Old National Bank v. Heckman

47 N.E. 953, 148 Ind. 490, 1897 Ind. LEXIS 241
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 1897
DocketNo. 18,151
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 47 N.E. 953 (Old National Bank v. Heckman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Old National Bank v. Heckman, 47 N.E. 953, 148 Ind. 490, 1897 Ind. LEXIS 241 (Ind. 1897).

Opinion

McCabe, C. J.

This suit was brought by the appellees Rosine Heckman, Elizabeth Weinheimer, Rose Kreipke and Philip W. Frey, against the appellant, [491]*491The Old National Bank of Evansville, and against the appellee, The Indiana Pottery Company, to foreclose a mortgage given by the Indiana Pottery Company to the other appellees.

The issues formed were tried by the court, resulting -in special finding of the facts on which the court stated its conclusions of law favorable to the appellees, and rendered judgment accordingly.

The substance of the special finding is as follows: The plaintiffs, Bose Kreipke and Elizabeth Weinheimer, are both daughters of the plaintiff Rosine Heckman, and are the wives of William Kreipke and Louis Weinheimer respectively. Prior to the year 1892, the plaintiff, Rose Kreipke, loaned said William Kreipke the sum of $1,650.00, and afterwards she loaned him the further sum of $1,350.00, and took his note for the sum of $3,000.00; that with the proceeds of said loan he purchased real' estate on Main street in the city of Evansville; that he' after-wards sold said real estate, and with the proceeds of said sale he purchased stock in the Uhl Pottery Company; that the plaintiff, Elizabeth Weinheimer, in 1888 loaned Louis Weinheimer, her husband, the sum of $1,600.00 and took his note for that amount; that he purchased stock in the Old National Bank with the proceeds of said loan, and that afterwards he sold said bank stock, and with the proceeds of such sale he purchased stock in the Uhl Pottery Company; that at the time of said parchase he borrowed from the plaintiff, Elizabeth Weinheimer, the further sum of $1,400.00, and with the proceeds of said loan purchased stock in the Uhl Pottery Company; that at the time he borrowed said sum of $1,400.00 from her, he took up the note for $1,600.00 and gave her his note for $3,000.00. No part of either of these sums have been paid by the said Kreipke and Weinheimer to their wives. After [492]*492giving the note for $3,000.00, and while he was solvent, said Kreipke built a house for the plaintiff, Rose Kreipke, on her real estate, at the cost of $1,200.00, which he donated to her.

On and before the 25th of December, 1893. the Uhl Pottery Company was a Corporation organized under the statutes of this State providing for the incorporation of manufacturing and mining companies. It had an authorized capital of $25,000.00. It was organized in 1891, and its term of existence was ten years, its place of business was Evansville, and its object of formation, as stated in its articles of association, was the manufacture and sale of pottery and similar goods. At the date above mentioned it had but three stockholders, namely: Louis Weinheimer, William H. Kreipke and one Arthur W. Blackman, said Weinheimer and Kreipke having each stock in said company of the par value of $5,000.00, and said Blackman having stock in said company of the par value of $1,000.00, which he at the time of the conveyance next mentioned sold to said Weinheimer and Kreipke for $250.00. The only directors, of said company at said date were said Louis Weinheimer, William H. Kreipke and said Blackman.

On said 23d day of December, 1893, a conveyance was made of all the property of the Uhl Pottery Company to said Louis Weinheimer and William H. Kreipke. Said deed was made in the name of the Uhl Pottery Company, and was executed by said Kreipke as president of said company, and by said Weinheimer as secretary of said company, to themselves as individuals. At once upon the transfer of all property of the Uhl Pottery Company to themselves, as hereinbefore stated, said Weinheimer and Kreipke began and continued the same kind of business that said Uhl Pottery Company had been engaged in as partners, under [493]*493the name of The Indiana Pottery Company, using in said business the plant and all other property of said Uhl Pottery Company. Shortly after Said 23d day of December, 1893, said firm of Weinheimer and Kreipke, by the name of The Indiana Pottery Company, assumed the said indebtedness of the individual members of said firm to their wives, and gave a note of said firm to the plaintiff, Elizabeth Weinheimer, of $3,000.00, and to the plaintiff, Eose Kreipke, of $3,000.00. Neither said Uhl Pottery Company, nor said firm of Weinheimer and Kreipke at said time, nor at any other time, were indebted to either of said plaintiffs in any sum whatever, and the only consideration for the assumption of said indebtedness and the giving of their said notes was the fact, as herein stated, that each of said husbands owed his wife. Said Weinheimer and Kreipke conducted said business under said name of The Indiana Pottery Company until the 3d day of October, 1894, when they, with their brother-in-law, Louis Heckman, filed articles of association under the law providing for the incorporation of manufacturing and mining companies, and formed a corporation under the same name of The Indiana Pottery Company with a capital stock of $25,000.00, and term of existence of fifty years, with their place of business at Evansville, Indiana, and to carry on the same kind of business as had been carried on by said Uhl Pottery Company. There were but three incorporators, namely: said Louis Weinheimer, William H. Kreipke and Louis Heckman, said Weinheimer and Kreipke taking each one hundred shares of $50.00 each of the capital stock of said new corporation, and said Louis Heckman one share, said individuals being the sole stockholders and only directors of said company. At once upon the organization of said company, said Louis Weinheimer and William Kreipke [494]*494made a deed to said new company, in which their wives joined, of all the real estate which had been transferred from said Uhl Pottery Company to said Weinheimer and Kreipke, including the plant of said Uhl Pottery Company; and they also made a bill of sale to said .new corporation of all the other assets of said firm of Weinheimer and Kreipke, which included all they had received from said Uhl Pottery Company.

Said Weinheimer and Kreipke, upon such conveyance and transfer, caused said Indiana Pottery Company to enter on its minutes an agreement to assume the debts of said Weinheimer and Kreipke and they caused said Indiana Pottery Company, as a corporation, to execute and deliver to the said Elizabeth Weinheimer and to said Rose Kreipke, each of them, a note for $3,000.00 in lieu of the notes of said Weinheimer and Kreipke held by said plaintiffs, which were by the said plaintiffs surrendered to the said Weinheimer and Kreipke; at the same time said Weinheimer and Kreipke caused said corporation, The Indiana Pottery Company, to execute and deliver to the plaintiff, Rosine Heckman, a note for $6,000.00 which note, as hereinafter shown, was without consideration, except for the sum of $2,000.00.

Said Weinheimer and Kreipke, and said Louis Heckman, paid nothing for the stock so taken by them in said new corporation, except by the transfer of said plant and other property to said corporation; that on September 27th, 1894, said firm of Weinheimer and Kreipke, doing business under the name of the Indiana Pottery Company, borrowed from the plaintiff, Rosine Heckman, the sum of $2,000.00; that on said last mentioned date the said firm executed and'delivered to the plaintiff Rosine Heckman its note for the sum of $6,000.00; that said note was without consideration, except the sum of $2,000.00 borrowed as [495]*495aforesaid.

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Bluebook (online)
47 N.E. 953, 148 Ind. 490, 1897 Ind. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/old-national-bank-v-heckman-ind-1897.