Stallings v. Galloway-Kennedy Company

283 S.W. 41, 171 Ark. 24, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 394
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 12, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 41 (Stallings v. Galloway-Kennedy Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stallings v. Galloway-Kennedy Company, 283 S.W. 41, 171 Ark. 24, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 394 (Ark. 1926).

Opinions

Prior to 1914 F. M. Kennedy was engaged in the sawmilling business, with his wife as an equal partner, under the firm name of F. M. Kennedy Company. O. C. Galloway owned a sawmilling business which was operated under the name of the J. B. Galloway Company. In 1914 the Kennedy Company and the Galloway Company merged and formed a corporation, which was chartered under a corporate name of Galloway-Kennedy Company, hereinafter referred to as the company. The capital stock of the corporation was $20,000, of which Galloway and his wife each owned 22 1/2 per *Page 25 cent., and Kennedy and his wife each owned 25 per cent. The remaining five per cent. of the stock was owned by a brother of Galloway. The corporation prospered, and large dividends were earned, those for the year 1919 being between twenty and twenty-five thousand dollars. In 1918 the capital stock was increased to $75,000, which was owned in the same proportions as the original capital stock. In 1920 came the financial slump, which greatly disturbed the lumber market. The company had at that time thirty thousand dollars worth of timber on the river bank, all of which was paid for, much of which floated away, was stolen or rotted. In addition, a fire destroyed much property belonging to the company. This property was only partially insured, and all the insurance was not collected.

The company borrowed from the Merchants' Planters' Bank of Clarendon, Arkansas, the sum of $20,000, and to secure the same executed a mortgage covering all the corporate assets. This mortgage was duly recorded. Later, and on the 10th day of February, 1920, the Company borrowed from Galloway and Kennedy individually the sum of $18,000, and to secure the same executed a second mortgage on its corporate assets to Galloway and Kennedy, who had each loaned $9,000 to the company. This loan was evidenced by a note due one year after date and payable to O. C. Galloway and F. M. Kennedy. On November 14, 1921, Kennedy made the following indorsement on the back of the note: "As security for $11,233.33, I hereby transfer to Carrie C. Kennedy my one-half interest in this note." And a little later Galloway made an indorsement on the note reading, "For value received, I hereby transfer this note to Emma Galloway." Emma Galloway was the wife of O. C. Galloway and a sister of F. M. Kennedy, and Carrie Kennedy was the wife of F. M. Kennedy. On the dates the note was so indorsed Kennedy and Galloway indorsed on the margin of the record where the mortgage was recorded a transfer of their respective interests in the mortgage to their wives. *Page 26

The company became involved, and was sued by a number of its creditors. The first of these suits was commenced November 4, 1921, by C. R. Stallings, who made both Galloway and Kennedy parties because of their failure, as officers of the company, to comply with 1715, C. M. Digest, requiring officers of a corporation to file a verified annual report of the affairs of the corporation. The contract out of which this suit by Stallings arose was dated May 4, 1920, and the corporation made no defense. Galloway and Kennedy answered, and alleged that they had complied with the statute by filing the report. Stallings recovered judgment on December 7, 1921, against both the corporation and Galloway and Kennedy, and an appeal was prosecuted from that judgment to this court. It appeared that the report had been prepared and filed, but it had not been verified, and we held on the appeal that the filing of an unverified report did not comply with the law, and the judgment against Galloway and Kennedy was affirmed because of their noncompliance with the statute. Galloway v. Stallings, 154 Ark. 16. Later other creditors of the corporation, whose suits were commenced after the institution of the Stallings suit, recovered judgments against both the company and Galloway and Kennedy. The sole ground of liability asserted against either Galloway or Kennedy in any of these suits arose out of their failure to file the report required by 1715, C. M. Digest.

Stallings judgment amounted to $5,230, and upon this judgment he caused an execution to be issued, which was levied upon the corporate property and upon certain lands and town lots owned by Galloway individually in the city of Clarendon, and on certain other lands belonging to Kennedy individually. There was a sale under this execution, and Stallings became the purchaser of most of the lands sold, and among other lands purchased by him was the mill site, for which he paid $500. The lands and lots sold at this execution sale lacked $734.66 of bringing enough to satisfy Stallings judgment, with the interest and costs. Mrs. Galloway took an assignment *Page 27 from Stallings of his interest in the unsatisfied judgment.

After this execution sale the Merchants' Planters' Bank filed suit to foreclose its mortgage, and all the judgment creditors were made parties defendant, as were also Galloway and Kennedy individually and the Galloway-Kennedy Company, and Mrs. Galloway and Mrs. Kennedy as the apparent owners of the second mortgage executed by the Galloway-Kennedy Company to Galloway and Kennedy. This foreclosure suit was commenced August 16, 1922, and a decree of sale was rendered. This mortgage was originally for the sum of $20,000, but had been reduced by payments thereon to $6,417.13, and for this amount judgment was rendered. A commissioner was appointed to sell the mortgaged property, and at the sale made by the commissioner the property ordered sold was sold to Mrs. Kennedy for the sum of $9,800. The commissioner duly reported this sale, and when his report came on for confirmation the judgment creditors filed exceptions thereto and objected to its approval. It was alleged in these exceptions that bidding had been stifled, but no testimony was offered to support that charge.

By appropriate pleadings these creditors question the validity of the mortgage from the company to Galloway and Kennedy, and also the assignment of their respective interests to their wives, it being charged that there was no authority or consideration for the execution of this mortgage, and that the transfer by Galloway and Kennedy of their interests therein, if the mortgage was valid, was without consideration, and was done for the fraudulent purpose of cheating and defrauding the judgment creditors of Galloway and Kennedy. These judgment creditors prayed that the mortgage from the company to Galloway and Kennedy be canceled, and that the assignment thereof to Mrs. Galloway and Mrs. Kennedy be declared void, and they asked the court to adjudge the priority of the judgment liens of the respective creditors. It is conceded, however, that it will not *Page 28 be necessary to adjudicate the question of priority if the mortgage from the company to Galloway and Kennedy, and the assignment thereof, be upheld, for the reason that the excess of the fund derived from the commissioner's sale over the debt due the bank (and the company has no other assets) will not be sufficient to discharge the second mortgage.

All the parties who are attempting to enforce judgments against the company or Galloway, and Kennedy individually were made parties to the foreclosure suit of the bank, and the final decree in that cause adjudicated the rights of the parties as follows: The court found that the mortgage from the company to Galloway and Kennedy was valid and constituted a lien prior and superior to any of the judgments, and that the transfer by Galloway and Kennedy of their interests in the mortgage and the note which it secured was not a voluntary transfer but was made for a valuable consideration. The report of the sale of the corporate property to Mrs.

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

Related

McCown v. Taylor
53 S.W.2d 424 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 S.W. 41, 171 Ark. 24, 1926 Ark. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stallings-v-galloway-kennedy-company-ark-1926.