Rowan v. Union Arms Co.

36 Vt. 124
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 Vt. 124 (Rowan v. Union Arms Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rowan v. Union Arms Co., 36 Vt. 124 (Vt. 1863).

Opinion

Kellogg, J.

The orator on the 21st of June, 1858, being the assignee of the interest of the firm of Fox, Henderson & Co., in certain claims for damages growing out' of certain alleged breaches of a contract for the manufacture and delivery of twenty-five thousand Minie rifles, originally made with that firm by 'the Robbins & Lawrence Company, and subsequently assumed by the Union Arms Company, commenced a suit in the county court of the county of Windsor, in the name of Charles Fox as surviving partner of that firm, against the Union Arms Company, declaring upon the said breaches, and the writ in this suit was returnable to the county court at its December Term, 1858. This writ was served on the same 21st of June, 1858, by attaching as the property of the Union Arms Company all the coal, charcoal, ashes, brick, square timber, machinery, hay-scales, cord-wood, boards, pig iron, bloomed iron and scrap iron in the yards ■and buildings known as the Armory buildings formerly occupied by the Robbins & Lawrence Company, but more recently occupied by said Union Arms Company, at Windsor in this county. The suit having been entered in the county court at the December Term, 1858, judgment was thereupon rendered at that term [126]*126in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant for $149,203.51 damages, and $48.04 costs of suit, and execution upon said judgment was, by order of court, stayed until a final • decree should be made in the suit in chancery now under cofisideration. There was no appearance in behalf of the Union Arms Company in this suit at law. ' This suit in 'chancery was commenced on the 28th of June, 1858. Fox, Henderson & Co. had their place of business in London, and were principal contractors with the war department of the. British government for the manufacture and delivery of the said Minie rifles. The property now in controversy originally belonged to the Robbins & Lawrence Company, a corporation located and doing business at Windsor, and that corporation failed or became insolvent, and its business ceased, on the 28th of October, 1856, For some time previous to its failure, its principal business had been connected with the manufacture and delivery of Minie rifles under its contract with Fox, Henderson & Co., above referred to ; and at the time of its failure, it was largely indebted to the State Bank, a banking corporation located and doing business at Hartford, Connecticut, and also to the firm of Sanderson Brothers & Co., a partnership dealing in cast steel, and having its financial place of business at Sheffield' in England, and also having a commercial house or agency in Boston under the care and management of John B. Taft. The State Bank and the firm of Sanderson Brothers & Co., were among the attaching creditors of the Robbins & Lawrence Company at the time of the failure of that corporation, and their attachments covered the property of that corporation at Windsor, but were subject to two previous attachments thereon in favor of the Merchants’ Bank of Boston, and to a previous attachment in favor of the Ashuolot Bank of Keene, New Hampshire, and were also concurrent with attachments made at the same time in suits commenced by several other creditors of the Robbins & Lawrence Company. At the time of its failure, that corporation was very deeply involved in debt and was hopelessly bankrupt. In February, 1857, a joint stock association was organized under the name of the Union Arms Company, as a [127]*127body corporate, pursuant to tlie requirements of the statute laws of the state of Connecticut, and its stockholders consisted of persons who were creditors of the Robbins & Lawrence corporation, or of the partnership firm of Robbins & Lawrence, which had been engaged in the same kind of business at Hartford, and under tlie same management, seems to haw absorbed the capital and substance of the corporation whose location and place of business was at Windsor, and then to have become engulfed in bankruptcy to a deeper and more hopeless extent than the corporatipn itself; and the stockholders of this association appear, for the most part, to have held paid up shares which were allotted in representation or satisfaction of their respective debts against that corporation and partnership. The articles of association under which the Union Arms Company was formed declare the purposes for which this company was established to be “ for the manufacturing of fire arms, machinery, and tools, and dealing in the same, and such articles and merchandize necessary and convenient for carrying on their business,” and also declare that the corporation thereby formed is to be established and located at Hartford, hut that “ it is intended by the corporation to carry on their manufacturing also in Windsor, Vermont.” The evidence leaves no doubt that the chief, if not the sole object proposed to be accomplished by the organization of this corporation was the resumption of the work on the contract for the twenty-five thousand Minie rifles originally made by the Robbins & Lawrence Company, with Fox, Henderson & Co., through or tinder some arrangement to be made with the attaching creditors of the Robbins & Lawrence Company. The Robbins & Lawrence Company, at a meeting of its stockholders held on the 27th of May, 1857, authorized conveyances transferring its real and personal estate to the Union Arms Company to be immediately executed, and to be delivered upon compliance by the latter with certain conditions, and appointed a committee of three persons, a majority of whom were to have full power to determine upon the fact of such compliance. Agreeably to the authority thus conferred, conveyances transferring the real and personal estate of the Rob[128]*128bins & Lawrence Company, both at Windsor and Hartford, to the Union Arms Company, were executed on the.28th of May, 1857, and appear to have been delivered to the Union Arms Company about the 1st of July following, — a majority of the said committee having in the mean time determined that said company had complied with the conditions above referred to. Iii the instrument conveying the personal estate to the Union Arms Company, it is expressed that it is understood by the parties that said personal estate was incumbered by various liens, and that the said conveyance was made subject thereto. On the 80th of July, 1857, an agreement in writing was executed between the Union Arms Company of the first part, the said Fox, Henderson & Co., of -the second part, and the orator of the third part, in which, after reciting the contracts or agreements made by the said Robbins & Lawrence Company and Robbins & Lawrence with the said Fox, Henderson & Co., for the manufacture and delivery of the said twenty-five thousand Mime, rifles, and the transfer by the said Fox, Henderson & Co., to the orator, (who was a Colonel in the British army, and the agent and nominee of the War Department of the British Government,) of the securities held by said Fox, Henderson &.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

International Paper Co. v. Bellows Falls Canal Co.
90 A. 943 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1914)
McClelland v. Scroggin
53 N.W. 469 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1892)
Fales v. Roberts
38 Vt. 503 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1866)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 Vt. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rowan-v-union-arms-co-vt-1863.