Producers' Coal Co. of Ky. v. Barnaby

275 S.W. 625, 210 Ky. 244, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 654
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 19, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 625 (Producers' Coal Co. of Ky. v. Barnaby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Producers' Coal Co. of Ky. v. Barnaby, 275 S.W. 625, 210 Ky. 244, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 654 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

*246 Opinion op the Court by

Judge Sampson

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

Appellee, William Barnaby, and a hundred or more other employes of appellant, Producers’ Coal Company of Kentucky, incorporated, commenced this action in the Union circuit court against appellant, coal company, under sections 2487, 2488, 2490 and 2491, Kentucky Statutes, upon their several claims for past due wages owing by the company to them, and each of them, and to have their several claims adjudged a prior and superior lien .upon all the property, both real and personal, of the company located at Waverly, Union county, and for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of and preserve the property, pending the litigation, on the grounds, as alleged in the petition, that the appellant company had ceased to operate its coal mine on the property described, and the mine, an underdrainage one, was through the neglect of the company and its officials, agents and servants, being permitted to fill with water, whereby it was being greatly injured and damaged and the personal property was deteriorating and becoming valueless. It was averred in the petition that the coal company at the time of the commencement of this action was indebted to R. C. Arnold and wife in the sum of $55,000.00, secured by mortgage on the coal property at Waverly, and was indebted to the Union Bank of Chicago in the sum of $300,000.00, secured by mortgage, and against which bonds had been or would be issued; and was further indebted to Charles Schlytern, trustee, in the sum of $40,000.00, also secured by mortgage upon the same property. It was further averred in the petition that the company was indebted on unsecured claims for labor, supplies, etc., in the sum of about $24,000.00; the amount of the claims forming the basis of this action totalling about $9,000.00.

Appellees averred that the wages for which they sued had been earned while in the employment of the appellant company, mining, loading and shipping coal for it within six months before the commencement of the action and that the company had suspended business and ceased to operate its mine within sixty days next before the filing of the suit, thus bringing themselves clearly within the provisions of the statutes to which we have referred. Operations ceased at the mines about June 1st, and all of the appellees, employes, were out of employ *247 ment, and the company had failed to meet its last two pay days. This suit was commenced on June 11,1924.

Motion with notice for receiver for the property of the company was made immediately following the filing of the suit, and on June 24th the chancellor, upon hearing, sustained the motion and placed the property in charge of R. C. Arnold as temporary custodian, and named E. R. Morton, master commissioner of the Union circuit court, as receiver for the property, and Morton immediately thereafter qualified and entered upon the discharge of his duties. Among other things, he was directed to advertise for claims against the property and report to the court. Thereupon Schlytern filed answer and cross-petition against the company, seeking the enforcement of his mortgage lien on the property of the company to the amount of $40,000.00; and the Union Bank of Chicago, trustee of the $300,000.00 mortgage bond issue, filed its answer and cross-petition seeking to enforce its lien. About the same time Mrs. Fannie C. Arnold filed her answer and cross-petition to enforce her purchase money lien of $55,000.00 against the mining property. The Producers ’ Coal Company filed its reply to the answers and cross-petitions, averring that its charter limit of indebtedness was $100,000.00, and that by reason of the mortgage bond issue being in excess of the charter limit of indebtedness, it is void and unenforceable, and, further, that the mortgage and bonds we’re illegally placed upon the property by A. E. Anderson, a promoter and principal owner of the coal company, and same had been fully paid for by him out of the funds belonging to the coal company, and it prayed judgment declaring all such indebtedness void and unenforceable. After the issues were made up a large amount of evidence was taken in depositions in support of the several claims of the parties. The cause being submitted on its merits the court found for the original plaintiffs, employes of the coal company, on their several claims for wages amounting to a total of more than $9,000.00 and gave them a prior lien, and adjudged Mrs. Arnold to recover $22,148.00 for purchase money with lien, and also that certain other persons and companies that had furnished material and supplies to the company should have-liens for their money on the property of the company. ’

Appellant company’s first and chief insistence is,' that the chancellor erred in sustaining appellees ’ motion' f.or receiver for the property of the company, and in ap- *248 pointing a receiver for the property of the appellant, coal company, because, it says, it was not insolvent and its property was not in danger of being lost or removed. The pertinent provisions of section 2487, Kentucky Statutes, relating to liens of employes on the property and effects of coal companies reads:

“When the property or effects of any mine, etc., . : . company, 1 . . whether incorporated or not, shall be assigned for the benefit of creditors, shall come into the hands of any executor, administrator, commissioner, receiver of a court, trustee or assignee for the benefit of creditors, or shall in any wise come to be distributed among creditors, whether by operation of law or by the act of such company, . . ' . the employes of such owner or operator in such business shall have a lien upon so much of such-property and effects as may have been involved in such business,” including both realty and personalty.

Section 2490 provides:

“When any such company, owner or operator shall suspend, sell or transfer such business, or when the property or effects engaged in such business shall be taken in attachment or execution, so that the business shall be stopped or suspended, the said lien shall attach as fully as is provided in section 1 of this article, and in such case may be enforced by proceedings in equity. ”

Wages of employes falling due within six months before the property or effects of the company “shall in any wise come to be distributed among creditors” are made a superior lien upon the property of the coal company-by section 2488, Kentucky Statutes.

This action by the employes for receiver and for lien to secure past due wages is based upon the suspension of business of the coal company, as provided by section 2490, Kentucky Statutes, providing that when such company “shall suspend . .' . such business, the lien shall attach as fully as is provided by section 2487, and in such ease may be enforced by proceedings in equity.” There is no denial by the company that its mines were shut down and operation suspended, but it says that the suspension of work was not voluntary on- its part but the result of the wrongful conduct of appellees, its employes, *249 in calling a strike and ceasing to work in the mines.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 625, 210 Ky. 244, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/producers-coal-co-of-ky-v-barnaby-kyctapphigh-1925.