Scuddy Mining Co. v. Mullins

262 S.W.2d 192, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 1081
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 6, 1953
StatusPublished

This text of 262 S.W.2d 192 (Scuddy Mining Co. v. Mullins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scuddy Mining Co. v. Mullins, 262 S.W.2d 192, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 1081 (Ky. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

MOREMEN, Justice.

Perhaps some confusion may be avoided if, at the outset, a glossary of the various companies involved in this litigation is presented. They are:

1 — Scuddy Coal Company was the organization which, in April, 1934, transferred certain leases and mining property to Scuddy Mining Company.

2 — Scuddy Mining Company. All of its stock is owned by C. L. Ryley, his son, C, Reginald Ryley, and Ora Abbott, who are respectively president, vice president, and secretary of the company.

3 — Happy Colliers Company. All of the stock of this company is owned by C. L. Ryley, president, C. Reginald Ryley, vice president, and Ora Abbott, secretary.

4 — Racoon Coal Company has same ownership and management. (Certain details were not definitely shown by proof, but commissioner so found and no exception was taken.)

5 — Happy-Scuddy Mining Company. •This company apparently was formed by O. W. Robinson and C. W. Henderson after it purchased certain assets from Scuddy Mining Company.

Appellant, Scuddy Mining Company, operated a coal mine in Perry County. On May 12, 1944, appellee, Ishmael Mullins, an [194]*194employee of appellant, Scuddy Mining Company, sustained an injury in the course of his employment. Neither he nor the company had elected to operate under the terms of the Workmen’s Compensation Act. The parties agreed, however, that Mullins should be paid for his disability according to the provisions of the Act. Payments were begun immediately at the rate of $15 per week.

In September, 1944, at a special meeting of the stockholders and directors of the corporation, appellant, C. Reginald Ryley, reported to the meeting that he was negotiating the sale of all the mining property of the company to O. W. Robinson and C. W. Henderson (who later formed the Happy-Scuddy Company) for approximately $65,-000; about $15,000 to be paid in cash and the balance with a series of notes which would become due over a period of about 5 years. He was authorized to proceed with the negotiations and to consummate the sale and transfer the property, if possible, on the best terms he could obtain.

On October 3, 1944, at another special meeting, C. Reginald Ryley presented a contract of sale of the property of the mining-company and the meeting approved its terms. C. Reginald Ryley was authorized to pay proper and just obligations of the company and to wind up its affairs. He was further instructed to pay the indebtedness and obligations in accordance with their priority if the proceeds of the sale of the company’s assets proved to be insufficient to pay all indebtedness. The following proceedings were also reported in the minutes of that meeting:

“C. L. Ryley called to the attention of the meeting that C. Reginald Ryley personally held as assignee, the mortgage of Scuddy Coal Company to First National Bank & Trust Company of Lexington, Kentucky dated October 29, 1930, securing Scuddy Coal Company’s notes in the principal amount of $22805.00 and that when purchasing Scuddy Coal Company the Scuddy Mining Company had assumed and agreed to pay the balance due upon these notes, but had been unable to do so. Therefore, in view of the priority of this claim, upon motion duly made, seconded and carried, C. Reginald Ryley was directed to assign himself individually a sufficient number of notes of the Happy Scuddy Coal Company etc. to secure the payment of the mortgage indebtedness due him.”

In accordance with the resolution, the company assigned its lease and conveyed its holdings to the corporation known as Happy-Scuddy Mining Company for the purchase price of $65,000. $15,000 was paid in cash and the balance of the deferred purchase money was represented by eleven consecutively numbered interest bearing notes, ten of which were for the sum of $4,500 each, and note No. 11 was for the sum of $5,000.

In the meantime, appellee, Ishmael Mullins, was paid compensation from the date of his injury on May 12, 1944, for a period of about 90 weeks at which time the Scuddy Mining Company refused to make further payments, and, pursuant to agreement between the parties, the matter was submitted to the Compensation Board of Kentucky for arbitration. The Board found that Mullins was entitled to recover compensation of $15 a week commencing as of May 12, 1944, and continuing for the duration of his total disability, but not to exceed a period of 500 weeks or a total of $7,500 plus interest on all past due installments. The Scuddy Mining Company refused to pay according to the finding of the Board and Mullins instituted suit in the Perry Circuit Court on the agreement and on the award where a judgment was entered requiring Scuddy Mining Company to pay according to the finding of the Board, and an execution was issued on said judgment on the 21st day of March 1950, which was returned “no property found” on March 25, 1950.

In order to learn the reason no property subject to execution had been found, appel-lee Mullins filed this suit in which he requested a disclosure of all facts concerning the distribution of the assets of Scuddy Mining Company; charged that C. Reg-[195]*195in aid Ryley, while acting as trustee for Scuddy Mining Company during the liquidation period, had illegally disbursed certain assets of the company; requested the appointment of a receiver for the company and asked that a special commissioner be appointed to settle the accounts of C. Reginald Ryley.

The special commissioner found (and his conclusions are supported by the evidence) that upon the transfer of the property of Scuddy Mining Company to the Happy-Scuddy Mining Company, $15,000 was paid in cash and the balance of $50,000 was satisfied by the execution of ten notes of $4,500 each and an eleventh note of the principal sum of $5,000.

In connection with the payment of the notes, it was found that the first eight in the principal sum of $46,000 had been retired by payment and the last three notes (numbered 9, 10 and 11) were being held by the receiver.

The record discloses that C. Reginald Ryley, acting in the capacity of liquidating agent, disbursed a considerable amount of money to various creditors of the corporation. Although the proof in this case is not full in detail, certain points were proven in a general way. Between September 15, 1944, and May, 1948, C. Reginald Ryley paid out approximately $28,000 to the creditors of the Scuddy Mining Company. This payment was made out of assets other than those represented by the lien notes. This disposition was made of the notes: The first four notes, representing a face value of $18,000, were assigned to’ the Happy Colliers Company. Mr. Ryley explained, upon examination, that this was the return of alleged advancements in that amount from the Happy Colliers Company to the Scuddy Mining Company. Notes 5, 6, 7 and 8, also representing a face value of $18,000 were endorsed by Ryley, as vice president and liquidating agent of the Scuddy Mining Company, in payment of an indebtedness of the Scuddy Mining Company to Racoon Coal Corporation. We have noted above that all three of these corporations had interlocking ownership and management. Notes 9, 10 and 11 in the principal sum of $14,000 were endorsed by C. Reginald Ryley, as vice president of the Scud-dy Mining Company, to C. Reginald Ryley, in his personal capacity, to reimburse himself for the retirement of the mortgage indebtedness which he had paid to the First National Bank and Trust Company of Lexington, Kentucky, and which notes had been assigned to him by said bank.

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Related

Hazelhurst Lumber Co. v. Carlisle Mfg. Co.
112 S.W. 934 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1908)

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Bluebook (online)
262 S.W.2d 192, 1953 Ky. LEXIS 1081, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scuddy-mining-co-v-mullins-kyctapp-1953.