New Birmingham Iron & Land Co. v. Blevens

34 S.W. 828, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 410, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1896
DocketNo. 1261.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 34 S.W. 828 (New Birmingham Iron & Land Co. v. Blevens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Birmingham Iron & Land Co. v. Blevens, 34 S.W. 828, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 410, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 207 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This appeal is from an interlocutory decree of the District Court of Cherokee County, appointing John B. Reagan of said county receiver of the property of the New Birmingham Iron & Land Company and the New Birmingham Iron & Improvement Company, two corporations chartered by the State of Texas, and having each its domicile in the said county of Cherokee; the first chartered in 1889, and the second in 1891. The purpose of the first-named company was to buy and sell lands, and to establish and build up a manufacturing city in said county. The appointment of the receiver was made upon the prayer of the plaintiffs in the suit of A. B. Blevins, ICyle Pace and Kathleen Egan, against the aforesaid corporations, and James A. Mahonjq Wm. R. Utley, Leopold Wallach, Charles M. Wells and Richard L. Coleman, the plaintiffs suing for themselves, and for such others of the stockholders of the New Birmingham Iron & Land Company (or, as it is otherwise designated in the petition, “the old company”) in like situation with the plaintiffs, and who, were willing to make themselves parties and contribute to the expense of the suit.

The order for the appointment was first made in vacation by the judge for the judicial district embracing the county of Cherokee, before the plaintiffs’ petition was filed, and afterwards, when the petition had been filed, the same order was made by the same judge, and this order was attached to the petition. This was on the 10th of September, and on same day said Reagan duly qualified. The petition averred that said New Birmingham Iron & Land Company, in pursuance of the purpose of its organization, acquired ore, and timbered lands having upon them well improved farms, established and improved a site for a city, naming it “New Birmingham,” and erected thereon a smelting furnace, a brick-making plant, two hotels, besides other improvements, and also •acquired a large amount of personal property of various kinds. That *413 in June and July, 1891, said company was in a prosperous condition and was possessed of assets, real and personal, of the aggregate value of (as plaintiffs believe) $1,500,000, and, as plaintiffs believed, owed not exceeding $500,000. That plaintiffs then, and had for a long time previous, owned and still owned stock in said company of the aggregate value of $101,000; that the principal creditors were the defendants, James A. Mahony, William R Utley, Leopold Wallach and Richard L. ('oleman; that Coleman was and had been for a long time president of the said company; that he and the other defendants owned and controlled a large amount of the stock of the company; that prior to June, 1891, said company had executed a deed of trust upon its franchise and property to the Holland Trust Company to secure an issue of 300 seven per cent bonds of $1000 each, payable in the year 1909, and said bonds, had been pledged to said creditors and stockholders as security for money loaned by them to improve the property of said company.

The plaintiffs then charge, upon their information and belief, that Coleman and the other creditors above named and one Charles W. Wells, on June 1, 1891, conspired to obtain possession of all of the property of said company, and to convert the same to their use and benefit; and that, in furtherance of said conspiracy, the said Coleman, on June 11, 1891, under pretense that the debts of the company were pressing, issued a circular to the stockholders calling for a meeting at New Birmingham on July 15, 1891, and in said circular the stockholders of the company are advised that, upon consultation with the creditors and some of the largest stockholders, the directors think it possible to make an arrangement with the creditors for the cancellation of the debts of the company, by conveying its property to a new company to be organized by them with such bonds and capital stock as may be agreed upon, and by which such equitable portion of the common stock of the new company shall be given to this company as will enáble the directors to make a distribution thereof to the stockholders of the existing company at the rate of not less than 25 per cent of their holdings, and that it is proposed that the new company shall, with additional capital, make -some extensions to the manufacturing plant, and thereby, with the existing property, it was hoped that a substantial value would be given to the stock of the new company in a reasonable time; that plaintiffs, having confidence in Coleman, and believing the debts of the company would be cancelled and equitable distribution of the stock of the new company would be made, acquiesced in the proposed plan, and voted by proxy for said proposed reorganization and transfer of the property of the Birmingham Iron & Land Company (which is in said petition designated as the old company) to the company proposed to be organized; that a charter was procured by defendants on July 13, 1891, for the said proposed company, and in pursuance of the action of the stockholders of the old company, all of the property of said company was transferred to the new company, the corporate name being, the New Birmingham Iron & Improvement Company; and that, at a pretended *414 meeting of the stockholders of said last named company, held on July 15, 1891, and which meeting, as plaintiffs were informed and believed, was dominated by the aforesaid defendants, resolutions were passed providing for the issuance of $1,000,000 six per cent gold bonds of said company, and $700,000 of which were to be delivered to said creditors, and $700,000 of preferred stock in said company, and $2,480,000 of common stock therein (out of $2,800,000 of common stock) also to be delivered to said creditors, and $750,000 of the common stock to be delivered to the old company.

Plaintiffs then charge that said new company had failed and refused to deliver and still fails and refuses to deliver to plaintiffs any stock in said company, although they have in good faith, with other stockholders, surrendered their stock in the old company; that the new company, as plaintiffs are informed and believe, agreed to accept the transfer of the property of the old company under the terms and conditions aforesaid, and thereby agreed to cancel the entire indebtedness of the old company. The plaintiff Blevins avers that, believing the purpose of the incorporation of the new company, when the action of its stockholders of the 15th of July was made known to him, was to destroy the old company, and to cheat and defraud him and other stockholders thereof, after remonstrating with defendants and failing to obtain any assurance that justice would be done him, he instituted suit in the District Court of Cherokee County against said old and new company, and the Central Trust Company of New York, and the said Coleman, James A. Mahony and Wm. R. Utley, and one Richard J. Mahony and George F.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.W. 828, 12 Tex. Civ. App. 410, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-birmingham-iron-land-co-v-blevens-texapp-1896.