Robinson Mineral Spring Co. v. DeBautte

23 So. 865, 50 La. Ann. 1281, 1898 La. LEXIS 379
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 22, 1898
DocketNo. 12,732
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 So. 865 (Robinson Mineral Spring Co. v. DeBautte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson Mineral Spring Co. v. DeBautte, 23 So. 865, 50 La. Ann. 1281, 1898 La. LEXIS 379 (La. 1898).

Opinions

On Motion to Dismiss Appeal.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Watkins, J.

The motion is based upon several grounds.

1. That the appeal is premature.

The appeal is prosecuted from a final and definitive judgment which rejects the plaintiff’s demand from which he is appellant.

It appears that in the lower court, the auctioneer who sold the property in controversy took some proceedings looking to the deposit in the possession of the clerk of court of the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars; but that proceeding was not initiated until some days after the date- of the judgment, and the appeal had been taken.

We can not perceive in what way these proceedings affect or prevent the party already cast from appealing from the judgment which had been already rendered against him.

2. That certain documents are missing from the transcript.

But the motion fails to state, that said papers had been filed in the suit prior to the rendition of judgment, or that their non-production is attributable to the appellant in any way.

Failing in this, mover shows no cause for complaint.

3. That the plaintiff applied for and obtained a previous order of appeal which it failed to perfect and prosecute.

[1283]*1283The present appeal was taken in exact keeping with our opinion in State xe rel. Minerai Springs Co. vs. Jndge, 49 An. 1527.

The motion to dismiss is denied.

On the Merits.

This suit has for its object to compel the defendant to accept title to the property described in the petition of plaintiff, and comply with the terms of the adjudication by paying his bid of four thousand five hundred dollars, with interest.

On the trial there was judgment in favor of the defendant rejecting the plaintiff’s demands, and from that judgment he has appealed.

In limine, the defendant tendered several exceptions, viz.:

1. The court was without jurisdiction because the property in ■dispute is situated in the State of Mississippi.

2. That the charter of the plaintiff, a Mississippi corporation, does not authorize the board of directors to sell, transfer or assign the land’s in controversy; nor to prosecute a suit which has for its object the alienation of realty..

These exceptions were by the judge a quo referred to the merits "to stand as part of the defendant’s answer.

The theory of plaintiff’s suit is, that on the 6th day of May, 1896, there was sold at public outcry, by an auctioneer of the city of New Orleans, a certain described tract of land situated, in the county of Madison, State of Mississippi, containing two hundred acres more or less, less certain reservations mentioned and described, and that at said offering same was adjudicated to the defendant for the sum of iour thousand five hundred dollars, and same was evidenced by a proees verbal which bears date June 27, 1896.

That on the 30th of June, 1896, the plaintiff made a formal tender of an act of sale, but that the defendant refused and declined to accept the same or to pay the price of adjudication.

Plaintiff corporation shows that the defendant and adjudicatee was at the date of said adjudication and for some time thereafter -the president of the corporation, and, as such, personally cognizant of all the affairs of the company; and that he knew of the causes and reasons which led up to said sale, and was, as president, charged with the duty of consummating and carrying same into effect.

That it, in accordance with the expressed wish of the defendant, [1284]*1284obtained and annexed to the title tendered to him, “ the written consent and ratification of all the stockholders .of the corporation, and of all parties in any wise interested directly or indirectly in said property.”

That the defendant refuses to accept title for certain insufficient reasons and causes of which he was well aware at the time of the adjudication “and which he, as president of such corporation, is estopped to deny, as same were known to him, or to assert same in his own behalf.”

The defendant in answer avers, that, at the time of the adjudication, he was of the impression that the title to the property “ was registered in the name of the corporation, which was found on investigation not to be a fact;” and that he found the title to same to be “ defective and cloudy” for the following reasons, viz.:

1. That the charter of the corporation does not authorise the Board of Directors to sell said property, and hence the act of the board in so doing was ultra vires.

That a meeting of the stockholders authorized a sale for not less than ten thousand dollars, and that figure was not subsequently changed.

2. That the land being situated in the State of Mississippi and not having been registered in the name of the corporation, but left standing in the names of the individual corporators, ths corporation could not legally convey same.

3. That upon ascertaining these facts he demanded a ratification of the title by all the stockholders in whose name the property stood before be would sign and complete the same, and that same should be done prior to the 22d of June, 1896, and that failing in this the sale would be canceled.

And that the corporation failed to procure the ratification of all the stockholders, and that hence his obligation to accept the title was at an end.

It conspicuously appears from the foregoing that the defendant was president of the plaintiff corporation at the time of the adjudication before and since — until the month of October subsequent thereto; and, on that account, is conclusively presumed to know the terms and stipulations of its charter, and to possess full and accurate information of the title to its property.

As president, he was, necessarily, charged with the duty of super[1285]*1285intending and caring for the interests and well-being of the general ■stockholders.

The corporation having acquired the ownership of a valuable piece of real estate and taken title thereto, the president necessarily possessed knowledged of same without the title having been formally recorded.

The points on which the defendant’s counsel rely are (1) that the charter of the corporation did not authorize the board of directors to sell its property under any circumstances; (2) that a meeting of the stockholders authorized a sale for ten thousand dollars and nothing less; (3) that the title being originally in the names of the original corporators, and their title to the corporation not having been recorded prior to the adjudication, the conveyance tendered is a questionable one; (4) that the title tendered to the defendant as ■adjudicatee was not subsequently ratified by all the stockholders.

Whether the charter of the corporation authorized the directors to make the sale or not is of no consequence, as it is specially admitted that the stockholders bad authorized the sale, albeit for a price in excess of the amount for which it was adjudicated to the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 865, 50 La. Ann. 1281, 1898 La. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-mineral-spring-co-v-debautte-la-1898.