Trammell v. Mower

62 So. 528, 182 Ala. 347, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 458
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 62 So. 528 (Trammell v. Mower) 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
Trammell v. Mower, 62 So. 528, 182 Ala. 347, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 458 (Ala. 1913).

Opinion

de GRAFFENRIED, J.

Stated roughly, but with sufficient exactness to give pith to this opinion, the facts of this case are as follows:

The complainants, R. F. Trammell, Peter Clements, and S. H. Murphree, who are farmers with practically no knowledge of business affairs, but who, nevertheless, attend to their affairs and are not non compos mentis, owned in fee about 400 acres of land. This land is valuable, not only for farming purposes, but also for its minerals and especially for its coal. Of this latter fact the complainants were fully informed, and it appears that they Avere desirous of selling the mineral rights in their said lands. They finally fell into the hands of a man by the name of Wood, and, according to the complainants’ version of the story, Avere induced by Wood to agree to the formation of a corporation Avith a capital stock of $7,000, all of the stock of Avhich was to belong to complainants except one share, Avhich was to be issued in the name of Wood in order that he might [350]*350appear among the list of stockholders and act as one of the officers of the corporation. The mineral interests in the lands were to be conveyed to said corporation in consideration of said $7,000 capital stock and this mineral interest was to be the only asset of the corporation. We think it probable that Wood in his own name, or in the name of some one for him, obtained an option on the said mineral interest at the sum of $7,000, and that this was done while the negotiations with reference to the formation of the corporation were in progress.

Finally, a corporation known as the Altoona Coal & Coke Company was organized, not in Blount county, but in Jefferson county. In the articles of incorporation the capital stock of the corporation was fixed, not at $7,000, but at $28,000; $7,000 of said capital stock being-preferred stock and $21,000 being common stock. Certificates for 69 shares of the preferred stock of the face value of $100 each were issued and delivered to complainants, and 1 share of this preferred stock of the face value of $100 was issued and delivered to said Wood. The common stock, representing- $21,000 of said capital stock, was issued as fully paid up to the said Wood, R. H. Coffee, George F. Jenkins, and T. F. Wood in consideration of $1,400 paid in cash into the treasury of said corporation and the transfer of the option previously obtained by said Wood on the mineral rights in complainants’ said lands. None of the complainants were made officers of the corporation, they attended none of the meetings of the stockholders, and did nothing in or about the matter, except, indeed, to sign such papers as were sent to them by said Wood for their signatures. They appear to have fully trusted Wood, and they claim that for a long period after the Altoona Coal & Coke Company was formed they were led by Wood to believe that its capital stock was only $7,000, that they owned [351]*351all of it except one share, and that the corporation was formed and the development of the property and its exploitation by the corporation were being had for the purpose of effecting its sale at a sum which would net complainants said $7,000. There was nothing, however, on the face of any of the articles of incorporation of said Altoona Coal & Coke Company which could in any way lead a stranger to a reasonable belief that complainants had in the formation of said corporation been overreached by the said Wood, or that they were not fully apprised of all the details which led up to and resulted in the formation of said corporation. In other words, there was nothing on the face of any of the papers putting a stranger upon inquiry as to any of complainants’ rights.

After the formation of the corporation, which was empowered “to buy, own, hold, lease or sell lands, * * * engage in mining coal and iron ores, etc., * * * to build, own, purchase or lease all railroads, vessels, etc., * * * as may be necessary or needful for the proper conduct of the business, etc., * * * and to do any and all other things in the transaction of such business not inconsistent with the laws of Alabama,” the mineral interest above referred to was, by sufficient legal conveyance, conveyed to the said corporation and the corporation took possession thereof. At the time of the organization of the corporation and during the period covered by this controversy the general laws of the state provided — as they now provide — that a mining corporation possessed the power “to borrow money, issue notes, bonds, or other negotiable paper, or mortgage, pledge, or otherwise transfer or convey its real and personal property to secure the payment of money borrowed' or any debt contracted,” etc. Acting under the powers thus conferred by our general laws, [352]*352the Altoona Coal & Coke Company on July 29, 1907, executed and delivered to the respondent Mower a mortgage upon the above-described mineral interests to secure notes aggregating $5,000. The said Wood had been —without the knowledge or consent of complainants if their contention about this matter is correct — elected president of said corporation, and this mortgage was executed to cover a loan which, through negotiations conducted by Wood as its president, the respondent had agreed to lend the corporation to aid it in the development of its properties. The respondent Mower is a nonresident, and he had no acquaintance with the complainants, but he knew Wood, the president, personally. It was understood, when the notes and mortgage were executed and delivered, that all of the $5,000 was not to be paid by Mower to the corporation in one sum, but only in installments as the corporation should need the money in its development work. In fact, it appears that Mower required that he should be kept informed as to the progress of the development work, how the money obtained from him was being expended, etc., in order that he might see that the money so paid out by him was, in fact, enhancing the value of the property and increasing his security. Before Mower accepted the mortgage, he employed a firm of lawyers to investigate the title to the property, see to the proper execution of the papers, and to advise him if the mortgage, when executed and delivered, was binding upon the corporation. The mortgage was accepted by him upon the advice of such counsel as to its legal sufficiency and validity, and so far as rve are able to discover, Mower, in this transaction, in all that he did, acted in perfect good faith both in law and in fact. After Mower, under his agreement, had advanced to the corporation the sum of $1,200, a large part of which seems to have been used in devel[353]*353opment work, he was advised by Wood that the stockholders of the corporation had fallen out, and that no further part of the $5,000 would-be used or drawn for. Mower, therefore, by virtue of his $5,000 mortgage, only claims a lien upon the property for $1,200, the interest and an attorneys fee' which is provided for in said mortgage.

1. After Mower had acquired all of the rights above stated, the complainants filed a bill of. complaint in the chancery court of Jefferson county against the said Wood and the said Altoona Coal & Coke Company and its other stockholders setting up that the conveyances from them to their mineral rights in said lands to said Altoona Coal & Coke Company was obtained by fraud, and praying that such conveyances should be declared void, and that they should be canceled on account of such fraud. The prayer of this bill was granted, and the said conveyances were canceled and declared void.

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 528, 182 Ala. 347, 1913 Ala. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trammell-v-mower-ala-1913.