Peacock Coal Co. v. Gaines Coal Co.

219 N.W. 24, 206 Iowa 1228
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 3, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 219 N.W. 24 (Peacock Coal Co. v. Gaines Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peacock Coal Co. v. Gaines Coal Co., 219 N.W. 24, 206 Iowa 1228 (iowa 1928).

Opinions

De Graff, J.

Plaintiff sold and delivered to the defendant Gaines Coal Company certain quantities of coal for which payment has not been made. There is no dispute about this. Is defendant Israel liable for the payment?

On the factual side it is shown that, about November 1, 1925, E. M. Gaines, under the trade name of E. M. Gaines Coal Company, was conducting a retail coal business on East Court Avenue, Des Moines, Iowa, and that appellant Israel entered into negotiations with Gaines to purchase an interest in said business. Israel did advance Gaines $1,000, and for security took an assignment of certain accounts receivable for the refunding of this money. On or about the 20th of November, 1925, Israel informed Gaines that the property did not look good to him, and told Gaines that he wanted his money back. The reason assigned by Israel was that there was insufficient capital, but he further testified:

“If he [Gaines] would organize a stock company, I would purchase stock in that company. Mr. Gaines agreed to that *1230 proposition, and agreed to the incorporation, and incorporation was ordered under the laws of the state of Delaware, for the reason that it was considerably less expensive. After our application for a charter in the state of Delaware, Mr. Gaines received a certificate of incorporation.”

The issued certificate of incorporation of the Gaines Coal Company 'from the office of the secretary of state of the state of Delaware bore date November 24, 1925, and was duly recorded November 25, 1925, in the office of the recorder of deeds at Wilmington, New Castle County, Delaware. This date, November 24, 1925, is important in the consideration of this cause. It was an important date on the trial in the district court, for the reason that the liability of the defendant Israel as the partner of Gaines in the E. M. Gaines Coal Company, prior to November 24, 1925, was viewed as a fact question, and was submitted to the’ jury for determination; whereas, the liability of the defendant Israel for coal sold and delivered by plaintiff to the Gaines Coal Company subsequently to that date was determined by the trial court, as a matter of law. The jury returned its verdict for the defendant Israel, and in so doing must have determined that, during that period, Israel was not the partner of Gaines. With this phase of the case we are not concerned, on this appeal. The trial court ruled the question of law in favor of the plaintiff, and directed a verdict against the defendant Israel for coal sold and delivered subsequent to November 24, 1925, on the theory that Israel, purporting to act for the Delaware corporation unlicensed in the state of Iowa, was individually liable for the coal sold and delivered to the Gaines Coal Company.

It is with this ruling that this appeal is concerned. In brief, the question is: Was thé liability of Israel for the coal sold ánd delivered.by plaintiff after November 24, 1925, a question of fact, to be determined’ by the jury? We think not. In the first instance, plaintiff bottomed his right to recover on the’ pleaded fact'that the Gaines Coal Company was a partnership, composed of E. M. Gaines and W. D. Israel. By an amendment to his petition, plaintiff alleged that Gaines and Israel entered into air agreement to incorporate under the name of the Gaines Coal Company, and in pursuance of said agreement procured a charter of incorporation from the state of Delaware, but that the *1231 said defendants did not in any manner comply with the laws of the state of Iowa for the purpose of conducting their business as a corporation in the state of Iowa; that the articles of incorporation were not filed with the secretary of state of Iowa; and that said articles were never recorded with the recorder of Polk County, Iowa, and no notice was ever published, as provided by Section 8357, Code of 1924, and no permit was ever obtained from the state of Iowa, as provided by Chapter 386, Code of 1924.

It is further alleged that the Gaines Coal Company did not, at any time, issue stock for value to any party; that neither B. M. Gaines nor W. D. Israel was issued stock in the Gaines Coal Company, and that they did not make a valid subscription for stock, and did not become a part of the Gaines Coal Company, a purported corporation of Delaware; that there never was a transfer to the purported Delaware corporation of the property owned by Gaines or Israel, or both of them,- in the coal business carried on by them in Des Moines, Iowa; that the purported corporation in the state of Delaware never entered into a contract or arrangement with Gaines and Israel or the E. M. Gaines Coal Company by which said parties would carry on the business of selling coal for the Gaines Coal Company, the purported Delaware corporation; that the said Gaines and Israel did conduct a business of buying and selling coal at 706 East Court Avenue, Des Moines, but that the business as operated did not then nor at any time become identified with or legally connected with the Gaines Coal Company, the purported Delaware corporation; that neither Gaines nor Israel held any stock, by assignment or otherwise, in the Gaines Coal Company, a purported corporation of Delaware, and received no authority from the'officers of said corporation, if any, to do business for said corporation; but that E. M. Gaines and W. D. Israel were individually and together conducting said business as a joint adventure, but did not at any time become legally connected with the Gaines Coal Company, a purported corporation of Delaware; that Gaines and Israel did, in fact, conduct the coal business jointly under the name of the Gaines Coal Company, and are liable individually for all debts contracted while so conducting that business, and for the .debt in suit, owed to the plaintiff, Peacock Coal Company.

*1232 The record amply sustains the allegations of fact. It is disclosed that Gaines and Israel were the organizers and promoters of the Gaines Coal Company, a Delaware corporation, and there is no escape from the conclusion that the Delaware corporation was promoted by them for the purpose of securing a permit in the state of Iowa for said Delaware corporation to transact business in the state of Iowa. They did attempt to secure this permit, but failed. However, they did operate the business of buying and selling coal in Des Moines, Iowa, as the Gaines Coal Company, and attempted to exercise rights under the corporate franchise of the purported Delaware corporation, which was chartered for the primary purpose of carrying on the business of wholesalers and retailers of coal and other products, and to make contracts with coal companies with reference to handling and selling coal on such terms as may be agreed upon.

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219 N.W. 24, 206 Iowa 1228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peacock-coal-co-v-gaines-coal-co-iowa-1928.