Vintroux v. Chilton

100 S.E. 496, 84 W. Va. 604, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 79
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 S.E. 496 (Vintroux v. Chilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vintroux v. Chilton, 100 S.E. 496, 84 W. Va. 604, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 79 (W. Va. 1919).

Opinion

POFEENBARGER, JUDGE:

The controversy brought up for determination by tMs appeal arose out of a distribution of assets of a corporation, the Holley Oil and Development Company, among its stockholders, in the form of a dividend, the corporation having converted all of its assets into cash and terminated its operations. At that time, L. T. Vintroux claimed to be the owner of thirty shares of the capital stock of the corporation, and his title to fifteen shares thereof was admitted by the board of directors and the trustee in whose hands the certificates of all'of the shares were deposited, but they denied Ms right to the other fifteen shares. They paid him what was estimated to be his dividend on fifteen shares, and they say that, in view of the dispute as to his right to the dividend on the others, the money applicable to them, as estimated, was deposited in a bank, The Union Trust Company of Charleston, W. Va. At that time, there seems to have been no [606]*606■controversy as to the amount of the dividend. At August Rules, 1914, Vintroux filed his bill praying for a decree ■against the corporation, the trustee and the members of the board of directors, for the amount of money in dispute, :$14,000.00. At September Rules, 1914, James A. Holley and Samuel Stephenson, two members of the board of- directors and large stockholders of the corporation, filed their answer to the bill, in which they set up new matter and prayed for affirmative relief against Vintroux. On May 17, 1917, Joseph E. Chilton who had no beneficial interest in the company, but was a trustee holding practically all of the stock and a director, filed his answer in his own right und as trustee, to both the bill and the cross-bill answer. On September 16, 1914,'the United Fuel Gas Co., a corporation which had been a large stockholder in the Holley Oil •and Development Co., just prior to the sale of its assets, filed its separate demurrer and answer to the bill. Vintroux having died, the cause was revived in the name of his ■•administrator, J. A. Vintroux, by an order entered January 3, 1918, and he filed an amended and supplemental bill :and bill of revivor, containing a special replication to the matters set up in the answer of Holley and Stephenson, as grounds of their prayer for cross-relief, May 15, 1918. On the motion of Holley and Stephenson it was ordered that their answer to the original bill should stand and be treated as their answer to the amended and supplemental bill. By the decree appealed’ from, both bills were dismissed. ■>

The transaction involved began, sometime prior to the year 1905,' with the organization of the Holley Oil and Development Co., having a subscribed capital stock of $7,500.00. Before its organization, James A. Holley, Samuel Stephenson and L. T. Vintroux, the last named party acting for and ■on behalf of the other two, had obtained leases upon various tracts and parcels of land in the counties of Putman, Lincoln and Kanawha for oil and gas development. The leases were assigned to the corporation, and, on April 10, 1905, the former owners thereof entered into what was termed an agreement of settlement, by which Vintroux was to have thirty shares of the capital stock of the company, and Holley •and Stephenson 360 shares each. It was further agreed [607]*607that Holley and Stephenson should contribute for development and expenses, the sum of $35,000.00, or such portion of that amount as they had not already expended. It was recited that Vintroux’s $3,000.00 had been paid into the company, by 'cash and services -rendered. At a meeting of the stockholders of the . company, held on the same day, the provisions of this agreement 'were ratified, and it was provided that an additional 675 shares of stock should be issued, making a total of 750 shares or $75,000.00, the shares being $100.00 each. Of the original stock, 36 shares were issued to Holley, 36 to Stephenson, one to Ira P. Champe one to A. J. Guill and one to Ira G-. Sayre. Of the 675 new shares representing the purchase price of the leases, 30 were issued to Vintroux, 321 to Holley, 321 to Stephenson, two to Champe and one to W. E. R. Byrne.- All of the shares were issued as being fully paid up and non-assessable.

At a meeting of the board of directors held a little more than two months later, June 26, 1905, and attended by Holley, Stephenson, Vintroux and Byrne, a resolution was adopted, reciting, a proposition of the United States Natural Gas Co., a corporation, for acquisition by it of one-half of the stock of the Holley Oil and Development Co., upon terms to be agreed upon by the holders of the stock of the company, and upon condition that the former company should pay over to the president of the Holley Company, a sum not less than $25.000.00, to be used and expended in further development of certain territory held under lease by the Holley Company; and authorizing and empowering the president J. A. Holley, to accept the proposition, for and on behalf of the corporation, and to impose such other and further conditions favorable to the corporation, as in-his judgment might be proper and expedient, and to execute, acknowledge and deliver on its behalf all apt and proper writings necessary to the carrying of such agreement into effect. This resolution set forth several of the material provisions of the contract after-wards made between' Holley, Stephenson, and the Holley Oil and Development Company, of the one part, and the United States Natural Gas Company of the other.

By that contract, dated, July 6, 1905, the United States [608]*608Natural Gas Co., agreed to pay to tbe Holley Oil and Development Co., $25,000.00, within fifteen days from the date thereof, to be used in the work of testing and developing the territory, under the general direction of James A. Holley. It provided for a reorganization of the board of directors of the Holley Company in such manner as to make it consist of Stephenson, Holley and Joseph B. Chilton, and for deposit of all of the shares of stock of that company, except three used for qualifying directors' and the 30 shares not then owned by Holley and Stephenson, in the hands of Joseph E. Chilton, to be held by him in trust for the purposes of the agreement; and, further, for like deposit of the 30 shares they did not then own, the Vintroux shares, if Holley and Stephenson should acquire them. Another provision of the contract, the one most vitally and directly involved here, gave the United States Natural Gas Co., upon certain conditions, the full one-half of the capital stock of the corporation, 375 shares, and obligated it to pay, as and for the purchase price thereof, to Stephenson and Holley, a sum equal to the amount of money actually expended prior to the date of the contract, in procurement of the leases and development of the property, which is shown to have been $43,354.51. The condition precedent to this transfer of stock and obligation to pay, was production from existing wells and others to be drilled, of a daily open flow of 25,000,000 cubic feet of gas. The shares of stock to be transferred to Joseph E. Chilton, Trustee, were to remain in his hands until the expiration of the trust created by. the contract. To secure payment of the amount to become due Stephenson and Holley, the .United States Natural Gas Co. bound itself to deposit with the trustee, $50,000.00 of its bonds, the coupons from which he was to detach from time to time and return to the company.

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.E. 496, 84 W. Va. 604, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vintroux-v-chilton-wva-1919.