State Ex Rel. Knox v. Edward Hines Lumber Co.

115 So. 598, 150 Miss. 1, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 101
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1928
DocketNo. 25076.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 115 So. 598 (State Ex Rel. Knox v. Edward Hines Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Knox v. Edward Hines Lumber Co., 115 So. 598, 150 Miss. 1, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 101 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

Cook, J.

The state of Mississippi, on relation of its attorney-general, instituted suit in the chancery court of the First district of Hinds county against the Edward Hines Lumber Company, the Wyatt Lumber Company, the Champion Lumber Company, the Wolf Eiver Lumber Company, the Lumbermen’s Mills Company, Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees, and Edward Hines, L. L. Barth, and C. F. Wiehe, individually, and as trustees under a certain declaration of trust, wherein they are styled “Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees,” all alleged to be nonresidents of the state of Mississippi, and also eleven resident defendants who are named as garnishees. There were filed with the bill, as exhibits thereto, a certain deed of conveyance executed by the several corporate defendants to Edward Hines, L. L. Barth, and C. F. Wiehe, as trustees, and a certain declaration of trust executed by said trustees, both of which instruments were executed January 1, 1918.

The deed of conveyance which was filed as Exhibit A to the bill of complaint conveyed to said trustees all of the lands, timber, and timber rights, and all other real rights or interests in law or equity, owned by the grantors, in the counties of Harrison, Hancock, Stone, Lamar, Pearl Eiver, Marion, and Walthall, in the state of Mississippi, together with all the improvements thereon, and all the appurtenances thereunto in any wise appertaining, and it set over, assigned, and conveyed to said trustees, as such, all timber or timber rights on any of said lands, or on account of any actionable entry upon or oc *30 cupancy of lands or any part thereof, and assigned, transferred, and conveyed to said trustees, as such,. all claims, demands, or rights of action arising out of any breach of warranty or other covenants or contracts respecting purchases by the grantors or conveyances to them.

The declaration of trust filed as Exhibit B to the hill of complaint refers to the deed of conveyance and recites that:

“Whereas, by proper’bills of sale, assignments, in-dorsements, and transfers bearing' even date therewith, there had also been transferred, assigned, set over, and conveyed to said Edward Hines, C. F. Wiehe, and L. L. Barth as trustees of Edward Hines Yellow Pine Trustees, certain personal property, including contracts for the sale of land, promissory notes, accounts, contracts, dioses in action, and other like personal property, and that, whereas said deed, assignments, transfers, and conveyances had been so made to said trustees upon the trust thereupon specified, and in consideration of the making and execution of said declaration of trust:
“Now, therefore, we, the said Edward Hines, C. F. Wiehe, and L. L. Barth, and our successors, do hereby declare and agree as between ourselves and with all persons who now are in anywise, and who may hereafter become interested herein, and with all persons who may become owner's of or in any way interested in any of the certificates of beneficial ownership or shares that may be issued hereunder, that we will, and our successors shall, hold, manage, administer-, and dispose of all property, both real, personal, and mixed, so conveyed, assigned and transferred to us as such trustees, and all additions thereto and proceeds thereof, and all income and profits therefrom, and all property, both real, personal, and mixed, together with the proceeds thereof, and the income therefrom, that may hereafter be conveyed or delivered to. us as such trustees, or to our successors *31 hereunder, or that may, through investment or reinvestment or in any other manner, come into our or their hands as such trustees, in trust for the following purposes and subject-to the stipulations herein contained,” etc.

The reasons for the organization of, and the objects and purposes to be accomplished by and through the' declaration of trust, are stated in the following language:

“Section 1. The great bulk of the real property which has on this day been conveyed to ’ said herein-named trustees, and the management, sale, and other disposition of which is herein provided for, is wild and uncultivated timber lands and timber rights. The same was acquired to cut the timber thereon and to operate sawmills, and generally to utilize all the forest products thereon, and thereupon to colonize or otherwise settle the same as rapidly as possible with farms or like developments. The greater portion of said lands and timber is located remote from transportation or other facilities, which renders same unavailable immediately for use, and all of same are being maintained at an enormous expense of taxes and carrying charges, which, unless said properties and the timber thereon are converted and disposed of or developed, will speedily absorb and destroy the value thereof. The general purposes of this trust are to dispose of or convert and liquidate into money, as rapidly as practicable, for the benefit of the certificate holders, the trust estate, either by sale or other disposition or by manufacturing or other utilization of the trust estate within such time as may in the judgment of the trustees reasonably exercised, be for the best interests of the certificate holders without sacrificing the value of said property. And to that end it is declared: That the trustees shall proceed as soon and as rapidly as practicable in the judgment of the trustees, reasonably exercised, to said disposition, conversion, and liquidation in the manner or manners deemed by them to be for the *32 best interests of the certificate holders; that the trustees shall not engage in any business not reasonably necessary or adapted to the said disposition, conversion, and liquidation; that the trustees shall not with the funds or property of the trust acquire other or further property except such as may be reasonably necessary or adapted to or convenient for the said disposition, conversion, and liquidation; that the trustees shall not loan the funds of the trust estate or indorse any negotiable paper or execute any guaranty or mortgage or pledge or hypothecate its property except (a) as may be reasonably necessary in said disposition, conversion, and liquidation of the trust estate, or (b) to or for the benefit of a corporation in which the first certificate holders herein named own at the date of this instrument a majority of the capital stock, and in that case only for the purpose of permitting, such corporation to retire or renew its outstanding indebtedness, present or future, and only to an aggregate amount including all loans, indorsements, and guaranties to or for the benefit of such corporation, not exceeding two million five hundred thousand dollars, or (c) to or for the benefit of a corporation or corporations coming within the terms of the proviso to paragraph (10) of this section; that the trustees shall not accumulate or withhold from distribution profits or incomes of the trust estate, or withhold distribution of the proceeds of the corpus of the trust estate, for, any greater length of time or to any greater extent than may be reasonably necessary to carry out the general purposes hereinbefore expressed and to pay or properly secure the payment of all of the debts of the trust estate and to comply or properly secure compliance with all of the contracts or other obligations of said trust estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 So. 598, 150 Miss. 1, 1928 Miss. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-knox-v-edward-hines-lumber-co-miss-1928.