Union City Lumber Co. v. Traverse City, Leelanau & Manistique Railroad

136 N.W. 463, 170 Mich. 205, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 812
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1912
DocketDocket No. 126
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 136 N.W. 463 (Union City Lumber Co. v. Traverse City, Leelanau & Manistique Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union City Lumber Co. v. Traverse City, Leelanau & Manistique Railroad, 136 N.W. 463, 170 Mich. 205, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 812 (Mich. 1912).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

In addition to the facts stated in the opinion of Mr. Justice Bird, I think the following should also be stated: Metheany and Kaufman, the promoters of the Traverse City, Leelanau & Manistique Railroad Company, in their scheme for financing the proposed road, arranged with the defendant Union Trust Company for the sale of its bonds. As appears by the correspondence, the letter of the defendant Union Trust Company of November 19, 1901, was addressed to these gentlemen, is in reply to theirs of November 15th, refers to the underwriting of $300,000 of 5 percent, gold bonds of the proposed company, the terms of which are described, and contains the following:

“ The bonds to be coupon bonds and the underwriting to be at ninety cents on the dollar; one-half of which underwriting, viz., one hundred and fifty thousand dollars ($150,000) you agree to subscribe for and obtain subscriptions for, at the same price, viz., ninety cents on the dollar, the Union Trust Company to be paid a bonus for such underwriting of thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) of the par value of the stock in the proposed Traverse City, Leelanau Sc Manistique Railroad, fully paid and nonassessable; * * * the bonus stock to be delivered to the Union Trust Company when the other stock is delivered to the other stockholders, and to be received and held by it under the terms of your said letter of November 15, 1901, for a period of two years from the date of its delivery.”

[207]*207To this letter Metheany and Kaufman replied, acknowledging the receipt thereof, and stating:

“The same is satisfactory to us, and is hereby accepted.”

The Traverse City, Leelanau & Manistique Railroad Company filed its articles of incorporation November 25, 1901. Of an authorized capital of $500,000, $15,000 was subscribed in the articles of association. The articles showed $500 per mile subscribed and that 5 per cent, of the amount subscribed had been paid in to the directors in good faith in cash by the subscribers. 2 Comp. Laws, § 6223. The railroad was constructed. During the period from April to October, 1903, the complainant furnished certain material used in the construction of the road, for the value of which its judgment was taken. No report was ever filed by the railroad company or by its officers until 1907. The complainant was unable to secure the production in court of the books of the defendant railroad company, and there is before the court no record of the company showing the issue of any stock to any person. It appears from the testimony that a certificate or certificates of stock were issued and tendered to the Grand Rapids & Indiana Railway Company, to whom Metheany and Kaufman had made a sale of some of its bonds, and that the tender was refused. It also appears that, shortly before the bill in this cause was filed, a certificate for stock of the Traverse City, Leelanau & Manistique Railroad Company, numbered 2, for 300 shares, was issued to the defendant Union Trust Company, under date March 23, 1904, in which certificate it is stated that “Union Trust Company is the owner of three hundred shares of the full paid capital stock of ” said company. The testimony shows that this certificate was received by the Union Trust Company April 8, 1904.

On the 2d of June following, the Union Trust Company wrote to Mr. Metheany, addressed as president of the defendant railroad company, a letter as follows:

[208]*208“A question has been raised whether the stock of the, Traverse City, Leelanau & Manistique Railroad Company has been fully paid ; it being claimed that the stockholders must contribute to pay obligations of the company.
“The stock fee which the Union Trust Company was to be paid for financing your road was a stock that was fully paid and nonassessable. Is that true of the stock issued for that purpose ? If it is not, I cannot accept, on behalf of the Trust Company, the stock which has already been issued.”

In reply, Mr. Metheany, adding to his signature the abbreviation “Pres.,” wrote:

“I have your letter of June 3d, on the subject of the capital stock of the Traverse City, Leelanau <& Manistique Railroad Company. The stock was issued to MacDonald Brothers & Company as part consideration under their contract for the construction of the road, and was purchased from them by Mr. Kaufman and myself. I consider the stock fully paid. If under those conditions you do not need the stock, you will please so advise me.”

The Union Trust Company kept the certificate. The contract for the construction of the defendant railroad was dated July 3, 1902, the parties thereto being the railroad company and MacDonald Bros. & Co. By its terms the railroad company, in consideration of the performance by the contractors of their undertaking, agrees to pay certain specified sums and prices; for example: For clearing, at the rate of $25 per acre; for excavating, at the rate of 20 cents per cubic yard; for track laying, at the rate of $300 per mile; for ballasting, at the rate of $575 per mile. The contractor testified that the prices named in the contract for different classes of work were prices named in the bid. Written on the margin of the contract is the following paragraph in the handwriting of Mr. Metheany:

“And as a further consideration, the company agrees to issue, deliver, and turn over to the contractor all of the unsubscribed capital stock of the company, the same being -shares of the par value of one hundred dollars each.”

[209]*209The paragraph continues:

“Which said prices and capital stock [the words ‘and capital stock ’ being inserted] shall be in full consideration for all labor and material.”

The testimony of Archibald MacDonald, one of the contractors, is that he has no recollection that any certificate of stock was ever issued to him or in his name, no certificate ever came into his possession, and he never considered the capital stock of the road as of any value. The following questions and answers are a part of his testimony, on cross-examination:

“Q. And you never indorsed any certificate of stock?
“A. I would not say that.
“Q. Well, if the stock was not issued in your name, what occasion would there be for indorsing it ?
“A. I understand that Mr. Kaufman had presented one paper for me to sign one time up the road; I have no recollection of it, but, if he asked me to sign a certificate over, I no doubt did, for I thought—
“Q. If you signed over a certificate, then the certificate must have been issued in your name ?
“A. It never came into my possession, and I do not remember anything about it.
“ Q. That was not the question which I asked you. I asked you whether you ever had knowledge of a certificate of stock which was issued in your name ?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. And which you assigned over to some one else ?
“A. I have not.”

The mortgage executed to secure the bonds ran to the Union Trust Company, trustee. Later an amended mortgage was executed dated March 30, 1903.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 N.W. 463, 170 Mich. 205, 1912 Mich. LEXIS 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-city-lumber-co-v-traverse-city-leelanau-manistique-railroad-mich-1912.