Urschel Lead & Zinc Mines, Inc. v. Smith

111 S.W.2d 480, 195 Ark. 36, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1937
Docket4-4816
StatusPublished

This text of 111 S.W.2d 480 (Urschel Lead & Zinc Mines, Inc. v. Smith) 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
Urschel Lead & Zinc Mines, Inc. v. Smith, 111 S.W.2d 480, 195 Ark. 36, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 171 (Ark. 1937).

Opinion

Baker, J.

Charley Smith filed suit in the circuit court of Newton county alleging personal injuries and asking for $45,000 damages. Suit was filed on the 14th day of December, 1936. Smith had tried to make settlement and had threatened suit and H. C. Urschel, the president of the corporation, had had him examined .on one or two occasions by physicians to determine if Smith had suffered an injury, and, if so, the extent thereof.

Urschel had lived in Bowling Green, Ohio. He be--, came interested in mines and mining in Newton county and he and Eli Wages, with others, had formed a corporation under the name of Urschel-Wages Mining Company. Eli Wages was named as the resident agent' for service of process. Thereafter, the exact time not shown, Wages disposed of his interests in the-company and the corporation is said to have taken in some new stockholders; at least, it changed its name to Urschel Lead & Zinc Mines, Inc., and H. 0. Urschel was named as a resident agent, with principal offices at Rush, Arkansas. It seems that at the time or after the change of the name of the corporation there was no proper certificate filed in the office of the clerk of Newton county showing that a new resident agent had been appointed.

The first complaint was filed against Urschel-Wages Mining Company and service of summons was had on Eli Wages. On the 14th of December, H. C. Urschel, who was then in charge of the corporation, talked with a lawyer at Jasper, Arkansas, and with a firm of lawyers at Harrison, Arkansas, but advised that he was without power to employ or contract with them at that time, hut one of these lawyers, acting under tentative employment, or the prospect thereof, procured a copy of the complaint against the Urschel-Wages Mining Company. Mr. Ur-schel knew this complaint had been filed. He attempted to get word to attorneys representing the plaintiff in. regard to the change of name of the company and attempted to give them information that he was the proper party upon whom service might-be had. He remained at Harrison for a few days awaiting service, after which he went to Ohio, where he thought it was necessary he should go for medical treatment. He also advised that Wages was no longer connected or iii 'any manner interested in the corporation. Evidently attorneys for the plaintiff did not wholly disregard this information. On the same day, December 14, at 7:30 p. m., they filed a new complaint and had a new summons issued against the corporation, by its proper name, but had service a second time upon Eli Wages, although, presumably, advised that he, at that time, was not in any way connected with the corporation. This statement is made not by way of holding that such service, had under the circumstances, on conditions that prevailed, was not good, nor do we think it necessary to determine that fact at this time for several reasons, and one is that no new certificate had been filed in the county clerk’s office showing the designation of another resident agent, and the record there, at that time, showed Wages as the agent named by the corporation under its name and former management. Sections 2215 and 2216, Pope’s Digest.

H. C. Urschel returned to his former home in Ohio where he notified his father of the pendency of this suit against the Urschel-Wages Mining Company, and it may he said that the father shortly thereafter made some effort to determine if a new suit had been filed and an effort to secure some attorney to represent the corporation. H. C. Urschel, the man who had been in charge of the business of the corporation, sometime late in December, entered the hospital where he remained for several weeks. There seems to be no dispute about the fact of his incapacity to look after and represent the interests of the corporation during that period. On the 2d day of court, which was the 5th day of January, when service had barely had time to ripen, a default judgment was taken against the corporation in the sum of $25,000. This judgment was rendered in the circuit court, before the Hon. J. M. Shinn, chancellor, on exchange with the Hon. J. H. Black, the regular circuit judge, presiding. After the trial of this case the court did not adjourn regularly until court in course, but, thereafter, on the 19th day of April, 1937, the defendant, the appellant here, brought to a hearing a motion for a new trial, setting up-among other grounds the following:

“That its principal officers are B. H. Urschel president, and G. K. Urschel, secretary; that at no time had service been had on any of its officers or agents; that the judgment complained of was rendered on the 5th day of January, 1937, without proper service; that none of the officers or agents of the company knew that suit had been filed until on or about the day of trial; that all the officers and agents of the company were then at its home office in Bowling Green, Ohio, a distance of more than 800 miles from Jasper, where the case was pending; that the weather was so inclement that it was impossible for them to appear and make defense; that as soon as weather and travel conditions improved ®o that they could come to Jasper and to their property, they did so; that they then learned that service was intended to he had upon defendant by delivering a copy of summons to Eli Wages; that Wages was not an officer of the company or a stockholder therein; that he had no interest in said company and was not at or about the place of business of the defendant at the time he was served; that the officers of the defendant company had no knowledge or information that such service had been so attempted.
“That the alleged cause of action was wholly without merit; that if the plaintiff sustained injury, such was not sustained while he was an employee of the defendant ; that, if such were sustained, it was the result of a fall from a tree about the last of September, 1936; that soon after said fall and before plaintiff conceived the thought of falsely alleging said injuries to have been sustained while in the service of this defendant, he stated to E. J. Eastep and LeRoy A. Stroyick that he had fallen from a tree while gathering grapes and received injuries.
‘ ‘ That, if proper and timely service of summons had been had upon this defendant, it could and would have investigated the alleged cause of action and ascertained ■the facts and would have procured proper witnesses to controvert the allegations of plaintiff; that after judgment was taken by default for $25,000, the same was so shocking to the moral sense of the community, that information came to the officers of the defendant which established the falsity of the claims of the plaintiff; that it was impossible for the defendants to procure such information prior to said judgment; that the defendants had a meritorious defense.
“ That the affidavits of B. H. Urschel and H. C. Ur-schel and LeRoy A. Stroyick and E. J. Eastep were attached to the motion and made a part of it; that defendant believed the facts set forth in said affidavits to be true. ’ ’

Affidavits of B. H. Urschel and H. C. Urschel, as attached to the motion, are as follows:

■ B. H. Urschel said: “I am president of Urschel Lead & Zinc Mines; about the last of December, 1936, I received information that one Charley Smith had brought suit against Urschel-Wages Mining Company, but no summons of any kind was served on me or any officer of the company or any one at the office of the company.

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.W.2d 480, 195 Ark. 36, 1937 Ark. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/urschel-lead-zinc-mines-inc-v-smith-ark-1937.