Sturtevant Mill Co. v. Cosmic Cement & Stone Co.

76 A. 412, 111 Md. 667, 1910 Md. LEXIS 83
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 12, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 A. 412 (Sturtevant Mill Co. v. Cosmic Cement & Stone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sturtevant Mill Co. v. Cosmic Cement & Stone Co., 76 A. 412, 111 Md. 667, 1910 Md. LEXIS 83 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Pattisoh, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are three appeals in this case,- all from a decree of the Circuit Court Ho. 3 of Baltimore City, overruling exceptions to an auditor’s account distributing’ the assets of the appellee company, which had, by a previous order of said Court, been placed in the hands of a receiver for liquidation because of its insolvency. Two of these exceptions were to the allowance of the claim of Dr. Pierce B. Wilson, one of which was filed by the Sturtevant Mill Company and the other by J. Prank Morrison, both creditors of the said insolvent company; the third exception was filed by Dr. Pierce B. Wilson to the claim of the said J. Prank Morrison.

This is the second time this case has been before this Court; the first time was at the October Term, 1908, and is reported in 109 Md., page 11.

The former appeal was also from an order of the Circuit Court Ho. 2 of Baltimore City, sustaining exceptions to an auditor’s account in this case distributing the assets of the appellee company and directing a restatement of the account; the only claim involved therein being the one filed by Dr. Pierce B. Wilson for salary alleged to be owing him from said company. The claim of Dr. Wilson was based upon a sale or disposition made by him unto the appellee *669 company of a formula to be used in the production of cement, tiles, etc., at and for the sum of' one hundred thousand dollars. The teims and conditions of this sale were reduced to writing, and are fully set out in the opinion of this Court in the former appeal. By its terms and provisions, ten thou-. sand dollars were to be in lieu of salary as chemist until said sum was fully paid, as set forth in said agreement; the balance, ninety thousand dollars, was to be paid him in the stock of the company — eighteen hundred shares of the par value of fifty dollars per share.

As stated by this Court in its opinion, the exceptions were to the claim and the contract upon which it was founded. Therefore it became necessary for the Court to consider and pass upon the validity of the contract. This Court did, and in its opinion said: “We think the contract attempted to be made by the acceptance of this proposal should be held, upon a fair construction of its terms, to have been divisible, and the portion of it relating to the employment of the doctor by the company as its chemist be held to be binding upon the parties, although the part relating to the issue of the stock and the transfer of the discovery and formula must, for the reasons already stated, be held to have been void.” But this Court differed from the lower Court as to the classification of a portion of the claim of Dr. Wilson, holding that six hundred dollars of it, his salary for three months, should have been allowed him in full; while the lower Court, treated the whole indebtedness as a general claim, upon which only a dividend was allowed.

It was for this last reason that the ease was remanded,, in order that an audit could be stated in conformity with the Court’s views so clearly defining the rights of Dr. Wilson under his contract with the company and specifically stating how the auditor’s account, distributing the assets of the insolvent company, should be stated in respect to the claim of Dr. Wilson.

Upon the return of the case to the lower Court, an auditor’s account, distributing the assets of the company and al *670 lowing the claim of Dr. Wilson in accordance with the opinion of this Court, was stated, whereupon the three exceptions were taken — two to the allowance of the claim of Dr. Wilson and one to. the claim of J. Frank Morrison. It is from the decree overruling these exceptions that this appeal is taken.

We will first consider the action'of the lower Court in overruling the exception to the allowance of the claim of Dr. Wilson. After a careful examination and comparison of the records in this and in the former appeal, we find little in the second record that is not contained in the first. About the only additional fact that we discover is the introduction of a paper writing, purporting to be a subscription to ninety thousand dollars of the capital stock of the appellee company, with the name of Pierce B. Wilson, Jr., attached thereto, and worded as follows:

“Baltimore, Md., July 26th, 1904.
“We, the undersigned, hereby agree, each with the other and with the Cosmic Cement, Tile and Stone Company of Baltimore City, Md., to and do subscribe for the number of shares of the capital stock of the said Cosmic Cement, Tile and Stone-Company, at the par value of fifty dollars ($50.00) per share, as written opposite our signatures, and do agree to pay for same, as follows: twenty-five per cent, of the amount of the subscription to be paid in cash at the time the subscription is made, a like payment of twenty-five per cent, to be due and made in one month thereafter, the balance, fifty per cent., of the amount of the subscription to be subject to the call of the board of directors, as required.
Date of of Subscription. Signature of Subscriber. Number of Shares of Stock Subscribed. Amount of subscription in dollars,
1904 July 28 Pierce B. Wilson. Jr. Eighteen Hundred. $90,000.00.”

The only testimony bearing in any way upon this alleged cash subscription is that of Major Frederick C. Tarr, secre *671 tary of said company, who, after testifying to the entries in the hooks of the appellee company, wherein it was shown that Dr. Wilson was credited with $100,000 purchase price for his discovery or formula purchased by the company from him, and wherein he was charged with $90,000 of its stock, which, by the contract, was. to be issued to him in part payment of said $100,000, and the further charges for money paid in cash, amounting to $585, all of which facts were in the former record, testified as follows: Q. Have you any other account containing any charges against Dr. Wilson for stock on your books ? Ans. Ho; none that I know of; I do not remember any now. Q. That was the only subscription he has for capital stock of the corporation on your books, was it not ? Ans. Yes; this is all. I did not keep any stock ledger — it would not have been entered on the stock ledger anyhow because the certificates had not been issued. Q. Look at this paper now handed you, dated July 26th, 1901, and please state what it is? (This was the alleged cash subscription.) Ans. That is the subscription to eighteen hundred shares of the capital stock of the Cosmic Cement, Tile and Stone Company of Baltimore City, Maryland, dated July 28th, 1901, and signed by Pierce B. Wilson, Jr. Q. That was the form, the subscribers to the capital stock were to sign? Ans. Yes. On cross-examination, ho further testified: Q. Do yon know the signature of Dr. Wilson? Ans. I do. Q. Look at that subscription and say whether or not that is his subscription ? Ans. I believe it to be — I am very well satisfied it is.

This is absolutely all of the testimony in which any reference is made to this alleged cash subscription. Witness testified, also, to the fact that Dr.

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

Related

Childers v. O'Malley
D. Alaska, 2024

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 A. 412, 111 Md. 667, 1910 Md. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturtevant-mill-co-v-cosmic-cement-stone-co-md-1910.