Tunison v. Guthrie
Opinion of the Court
In the fall of 1915, the Dakota Coal & Coke Company, a West Virginia mining corporation, was in financial straits. It owed altogether upwards of $150,000, including notes to the amount of about $85,000, indorsed by its directors and the appellee Guthrie, and some of its creditors were pressing. Its sales agent was the Commonwealth Fuel Company, of Pittsburg, and that concern seems to have been in charge and control of its coal operations. It was indebted to the fuel company to the aggregate of about $51,000, subject, perhaps, to some offsets. This indebtedness included six notes, of $1,000 each, indorsed by directors, and also a note of $20,000, secured by like indorsement and by a mortgage or deed of trust which the fuel company was threatening to foreclose. The secretary of the coal company, W. H. Cochrane, lived in Pittsburg, and meetings of the directors were often held at his office in that city, or at the office of the fuel company.
At the instance of Cochrane, the appellant, Tunison, a Pittsburg lawyer, had several conferences with some of the directors at Greens-burg, Pa., at which the affairs of the company were fully discussed. Omitting details, it transpired that Tunison offered to submit a plan of relief, if paid the compensation he demanded. On the 19th of October a resolution was adopted, as appears from the minutes of the board, to the effect that appellant be paid the sum of $5,000 “for a plan to raise and pay such moneys on a plan evolved by him on which to refinance and refund pressing obligations, and especially the trust deed of the Commonwealth Fuel Company, provided said plan is accepted by this board and put into successful operation by him with the assistance of this board and the company, and that, said refunding he accomplished, all to be done by him in the best interests of the company and in no wise to he done in any other interests.” A few days later, in a communication too long to reproduce, Tunison submitted two plans, one for a bond issue, which was impracticable, because the company held its coal lands only by lease, and the other for a transfer of the sales agency to the firm of Hite & Rafetto, who he stated would take over the obligation secured by the trust deed, extend the time of payment, and reduce the interest thereon, and make certain advances of money, etc. As to the results which would be secured he said:
“This plan relieves the directors and Mr. Guthrie of their indorsement upon the §20,000 note, as well as the six §1,000 notes held by the fuel company, and materially reduces the indorsement liability of Mr. Guthrie and the directors. * * ° These sales agents will have absolutely nothing to do with the principal operation of the properties, neither will they undertake to keep the books of your company. They will be merely exclusive sales agents.”
The committee made a contract with Hite & Rafetto, dated October 29, and in a report to, the board, under date of November 3, asked a ratification of its action in that regard. The minutes of the November 10 meeting show that the report was “ordered withdrawn,” and that no vote was taken on the motion to ratify the contract; the chair ruling, that, “as the contract had been executed by the committee appointed to negotiate and close it, ratification by the board was unnecessary.” Under this contract, to which further reference will presently be made, Hite & Rafetto became the “sole and exclusive” sales agent of the company. They gave Tunison, acting for the -committee, the $35,000 agreed to be advanced, of which $20,000 was for an assignment to them of the note for that amount indorsed by the directors and secured by deed of trust, as above stated. Of the $15,000 balance, for which the company was to give them its note, $14,000 was paid to the fuel company in full of its unsecured claim, stated to be $25,628.20 as of September 30, and $1,000 retained by Tunison on account of his services. A contract with the fuel company of about the same date provided for the termination of its agency ánd for the gradual payment of the six $1,000 notes, indorsed by the directors and Guthrie, which that company continued to hold.
Whatever relief the coal company thus obtained proved to be but temporary, for it was adjudicated bankrupt a few months thereafter. In due course Tunison filed a claim for the balance alleged to be due upon a contract to pay him $5,000 for professional services. 'The five appellees, two of them creditors and all of them stockholders of the corporation, filed objections to the claim, but it was allowed in full by the referee. Upon petition for review the court below, by decree of August 6, 1917, reversed the ruling of the referee and directed that the claim be refused. Tunison appeals. In the meantime, owing to the rapid advance of coal prices and the value of coal properties, the trustees were able to pay to creditors the full amount of their claims, and to stockholders a dividend of 44 per cent, on the par value of their shares.
For the purpose of deciding the case thus outlined, it will be assumed that Tunison was duly employed to advise and assist the company in its grave embarrassment, that nothing appears which made it improper for him to act as its attorney, that his written proposal to the board of directors and their acceptance of the same by resolution constituted a valid contract, and that he is not shown to have acted other
In important particulars his promises were not fulfilled. For exam - pie, in his communication of October 27 be repeated the assurance that the plan therein proposed would restore to the company the actual management of its plant, then in the hands of the fuel company, and this appears to have been strongly desired by the directors. But the contract two days later with Hite & Rafetto expressly bound the company to employ a superintendent and manager to be approved by them, which in effect put the whole mining operations under their control. And so it quickly turned out. The manager appointed by the board on the 10th of November, Cochrane voting in the negative, was virtually forced to resign after a service oí 11 days, because he was said to be unsatisfactory to Hite & Rafetto, and Cochrane thereupon appointed another manager, who presumably met with their approval. It would seem that the committee had no power to make such a contract, since its only authority was to “close a contract with sales agent as proposed in the communication of B. C. Tunison,” and manifestly that communication, with reference to the provision here considered, was of quite the opposite* import. But, even if the contract actually made, though unratified, be binding on the company, which we decline to hold, the fact remains that in this material respect Tunison failed to meet the conditions of his employment.
It was also- definitely stated in his proposal, as quoted above, that the plan presented by him would relieve the directors from their liability as indorsers on the notes of the fuel company; and this was confirmed by his own testimony before the referee, as follows:
“Q. In your letter submitted, your proposition in writing, did you not stale that the plan you bad to propose would release the indorsers on the i?20.000 note? A. Yes, sir; I did. Q. And on the six i(?l,000 notes? A. Yes, sir. Q. And that it would materially reduce the liability oí' Mr. Guthrie and the other directors? A. I did.”
But this promise, to so describe it, was in no part kept. Hite & Ra-fetto simply took over the $20,000 note, with all the security therefor which the fuel company held, and there was no discharge or reduction of any indorser’s liability.
Without further recital, it is enough to say that all Tunison did, so far as we can see, amounted to little more than a transfer of the sales-
Affirmed.
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Reference
- Full Case Name
- TUNISON v. GUTHRIE In re DAKOTA COAL & COKE CO.
- Status
- Published