Patterson v. United States Bond & Mortgage Co.

199 So. 695, 240 Ala. 474, 1940 Ala. LEXIS 278
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 19, 1940
Docket6 Div. 747.
StatusPublished

This text of 199 So. 695 (Patterson v. United States Bond & Mortgage Co.) 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
Patterson v. United States Bond & Mortgage Co., 199 So. 695, 240 Ala. 474, 1940 Ala. LEXIS 278 (Ala. 1940).

Opinion

*476 KNIGHT, Justice.

Bill by C. D. Patterson, as -assignee of Grace A. Patterson, against the United States Bond and Mortgage Company, a corporation, and the two receivers of said corporation, praying for a moneyed judgment and decree against said corporation, and to require the receivers “to list said judgment and decree when entered, in accordance with the class to which it may belong as a claim against the corpus of said receivership, and direct payment thereof along with other creditors of the class of claims so established,” and for general relief.

It appears from the bill that one Grace A. Patterson, in September, 1927, entered into three separate contracts with the corporation respondent for the purchase of a certain number of shares of “non par cumulative seven per cent guaranteed and additional participating preferred stock,” and a like number of non par common capital stock, of said corporation. Each of said contracts was on a printed form with identical contractual terms, except as to dates and amounts involved. The aggregate of the first mentioned class of stock was 110 shares, and the aggregate of the second mentioned class was likewise 110 shares. A copy of one of the contracts is attached to the bill as Exhibit “A” and appears in the report of the case.

It appears that on the first of said contracts the said Grace A. Patterson paid the corporation the aggregate sum of $380: on the second contract she paid the sum of $950: and that on the third contract she paid $760.

It further appears that on February 4, 1930, the respondent corporation, under the terms of said contracts, entered and credited Miss 'Patterson with interest as follows: On first contract $41; on second, $115; and on the third $82.

It further appears from the bill that on, towit, February 24, 1930, the United States Bond and Mortgage Company notified said Grace A. Patterson in writing that it had, pursuant to the provision in the contract of purchase, elected to cancel her “reservation” for 110 shares of common and 410 of preferred stock, on account of her failure to continue the payments called for by said contracts, and that it would proceed in accordance with the terms of said contracts as to repayment of the sums due thereon.

It further appears from the bill that the said Grace A. Patterson did on September 26, 1931, “transfer, sell, and assign to C. D. Patterson, the complainant, all the stock and all the interest in stock which she then had in the United States Bond and Mortgage Company, together with any claim of any kind or description she might have against said corporate respondent.”

It also appears from the bill that the corporate respondent had been placed in receivership, in the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, and that the court had appointed J. Kirkman Jackson and Carlton P. Smith receivers “for the management of the affairs of said corporation,” and that they had duly qualified and were acting as such receivers under the orders of said court.

The bill further avers that on, towit, December 15, 1931, the complainant filed suit in the law division of the Circuit Court of Jefferson County, seeking to recover the amounts paid by said Grace A. Patterson on said stock contracts, and that said" action had been transferred by written consent of all parties and consolidated with the receivership then and now pending in said court.

On final hearing, the court denied the complainant the specific relief prayed for, but held and decreed that the complainant, as assignee of Grace A. Patterson, was in equity and good conscience entitled to be considered and treated as a shareholder of said corporation to the extent that the money paid by said Grace A, Patterson upon her subscription contracts, less the commission paid, at the rate of 11% to the fiscal agent for procuring of said subscription contracts, would pay for shares of stock in the corporation of the class and at the price provided for by the terms of said subscription contracts. The court then proceeded to ascertain that the money so paid by Miss Patterson, less said com *477 missions, would and did entitle complainant to 38%s shares of “participating preferred stock and a like number of shares of common stock.” That in the distribution of the assets of said corporation the said complainant was entitled to share according to said ascertainment, etc. From this decree complainant appeals.

It is not here insisted that complainant's assignor ever paid in full for any shares of stock, on the contrary, the evidence shows that she ceased to make payments on said contracts before completing payment under any of them. Under the terms of said subscription contracts for stock, the corporation was not to issue any certificate of stock to the said Grace A. Patterson until the stock was paid for in full.

The subscription contracts contained the following provisions, among others:

“The Company agrees to issue Stock Certificates for the above number and kinds of shares when they are paid' for in full by applicant. The preferred shares shall provide for an annual dividend of $3.50, guaranteed dn each share, payable January 1st and July 1st of each year, and in addition thereto after 7 c has been paid on common the preferred shall share equally with the common in any greater earnings of the Company, payable from surplus earnings only.

“The applicant agrees that upon failure to carry out the terms of payment for 60 days, time being the essence of this contract, the Company may cancel this reservation and offer for resale the shares represented herein. And after deducting the cost of this sale and such resale, refund to applicant any amount paid in by him less such expense.”

Under the plainest terms of said agreements, • the corporation merely agreed to issue the stock to the said Grace A. Patterson, if and when she had paid in full therefor, and therefore no title to any of the stock ever passed into Miss Patterson, or into her assignee, the complainant. The contracts were wholly executory. Gill Printing Co., et al. v. Goodman, 224 Ala. 97, 139 So. 250. We confess our inability to see just how the court held that the complainant, as such assignee, was entitled to a decree adjudging him to be “in equity and good conscience,” the owner of 38%5 shares of participating preferred stock, and a like number of shares of common stock.

Complainant was either entitled to have a moneyed decree in his favor for some amount, or he has not made out a case where the right to a refund has yet accrued to him. This, then, requires us to determine what steps, if any, the corporation took to carry out the provisions of the contracts which required it, on the cancellation of the subscription contracts, to sell the stock which Miss Patterson had subscribed for, in order to make refund of the amounts paid on her subscriptions.

The respondents, by their answer, admit the cancellation of the subscription contracts as of date February 24, 1930, but as their excuse for not making any refund to Miss Patterson, or to her assignee, they say “that subsequent to the date of the cancellation of the aforesaid subscription contracts market conditions in this

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Related

Gill Printing Co. v. Goodman
139 So. 250 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
199 So. 695, 240 Ala. 474, 1940 Ala. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-united-states-bond-mortgage-co-ala-1940.