Woolfolk v. January

33 S.W. 432, 131 Mo. 620, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 17, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 33 S.W. 432 (Woolfolk v. January) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woolfolk v. January, 33 S.W. 432, 131 Mo. 620, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 109 (Mo. 1895).

Opinion

Gantt, P. J.

In this action plaintiff in error sought to charge the defendant’as-a stockholder of certain shares in the Nevada Gas and Coal Company, to satisfy a judgment obtained by plaintiff against said company. The proceeding is by motion for an execution against the defendant as holder of one hundred and one shares of the capital stock of said company. Plaintiff obtained judgment for $7,266.96 against the company. Execution issued and was returned nulla bona. Plaintiff averred that defendant’s stock was wholly unpaid. Defendant denied that he owed any sum whatever on the stock.

Eor a second defense, the answer avers that plaintiff’s judgment is founded on eighteen certain bonds of $1,000 each, made by the company and delivered to P. Eoberts, D. H. Irland, and J. H. Andrews, in part payment of the purchase price of certain gas works and the properties and franchises thereto belonging, sold by said Eoberts, Irland, and Andrews to said company; that the balance of the purchase price was five hundred and ninety paid-up shares in the capital stock of said company, which shares were issued and delivered to said Eoberts, Irland, and Andrews, as fully paid and nonassessable and were so received by them, and it was understood and agreed by and between said company and said Eoberts, Irland, and Andrews, that said bonds were to be a charge upon the property of the company only and not upon any of the shares of the capital stock; that afterward Eoberts sold defendant the one [624]*624hundred and one shares sued on, being part of said five hundred and ninety shares, and at the time of the sale represented to defendant that said shares were fully paid and nonassessable, and the same so appears upon the certificates thereof, and defendant, so believing, purchased the same in good faith and for value; that plaintiff purchased the said eighteen bonds with full notice of the said alleged facts and is thereby estopped from maintaining this motion. For a third defense the answer avers that defendant purchased his shares for value and in good faith, believing that they were paid-up and nonassessable. For a fourth defense the answer avers that the debt upon which plaintiff recovered his judgment was not to be paid within one year from the time it was contracted. For a fifth defense the answer avers that said debt became due and payable on the first day of January, 1885, and suit thereon was not brought against the company until January 2,1889.

The reply admits that the judgment was founded on the eighteen bonds as alleged, but denies that the five hundred and ninety shares were paid-up stock or were issued or delivered to said Roberts, Irland, and Andrews as fully paid and nonassessable or. were so received by them, or that it was understood and agreed between them and the company that the bonds were to be a charge upon the property of the company only and not upon the stock, or that Roberts and Irland represented to defendant that the one hundred and one shares sold to him by 'them were fully paid and nonassessable, or that defendant purchased the stock in good faith believing the same to be full paid and nonassessable, or that plaintiff purchased the bonds with notice of the alleged facts pleaded in the second defense. The reply further denies generally the third, fourth, and fifth defenses.

[625]*625Besides this action against January there were pending at the same time and in the same court actions of the same kind by the same plaintiff against Joseph E. Harding, John A. Tyler, Michael Jordan, Thomas E. Stokes and Ed. J. Dickinson. By agreement of counsel for all the parties the cases, except that against Stokes, were all tried together, the evidence was taken in all together, they were submitted together, and the same bill of exceptions applies to all. The cause was heard by the circuit court and a finding and judgment for the defendants, and plaintiff sued out his writ of error.

From the record we gather that in 1882 D. H. Irland, of St. Louis, Preston Roberts, of Independence, and J. H. Andrews obtained from the mayor and city council of Nevada a franchise to construct gas works in said city and the exclusive privilege of laying the mains in the streets and alleys of said city for a period of twenty-one years. The ordinance limited the charge for gas for five years to $3.50 per thousand feet and after five years to $3 per thousand feet. The city was bound to use twenty-five lamps for five years, at $30 per year per lamp, and each extension of three hundred and eighty feet bound the city to use an extra lamp at $25 per year.

Irland and Roberts paid Andrews for the franchise thus obtained between $1,200 and $2,000. Irland and Roberts then proceeded to, and did, erect the works and laid the mains in the streets. Irland and Roberts then became the promoters of a corporation to operate these gas works. At their instance articles for the company to be known as the Nevada Gras and Coal Company were drawn. The stock was divided into six hundred shares of the par value of $100 per share, and the association was organized under article 8, [626]*626chapter 21, Revised Statutes, 1879, entitled, “Business and Manufacturing Companies.” The names and places of residence of the shareholders and the number of shares subscribed by each were given as follows: D. H. Irland, St. Louis, two hundred and ninety-five shares; P. Roberts, Independence, Missouri, two hundred and ninety-five shares; J. A. Tyler, of Nevada, five shares, and P. F. Thornton, Joseph E. Harding, Charles G. Burton, M. Jordan, and C. A. Roekwood, each one share. The articles recited the shares were bona fide subscribed, one half actually paid up in lawful money. The certificate of incorporation from the secretary of state bore date October, 1882.

At the meeting of the incorporators the articles were read, reciting the payment of one half cash, and thereupon Judge Burton, the attorney who had drawn the articles, at once said, “Gentlemen that recital is not true. No cash has been paid in.” Whereupon Irland inquired, “Is it necessary that it should be paid in money?” To this Judge Burton answered, “No; the supreme court of this state has held it may be paid in property.” Irland then said, “We have already paid over half of it in this way.” “But,” said the attorney, “that is your property and not the property of the corporation.” Whereupon Irland said he would turn it over and stated there that from that time the board of directors had charge of it. It was the understanding of all present that the whole property belonged to Irland and Roberts and the ten shares subscribed by the others were to be given to them by Irland and Roberts. Irland, then, upon inquiry as to his reason for capitalizing the corporation at $60,000, said the plant alone had cost $34,000 and the franchise was for twenty-one years, and in a live, progressive city like Nevada made it very valuable. “These works,” he said, “with the franchise will be worth from $80,000 [627]*627to $100,000 the moment they are ready to operate;” that the Independence works paid six per cent on $100,000 and were not as good as these. With this explanation the corporators signed and executed the articles. The meeting was adjourned to December 12, 1882. On that day Irland, Roberts, and Andrews submitted the following proposition:

uTo the Stockholders of the Nevada Gas and Coal Company:
“The undersigned hereby submit for your consideration and action the following proposition, viz.:

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Bluebook (online)
33 S.W. 432, 131 Mo. 620, 1895 Mo. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woolfolk-v-january-mo-1895.