Nelson v. Darley

194 So. 177, 239 Ala. 87, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 21, 1939
Docket3 Div. 290.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 194 So. 177 (Nelson v. Darley) 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
Nelson v. Darley, 194 So. 177, 239 Ala. 87, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 97 (Ala. 1939).

Opinions

*89 BROWN, Justice.

This case was here on a former appeal of the receiver from a decree ordering the sale of the property. Darley v. Alabama Public Utilities Co. et al., 236 Ala. 463, 183 So. 447.

This appeal is from a final decree dismissing the original hills in the nature of cross-bills of W. Arnold Duncan and Victor W. Nelson, separately filed, as holders of bonds issued by the South Central Telephone Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Delaware, alleged to be secured by deed of trust on property located in Alabama, consisting of real estate, telephone lines, equipment and franchises for the operation of such public utility.

The said Duncan in his bill filed September 10, 1937, alleges, that he “is the owner and holder of certain of said bonds secured by said mortgage to the sum of, to-wit, $185,000.00. * * * that the principal amount of said bonds will become due on February 1, 1938.”

By amendment, said cross-complainant alleged that he acquired the bonds on December 12, 1929, from the “Mid-Continent Utilities Corporation Bondholders Protective Committee”; that he acquired “said bonds from the owner or holder thereof for a valid cash consideration prior to the maturity of said bonds.” There is in his bill an absence of averment that he acquired said bonds without notice of defects in the bonds or title thereto.

Nelson, in his bill filed February 21, 1938, alleged that he “is the holder in due course of certain of said bonds secured by said mortgage to the sum of, to-wit, $50,000.00,” with like averment as to the maturity as incorporated in the bill of Duncan. There is also an absence of averment that the bonds were acquired by said cross-complainant without notice, or that he paid value therefor.

The complainant, Darley, amended the original bill, and also the answers to the original bills in the nature of cross-bills by incorporating in the original bill as paragraph 4(a), and in said answers the following averments: “That the uncancelled mortgage or deed of trust against the properties of the Alabama Public Utilities Company was dated February 1st, 1928, and purports to have been executed by South Central Telephone Company to Union Trust Company and Rufus F. Chapin, Trustees, and purports to have conveyed the real properties located in the State of Alabama, and which are the properties of the Alabama Public Utilities Company; that said bonds were issued without the receipt of any money or property by said corporation, South Central Telephone Company, and without the performance of any labor for said corporation, South Central Telephone. Company, that the indebtedness evidenced by said bonds was fictitious, and that said fictitious bond issue was void and of no effect in the hands of any person. That the course of dealings with said bonds was that said bonds were without any consideration, either of money, property or labor, issued and delivered to J. S. Martin & Company, an Illinois Corporation, which in turn delivered said bonds to Mid-Continent Utilities Corporation, a Delaware Corporation, and that said Mid-Continent Utilities Corporation pledged said bonds as security for an issue of ten year-six percent Gold Bonds, Serial A of said Mid-Continent Utilities Corporation. That no consideration whatever was paid to South Central Telephone Company for the issuance of said bonds, and that said bond issue is fictitious and void as a lien or charge against any real property located in the State of Alabama, or against any of the properties involved in this suit.”

The order of submission recited: “This cause coming on to be heard, is submitted for final decree on the issue presented as to' the validity vel non of the mortgage or deed of trust against the properties of the Alabama Public Utilities Company dated February 1, 1928, and the bonds secured thereby, and upon pleadings and proof as noted by the Register.”

The testimony of two or more witnesses given ore tenus in open court and documentary evidence consisting of exhibits to depositions and the files in the case were noted by the Register.

The weight of historic data confirms the fact that the concept of separate entity of a business organization from the natural persons operating and controlling it, originated in the civil law. 14 C.J. 50, § 2. However this may be, and though it be conceded that this concept originated in the development and growth of English Jurisprudence, as evidenced by the organization of the “Hudson Bay Company,” organized by the governors and certain adventurers as a business trust, under charter granted by the Crown of England, for the purposes of exploiting the North American Conti *90 nent; nevertheless the modern business corporation as recognized in the United States is solely a creature of legislative authority, chartered by special legislative act or organized under general statute which constitutes its charter and the source of its power. 14 C.J. 92, § 53; Ex parte Selma & Gulf Railroad Company, 45 Ala. 696, 725; 6 Am.Rep. 722; Paschall v. Whitsett, 11 Ala. 472.

In the absence, therefore, of pleadings and proof of the lex loci contractus the lex fori must be applied in determining the validity of the deed of trust executed by the South Central Telephone Company, and the bonds which it purported to secure. Peet & Co. v. Hatcher, 112 Ala. 514, 21 So. 711, 57 Am.St.Rep. 45; Kennebrew v. Southern Automatic Electric Shock Machine Company, 106 Ala. 377, 17 So. 545, 549; 17 C.J. S., Contracts, p. 335, § 12.

Article XII, § 234, of the Constitution of 1901, declares that: “No corporation shall issue stocks or bonds except for money, labor done, or property actually received; and all fictitious increase of stock or indebtedness shall be void. The stock and bonded indebtedness of corporations shall not be increased except in pursuance of general laws, nor without the consent of the persons holding the larger amount in value of stock, first obtained at a meeting to be held after thirty days’ notice, given in pursuance of law.” Skinner’s Annot.Constitution 1901, p. 842.

This Section of the Constitution expresses in the highest form the public policy of this State. Randolph v. East Birmingham Land Co. et al., 104 Ala. 355; 16 So. 126, 53 Am.St.Rep. 64; White v. White, 230 Ala. 641, 162 So. 368; Williams v. Evans, 87 Ala. 725, 6 So. 702, 6 L.R.A. 218; American Ice and Industries Co. v. Crane, 142 Ala. 620, 39 So. 233; Nelson v. Hubbard, 96 Ala. 238, 11 So. 428, 17 L.R.A. 375.

In Williams v. Evans, supra [87 Ala. 725, 6 So. 703, 6 L.R.A. 218] it was observed, that: “One of the purposes of this clause of the constitution was to protect the public, as well as stockholders, against spurious and worthless stock by the process of watering, — in other words, from fraudulently issuing and putting on the market fictitious corporate stock, which is based on nothing valuable, as a- consideration for its issue.”

And said § 234 of the Constitution places “stocks or bonds” in the same -category. American Ice and Industries Co. et als. v. Crane, supra.

And in Nelson v. Hubbard, supra, it was held that [96 Ala. 238, 11 So. 432, 17 L.R.A.

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194 So. 177, 239 Ala. 87, 1939 Ala. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-darley-ala-1939.