Yellow Chief Coal Company's Trustee v. Johnson

179 S.W. 599, 166 Ky. 663, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 746
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 11, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 599 (Yellow Chief Coal Company's Trustee v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yellow Chief Coal Company's Trustee v. Johnson, 179 S.W. 599, 166 Ky. 663, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 746 (Ky. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Nunn.

Reversing.

The appellees, Leonard and Charles Johnson, were plaintiffs below in separate actions. By an agreed order the actions were consolidated and tried together. Separate judgments were rendered against the Yellow Chief Coal Company, whereby Charles Johnson recovered $5,625, and Leonard Johnson .recovered $3,375. The court also adjudged a lien upon certain lands for the payment of each judgment and ordered a sale of the lands for that purpose. Pending the action the coal company was adjudged a bankrupt in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky, and the trustee, who intervened, brings this appeal. Except [664]*664in the ainounts claimed the actions of Leonard and Charles Johnson are identical.

In the year 1909, James M. Lively, of New York, came to Johnson county, and started negotiations with the appellees, and others, for the purchase of coal lands on Bobbs branch in that county. Upon his return to New York, the owners made a proposition in the form of a letter, agreeing to sell their lands at $25 per acre, one-third to be paid in cash, and the balance in one and two years. In November, 1909, Lively returned to Johnson county, in company with Henry Taylor, and after further negotiations procured, on the 30th day of that month, separate writings or options from Charles and Leonard Johnson, whereby Charles agreed to convey 300 acres and Leonard agreed to convey 180 acres. The consideration was $25 per acre. The options recited that Taylor and Lively were to organize a company, and the conveyances were to be made to that company within 60 days. One-third of the consideration was to be paid in cash when the conveyances were made, and the remaining two-thirds “to be paid for in the first mortgage 20 year 5 % sinking fund bonds of said company, at the rate. of 80% on their par value.” During the interval the appellees agreed to furnish an abstract of title. The options also contained this clause:

“It is further provided, that the vendor shall have the option, at any time after the expiration of eighteen (18) months from the delivery of such bonds, and before the expiration of twenty-four (24) months, to sell such bonds to the company so organized at the price of ninety (90) per cent, of their par or face value,- and the said company shall, within sixty (60) days after such notice, take up said bonds and pay therefor such price. ’ ’

In the meantime, the Johnsons were having abstracts made and Taylor and Lively proceeded with the organization of the Yellow Chief Coal Company, which was tentatively formed by the subscribing stockholders on the 1st of January, 1910. While so organized the company took an assignment of the options executed to Taylor and Lively. On that date the company executed and acknowledged a mortgage or deed of trust to secure an issue of first mortgage bonds of $500 each, aggregating $100,000. The mortgage covered all the lands upon which Taylor and Lively had secured options, including the lands of appellees. January 29th, 1910, was the last [665]*665of the 60 days on which the option to purchase might be exercised, and on that day the articles of incorporation of the Yellow Chief Coal Company were filed for record in the Johnson county court clerk’s office, as well as the mortgage or deed of trust referred to. On the same day the Johnsons executed and delivered their deeds to the company, which were then recorded, conveying the lands which they had theretofore optioned, and the consideration was paid therefor as stipulated in the option, viz.: One-third cash, and the balance by delivery of first mortgage 20 year 5% bonds, that is, a sufficient number of them at 80 cents on the dollar to equal in amount the balance of the purchase price. The deeds, however, did not recite the whole consideration, or the manner of payment. The consideration named was “the sum of $10 and other considerations in hand paid.” It was the ordinary form of general warranty deed, without reservations or limitations of any kind, except an exclusion of two small surveys.' No question about the exclusions is involved in this controversy.

On the 11th of February, 1910, a certified copy of the articles of incorporation were filed for record with the Secretary of State. On April 18, 1911, at a stockholders’ meeting, a resolution was adopted ratifying the mortgage and again declaring it to be. the act and deed of the corporation.

By the sale of bonds secured by the mortgage, executed and recorded in the way already explained, the company procured funds with which to develop the property, and which it commenced to do as soon as titles were acquired. The appellees held their bonds and drew interest thereon semi-annually for two years. At that time it became apparent that the company was in failing circumstances. It was unable to pay about $5,000 which it owed for merchandise supplied by wholesalers to its mine commissary. In February, 1912, appellees filed their suits against the Yellow Chief Coal Company, and averred that it was a corporation “duly organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of Kentucky * * * and was organized for the purpose of taking over said property.” (Referring to the land in question.) After setting up the terms of the option, they alleged that when they made the contract and agreed to accept the bonds as therein stipulated “the defendants (Lively and Taylor) represented to plaintiff that the mortgage se[666]*666curing the same included only enough bonds to cover the purchase money on this and other tracts adjoining it, bought by defendants as aforesaid, and upon this representation, and believing it to be true, plaintiff agreed to accept same under the terms aforesaid. ’ ’ They alleged that said representation was falsely made for the fraudulent purpose of cheating plaintiffs, for at that time Taylor, et al., intended to, and the company did, issue bonds aggregating $100,000, “which was more than four times the amount of purchase money for land as aforesaid. ” It is further alleged that before the expiration of 21 months they gave to the company notice of their desire to sell the bonds so held by them at the price of 90 cents on the $1, and the company failed and refused to purchase or pay for the bonds, or any part thereof, “and, therefore, the full amount therefor is now due, just and owing to plaintiff * * * and plaintiff has a purchase money lien upon said land to secure the payment of said sum which should be enforced by a sale thereof. ’ ’

By an amended petition, they say that the corporation was not in fact organized with power to do business until February 11, 1910, but that Lively and Taylor, when the deed was demanded on January 29th, falsely and fraudulently represented that the corporation had been organized and that the “plaintiff, believing said representations to be true, and believing he was legally bound to execute said deed, signed and acknowledged the deed mentioned and set out in the petition, but with the express understanding that the company, which he thought was then organized and existing, would pay the purchase money on said land as mentioned and set out in said (option) contract.” It is further alleged that at the time the company executed the mortgage or trust deed to secure the $100,000 bond issue, the plaintiffs and other landholders had not executed their deeds for any of the land covered by the mortgage, and the company “had no title except the contract aforesaid, which was executed by the plaintiff and other vendors to the defendants, James M. Lively and Henry A.

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 599, 166 Ky. 663, 1915 Ky. LEXIS 746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yellow-chief-coal-companys-trustee-v-johnson-kyctapp-1915.