Shannon v. Lunsford

111 So. 22, 215 Ala. 465, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 522
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 4, 1926
Docket6 Div. 473.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 111 So. 22 (Shannon v. Lunsford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shannon v. Lunsford, 111 So. 22, 215 Ala. 465, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 522 (Ala. 1926).

Opinion

BOULDIN, J.

The original bill was filed March 10, 1917, by J. S. Shannon, present appellant, against Nora L. S. Lunsford' W. G. Lunsford, her husband, and Sarah E. Malone.

The purpose of the suit, as then presented, is shown in opinion on former appeal. Lunsford v. Shannon, 208 Ala. 409, 94 So. 571.

Thereafter, on November 18, 1923, complainant amended his bill making Charles E. Rice and Mount Carmel Coal Company, a corporation, parties respondent. On July 7, 1924, after proof taken an amended bill, “to meet the proof,” was filed. Upon final decree, November 29, 1924, complainant was denied relief as against the parties added by amendment, and the bill dismissed as to them. The appeal is to review this feature of the final decree.

The amended bill, after presenting the case against the original defendants, and certain *467 matters relating to the relation of attorney and client between complainant and respondent Rice, proceeds:

“V. Complainant showeth that respondent, Chas. E. Rice, while under his employment aS an attorney, as aforesaid, became fully advised by complainant as to the value of the mining lease on the properties formerly had by the' Oak Leaf Coal Company, and upon which complainant had expended large sums of money in and about the matter of developing and opening up the mines and developing the same, and said respondent was also advised by complainant as to the trouble which he was having with the former eoventurer or copartner, respondent, Lunsford, and he became advised as to complainant’s desire to form a corporation, and to secure a lease from the University of Alabama to said property for the benefit of himself or said corporation, and about February 15, 1917, said respondent, Chas. E. Rice, with such knowledge as aforesaid proposed to complainant that a lease should be executed by the University of Alabama to him, said Ohas.,E. Rice, and he assured complainant that if he would' make no claim for a lease to himself, and would permit the lease to be executed to him, or assist him in getting it, then he, the said Chas. E. Rice or a corporation' which the lease would be executed or assigned to, would fully compensate complainant for everything which complainant had there, or of which he was interested in as a result of his expenditures on and to said property, as aforesaid, or of which he might, in equity, be entitled to, as a result o^ his said expenditures.

“(a) Complainant showeth that he gave full faith and credence to said assurance as made by the said respondent, Chas. E. Rice, and permitted or suffered a lease to be executed by the university to him.

“(b) Complainant showeth that he not only suffered said lease to be executed to said Chas. E. Rice, as aforesaid, but that on the date said lease was executed and signed, complainant and the said respondent, together, went from Birmingham to Tuscaloosa, and complainant paid the expenses of said trip, and before’ said lease was executed, complainant executed a promissory note to the University of Alabama, in satisfaction of all prior claims which it had against the Oak Leaf Coal Company, and that the consideration for the execution of said lease was the satisfaction of the said indebtedness of the said Oak Leaf Coal Company and the obligations to pay the minimum royalty of one hundred ($100.00) dollars per month thereafter, which fully appears in said lease, which was executed as of date February 15, 1917.

“(c) That afterwards, on, to wit, the 12th day of March, 1917, the said Chas. E. Rice organized or promoted a mining corporation known by the name of the Mt. Carmel Coal Company, Inc., to which company the said Rice proposed to or agreed to transfer the said lease which he had secured from the said University of Alabama.

“(d) Complainant further showeth that, believing said lease had been transferred to said Mt. Carmel Coal Company, Inc., and trusting and believing in the assurances made by the respondent, Chas. E. Rice, that he would fully protect complainant was led to expend large sums of money in the furtherance of the scheme or promotion or development of said property, and that part of the money which he so expended, was furnished by complainant to pay the royalty on the said lease which the said University of Alabama had executed to the respondent, Chas. E. Rice.

“VI. Complainant showeth that, beginning the' early part of the year 1919, complainant became afflicted, was sick, and confined to his bed, and while in this condition, he was without the state of Alabama, being in the state of Kentucky, and while so afflicted, namely, during the months of May, June or July, the said respondent, Chas. E. Rice, was advised by the University of Alabama that unless the past due royalties were paid up, the said lease which had been executed to him, as aforesaid, by the University of Alabama would be canceled, but that no knowledge of the said cancellation was given to this complainant by the said Chas. E. Rice, though complainant had been fully assured by the said Rice that his interests would be fully protected, as aforesaid.

“(a) Complainant further showeth that before said lease was forfeited, respondent, Chas. E. Rice, made a tentative agreement with people other than this complainant, to promote a corporation, which corporation should secure in its own name, a lease from the University of Alabama, on the properties so leased to him, and which were previously leased to the Oak Leaf Coal Company, and on wHich complainant had expended large sums of money in opening up and developing the same, as aforesaid..

“(b) That long before said lease was canceled by the University of Alabama, as in this section referred to, said Chas. E. Rice, and others entered into an agreement that upon the forfeiture of said lease made by the University of Alabama to the said respondent, Chas. E. Rice, that they, as a body corporate, would acquire a lease from the University of Alabama on the properties described in said lease which the said Chas. E. Rice had from the University of Alabama, as aforesaid, and that in keeping with this agreement, they became a body corporate under the name of the Big Warrior Coal Company, and in consideration of the services rendered in and about the matter of procuring of said lease from the University of Alabama to the said Big Warrior Coal Company, it was agreed by the promoters of said corporation, of which said Chas. E. Rice was one, that said corporation would deliver to, or hold for the said Chas. E. Rice as payment for his said services, one-half of the capital stock of said Big Warrior Coal Company, which complainant believes and states the fact to be true, was, so held or delivered to the said Chas. E. Rice, by said Big Warrior Coal Company; all of which acts of the said Chas. E. Rice, as in this section referred to, were without the knowledge or consent- of the complainant.

“VII. That thereafterwards the Big Warrior Coal Company began developing the said property secured to it under its said lease from the ■ University of Alabama, which development was-had under the directions of the respondent, Chas. E. Rice, who was then its general manager.

.“(a)-That after the said Big' Warrior Coal Company was organized, to wit, in the year- *468

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Related

Bay Minette Land Co. v. Stapleton
139 So. 342 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1932)
Lunsford v. Shannon
128 So. 215 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
111 So. 22, 215 Ala. 465, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannon-v-lunsford-ala-1926.