Roach v. Wallins Creek Collieries Co.

160 S.E. 860, 111 W. Va. 1, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 141
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1931
Docket6463
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 160 S.E. 860 (Roach v. Wallins Creek Collieries Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roach v. Wallins Creek Collieries Co., 160 S.E. 860, 111 W. Va. 1, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 141 (W. Va. 1931).

Opinion

Litz, President :

The defendant, Wallins Creek Collieries Company, is a Delaware corporation. It formerly owned and operated coal mining plants in Kentucky, while maintaining its principal office at Charleston, West Virginia. October 8, 1923, numerous miners in its employ recovered judgments against it in the circuit court of Harlan County, Kentucky, for alleged wages due them, in the aggregate of $18,000. November 7th, following, the appellant, Maryland Casualty Company, became surety on supersedeas bonds executed by the Collieries Company in the process of perfecting appeals from the judgments to the Kentucky Court of Appeals. The appeals being later dismissed as improvidently awarded (Wallins Creek Collieries Company v. Marshall, 217 Ky. 647, 290 S. W. 519), judgments were recovered on the bonds against the principal and surety. Maryland Casualty Company v. Marshall, 226 Ky. 62, 10 S. W. (2d) 485. Having a very large general indebtedness, the Collieries Company (in 1924) conveyed its tangible assets to Harlan-Wallins Coal Corporation in consideration of 4750 non-par shares of the capital stock of the Coal Corporation and the assumption by it of specific indebtedness of the Collieries Company amounting to $570,000. August .11, 1925, the stockholders of the Collieries Company passed a resolution authorizing its directors to sell, transfer, pledge or encumber so much of its assets as in their opinion might be necessary to secure funds sufficient to pay, settle and adjust its remaining obligations. Pursuant to the authority thus conferred, the directors, by resolution of September 26th, following, ratified and confirmed a tentative agreement (executed October 12, 1925), between the Collieries Company, party of the first part, and Caldwell & Company and American National Company, corporations, and Joe B. Palmer, doing business under the firm name of Joe B. Palmer Company, parties of the second part, designated “Bankers Agreement,” whereby the parties of the second part agreed to purchase of the party of the first part *3 all or any of tbe 4759 shares of stock owned by it in the Coal Corporation, and the party of the first part agreed to sell to the parties of the second part 2815 of said shares, at $20.00 a share. The directors, by the same resolution, authorized the settlement of a claim of sixty thousand dollars asserted against the company by B. K. Littlepage (a stockholder and director) for the sum of $31,263.80. ^Pursuant also to said resolution another contract was entered into, October 12, 1925, between the Collieries Company and the American Trust Company, a corporation, with its principal offices in Nashville, Tennessee, trustee, whereby the said 4750 shares of stock were delivered to the trustee with authority to transfer 2815 shares thereof and collect the purchase price therefor under the Bankers Agreement. The contract states the items of admitted indebtedness against the Collieries Company, aggregating $29,119.49, and disputed claims asserted against it as follows: $31,263.80 in favor of B. K. Littlepage for legal services; $20,000 in favor of Jesse Blan-ton for arrears undeb a lease of coal in Kentucky; $20,000 in favor of the United States G-overnment for income taxes. It authorized the trustee to set apart a fund of $4,000 from the price of the stock “for the purpose of paying attorney fees, legal expenses and other expenses necessarily incurred in the defense of certain law suits against the Company, and the general conduct of its affairs.” It further authorized the trustee to pay checks and drafts issued by the Collieries Company in settlement of its admitted indebtedness; to pay the claim of B. K. Littlegape after final judgment, or, at its discretion, upon advice of the directors of the company; to resist the claims of Blanton, the miners and the United States Government and pay the same only after judgment or adjustment by' the company and the sale of a sufficient amount of stock to secure the necessary fund; and to employ agents and attorneys in executing the trust. The contract also states that its purpose is “to protect the creditors of the company and its stockholders and to provide 'a sale for the shares of stock owned by it in the Harlan-Wallins Coal Corporation which constitutes its sole and only assets.” It further provides: “This agreement and.the deposit of said *4 stock or such part of same as remains unsold, shall continue until the payment, discharge, release or other acquittances of all claims now or hereafter legally asserted against the company.” Performance under each contract proceeded promptly.

This suit was instituted November 21, 1925, by Michael T. Roach, J. K. Roach, H. A. Maffey, Margaret Maffey, H. C. Schernorhorn, Ether Schernorhorn, and Y. H. Knopp, minority stockholders of the Wallins Creek Collieries Company, against Wallins Creek Collieries Company, Old Straight Creek Coal Corporation, B. K. Littlepage, B. K. Littlepage, trustee, and American Trust Company, trustee. The bill alleges the sale of the assets of the Wallins Creek Collieries Company to the Harlan-Wallins Coal Corporation; the issue to B. K. Littlepage, trustee for the Collieries Company, of 4750 shares of non-par stock in the Coal Corporation, and assumption by it of indebtedness of the Collieries Company in the amount of $570,000; a demand upon B. K. Littlepage, trustee, to distribute the 4750 shares of stock in the Coal Corporation to the stockholders of the Collieries Company; the execution of the Bankers Agreement and Trust Agreement; the institution of an action by B. K. Littlepage in the circuit court of Kanawha County, West Virginia, against the Collieries Company, August 25, 1925, in the amount of sixty thousand dollars for alleged legal services; the execution by the officers of the Collieries Company to Littlepage, September 26, 1925, of its promissory note payable ten days from date for $31,263.80 in settlement of his claim; the institution of an action by Old Straight Creek Coal Corporation as assignee of Littlepage against the Collieries Company on said note; a default judgment therein November 3, 1925. It alleges, substantially, also'that the note was issued in settlement of a fraudulent claim asserted by Littlepage against the company as the result of a conspiracy between him and other directors to defraud the stockholders ;■ and that the action had been brought in the name of Old Straight Creek Coal Corporation under a pretended assignment to it and judgment suffered by the officers of the Collieries Company in consummation of the said con *5 spiracy. The bill prays that the American. Trust Company, trustee, be prohibited from selling more than 2815 shares of said stock until further order of the court; that the stock remaining in its hands be transferred, delivered, hypothe-cated or sold under the orders of the court: that the Old Straight Creek Coal Corporation and B. K. Littlepage be enjoined from enforcing said judgment; that the business of the Collieries Company be liquidated, the corporation dissolved and a receiver appointed to take charge of and administer its assets; that the American Trust Company, trustee, be enjoined from using any of the proceeds from the sale of the 2815 shares of stock not required for payment of valid and existing indebtedness of the company until the further order of the court.

December 19, 1925, an order was entered upon the bill, the joint and several demurrer and answer of Wallins Creek Collieries Company, Old Straight Creek Coal Corporation, B. K.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 S.E. 860, 111 W. Va. 1, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roach-v-wallins-creek-collieries-co-wva-1931.