present location. The subscriptions hereto shall become binding and effective when seventy-five per cent. of the total capitalization of the corporation shall have been subscribed." On June 24, 1907, a charter having been obtained, the corporation was organized, officers elected, and by-laws for the government of the institution were passed. At this meeting it was ascertained and spread upon the minutes that 224 shares were to be preferred stock and 454 shares were to be common stock; and a form of certificate was devised and adopted to define the status and the rights of the preferred stockholders, and the same was spread upon the minutes. Calls for the payment of the stock subscriptions were duly made, and notice given to each stockholder. The directors purchased from the Sparta Oil Mill the property described in the subscription agreement (known as the Montour Mills property), except the power-plant, for the sum of $37,000. The power-plant was deemed inadequate for the purposes intended, and the purchase-price was reduced $5,000. Some of the subscribers paid for their stock in full, some in part, and some have not paid. The directors made ineffectual efforts to operate the property, and in so doing incurred certain debts. It was difficult to get a meeting of the stockholders, but finally a majority of the common stock and 95 per cent. of the shares of the preferred stock were represented at a meeting held on February 23, 1911, at which meeting, after re-electing petitioners as directors, the stockholders voted to liquidate the affairs of the company; and this petition is filed for the purpose of marshaling and distributing the assets upon equitable principles, and for other relief ancillary thereto.

Certain of the defendants filed answers, and the case was referred to an auditor. Afterward the answer was amended by alleging that the defendants were not bound by their contracts of subscription, for the reason that there is a radical and fundamental difference between the charter and the subscription agreement. The plaintiffs demurred to so much of the original answer and amendment as set up fraud in the procurement of the stock subscriptions, and to so much as averred a variance between the subscription agreement and the charter. The auditor sustained the demurrer. The auditor made his report, and exceptions of law and of fact thereto were filed by the defendants. The court rendered the following judgment: "And now, in open court, upon the auditor's report in said case, as modified by the decision of the judge on exceptions thereto, it is finally considered and adjudged and decreed as follows: The defendants answering in this case and setting up the variance of the charter from the contract of subscription are discharged from further payment on said subscriptions, and said unpaid subscriptions are not assets of the Sparta Cotton Mill. The note of Sparta Cotton Mill to Sparta Oil Mill for $2,421.26 (balance of principal), appearing from the evidence to be a part of the purchase-price of Montour Cotton Mills and allowed by the auditor as a valid obligation of the Sparta Cotton Mills, is disallowed as such, and the interventions filed for the purpose of applying said debt to judgments against Sparta Oil Mill are refused and disallowed. The intervention of National Bank of Union Point, alleging its debt against Sparta Cotton Mill to be secured by collateral notes therein set out and in evidence, is retained for the purpose of enforcing said collateral should the debt be not fully paid otherwise; and the parties to this case interested in said intervention are retained for that purpose. The fund raised by the sale of Montour Mills property on June 2, 1914, is to be administered as provided by previous judgments, save as modified hereby, the cost of the case being therein provided for. The valid debts of the corporation being thus fully provided for, the directors and officers of Sparta Cotton Mill, petitioners herein, appearing to have honestly discharged their duties, are discharged from further liability. This Sept. 30, 1914."

Exception is taken to so much of the judgment as held that the defendants were discharged on their subscription agreement because of its variance from the charter of the corporation; to so much thereof as undertook to rule that E.A. Rozier, R.F. Bryan, J.W. Griffin, and John D. Walker were not entitled to their subscriptions allowed by the auditor, being found to arise from their participation as stockholders of the Sparta Oil Mill in the purchase of the cotton-mill property sold by the oil-mill to the Sparta Cotton Mill; to so much of the decree as disallows the note of the Sparta Cotton Mill to the Sparta Oil Mill for $2,421.26, as an indebtedness against the Sparta Cotton Mill; and to the discharge of all stock subscriptions which had not been paid in, without providing for either the equalization or repayment of preferred-stock payments. The defendants except to so much of the judgment as overruled their exceptions of law and fact other than those sustained by the court.

Samuel H. Sibley, R.L. Merritt, and Burwell Fleming, for plaintiffs in error in main bill. Allen Pottle, R.W. Moore, T.M. Hunt, and R.H.Lewis, contra. 1.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hay v. Hay
230 P.2d 791 (Washington Supreme Court, 1951)
Barnett v. D. O. Martin Co.
11 S.E.2d 210 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1940)
Tennant v. Epstein
271 Ill. App. 204 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1933)
Kennedy v. Brooke
168 S.E. 294 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1933)
Brooke v. Kennedy
158 S.E. 4 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1931)
Kiser v. Westbrook
125 S.E. 774 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1924)
Holliday v. Persons
116 S.E. 907 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1923)
Berckmans v. Tarnok
106 S.E. 2 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.E. 406, 144 Ga. 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-union-point-v-amoss-ga-1915.