Sampson v. Camperdown Cotton Mills

82 F. 833, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2803
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 19, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 82 F. 833 (Sampson v. Camperdown Cotton Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sampson v. Camperdown Cotton Mills, 82 F. 833, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2803 (circtdsc 1897).

Opinion

SIMONTON, Circuit Judge.

This case comes up on an original and a cross bill. The original bill is filed to foreclose a mortgage given by the Oamperdown Mills to secure past and future advances. Pending this main cause, Julius C. Smith and other stockholders filed their petition for leave to intervene in the cause, and to be made parties hereto. Leave having been granted, they came in, and, filing their answers, filed also their cross bill. The cross blil charges that certain items of indebtedness to the complainants, as shown in their account, were incurred by the officers of the corporation without lawful authority, in fact and in law, and are not binding on the corporation; certainly not on those stockholders who did not authorize or participate in the unauthorized and illegal acts.

The main facts are these: The Camperdown Mills is a corporation of the state of South Carolina, engaged in the manufacture and sale o-f [834]*834cotton goods. In the year 1887, during the presidency of Mr. Hammett, he bought for the mill 2,700 bales of cotton for future delivery. Closing out this transaction, the mills made a profit. In 1S90, President Hammett made another purchase of 1,500 bales of cotton for future delivery, and in 1891 Mr. Beattie, president, under the instruction of the board of directors, made another purchase of 1,500 bales of cotton for future delivery. O. H. Sampson & Co., having their offices in Hew York and Boston, were the commercial agents of the Camper-down Mills, aiding them by advances towards their commercial capital, and receiving and selling all the output of the mill, having a lien on all goods in their hands for securing the balance of account. "When these purchases for future delivery of cotton were made, the transaction was through Woodward & Stillman, of Hew York, brokers, the money for margins being put up by the Camperdown Mills, at first directly, and afterwards by drafts upon or instructions to the commercial agents, O. H.° Sampson & Co. After the transactions were made, but before they were closed out, Charles E. Sampson, a member of the firm of O. H. Sampson & Co., was made president of the Camper-down Mills, and thenceforward he managed the contracts for future delivery made by his predecessors. The course of the cotton market was such that it was deemed most advisable to carry, and not to close out, these contracts, under the delusive hope that a change for the better would occur. While this was done, Sampson & Co. continued to make all the advances necessary to carrying the cotton, and Mr. Charles E. Sampson, the president, at one time, in order to avoid the anticipated result of the Hatch bill, forbidding such contracts, transferred all the contracts from the Hew York Cotton Exchange, where they originated, to the Liverpool Cotton Exchange. Finally the evil moment came. The transactions were closed out at a loss of $87,-551.41. This constitutes the chief part of the account of complainants, as most of the money to meet the losses was paid by them as the commercial agents of the mill. The manufacturing business proper of the mill was successful. Each year but the last there was a profit made. In the reports to the stockholders this profit appeared. The money paid out on the future contracts did not appear in the profit and loss account. This money was carried as money paid to the brokers, not precisely as an asset, but certainly not treated as a loss, until the end, when the account wras closed, and the loss realized. The directors of the company were cognizant of and approved these transactions, and at a meeting of stocldiolders a majority approved them also. O. H. Sampson & Go. were large stockholders, having, through their own stock and that of their friends, a controlling voice in the corporation. O. H. Sampson, the head of the firm, was at one time vice president. He was also a director, (diaries E. Sampson, another member of the firm, as president, as we have seen, succeeded Mr. Beattie, who had succeeded Col. Hammett. There were several other members of the firm of O. H. Sampson & Co. These had no other connection with the Camperdown Mills, save as commercial agents, and also having an interest in the stock standing in the name of O. H. Sampson & Co. The minority stockholders, complainants in the cross bill, contend that these transactions in futures were purely [835]*835speculative in their character; that so they were ultra vires, and also in contravention oí the express law of the state of South Carolina, whose creature this corporation was; that O. H. Sampson & Co., by reason of the close connection of two of the members of their firm with the direction and control of the company, and by reason of the fact that they were stockholders, had full notice of the illegality of the transactions; that they advanced all the money which they did advance with this notice; that they are affected by it, and cannot now recover it back.

The first question to be discussed in reaching a conclusion of this most difficult and interesting case is, what was the character of these transactions? Were they entered into as speculations on the rise and fall of cotton, or were they made in the ordinary and legitimate business of the mill, — purchases of cotion for the use of the mill? The answer to this question involves an inquiry into,the motive which induced the purchases in the first instance. What was the purpose of Mr. Hammett and of Mr. Beattie in making the purchases of cotton on the New York Exchange, and why did Mr. O. H. Sampson advise and approve them? It is a difficult thing, generally, to get at the motive for an act. Usually we try to ascertain the motive by the declarations and conduct of the parties, and by the circumstances which surround them. In deducing the motive in this way, much depends upon the personal integrity and character of the parties. In the present case we are dealing with men of the highest business character for integrity and honesty. No fraud or bad motive is charged against any of them. No room exists for such a charge. Personally none of them liad any private interest to subserve. Except as the transactions affected the interests of the corporation of which they were officers and stockholders, none of them had a dollar’s interest in the matter. As far as the firm of O. II. Bampsou & Co. was concerned, they made' none of the contracts, had no interest in any one of iliem, and furnished the money needed in carrying the contracts precisely in the same way as they made any other advance to the corporation. There is a letter in the record which gives a clue to the intent with which Col. Hammett went into these operations in futures. He inaugurated the practice, and we can safely presume that it was continued by his successors and colleagues for the same reasons which actuated him. The letter is as follows:

“Greenville, S. C., November 26, 1887.
“Messrs. O. H. Sampson & Co., Boston, Mass. — Gentlemen: In a recent letter from yon In reply to one of mine, in which I had reported that we had purchased all the cotton we should need at Piedmont, you expressed a regret that we could not say the same thing for Camperdown. There ar<v several reasons why I did not do the same thing for Camperdown. One was that we had no place to store it until our new warehouse was completed, which has now' been done; but the principal reason was that we'did not have the money to pay for it. and had to run along as best we could from hand to mouth.

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

Related

Benson-Stabeck Co. v. Reservation Farmers' Grain Co.
205 P. 651 (Montana Supreme Court, 1922)
L. Harvey & Son v. Pettaway
72 S.E. 364 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1911)
De Mary v. Burtenshaw's Estate
91 N.W. 647 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1902)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 F. 833, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sampson-v-camperdown-cotton-mills-circtdsc-1897.