Barksdale v. Finney
Barksdale v. Finney
Opinion of the Court
The decree from which this appeal has been taken, subjected the Chesterfield coal and iron mining company to a heavy recovery on account of a debt alleged to be due to the appellees from the Black Heath company of colliers. The first question,
On the 16th of December 1840 the widow of William Finney, in her own right, and as the next friend of her infant children, filed their bill against John Heth, Beverly Heth, and the Black Heath company of colliers, setting forth their claims as cestuis que trust under a deed of marriage settlement and other deeds touching the trust property, under which John Heth had become sole surviving trustee; and complaining of a sale made by John Heth in January 1837 of the whole trust property; which, they alleged in the bill, was made by John Heth without authority, and directly against the plain provisions of the deeds under which he was acting as trustee; and were a clear and distinct breach of trust committed by him, and by all ' who participated with him in the sale: and that at the sale of the trust property made by John Heth as trustee, he as the manager of the business of the Black Heath company of colliers, purchased for the company slaves, and perhaps other property, to the amount of eleven thousand three hundred and forty-five dollars. The bill further averred that at the said sale, Beverly Heth purchased land and slaves to the amount of twenty-five thousand one hundred and three dollar's and six cents. It made John Heth, Beverly Heth and the Black Heath company of colliers defendants, and prayed for a decree that said purchasers should pay the. principal and interest due from them respectively, and that John Heth should pay any balance appearing to be due from him, and for general relief.
To this bill John Heth filed his answer, admitting
On the 30th of March 1841 an interlocutory decree was rendered, which recites, “ that the cause came on to be heard upon the bill, the answer of the defendant John Heth, with the replication thereto, the bill taken for confessed against the other defendants, more than two months having elapsed since the filing of the plaintiffs’ bill and the return of the subpoenas, with service acknowledged by the other defendants, and they still failing to appear and answer, and sundry exhibits.” The decree then directs accounts to be taken in relation to the trust estate, and amongst them an account showing the exact amount due from the Black Heath company and from Beverly Heth to John Heth as trustee, or to the trust fund. The commissioner, in the report made out in obedience to this decree, states
On this decree an execution was issued against John Heth; the sum of four hundred and thirteen dollars and thirty-six cents made as of the 7th of February 1841; and a return of no effects found to make the balance.
Having thus made an unsuccessful effort to collect
The bill also details the circumstances attending the sale of the land and other trust property to Beverly Heth; alleges a conveyance by Beverly Heth of the land and slaves pending the suit, to a trustee to secure certain creditors; and prays that the property be re-conveyed to the appellees, or sold, and the proceeds applied to the payment of the debt due to them from John Heth.
On the 1st of November 1842 the cause again came on to be heard on that branch of the case affecting Beverly Heth’s purchases; and the court decreed that John Heth committed a breach of trust in the sale of the trust property to Beverly Heth, in which the latter actively concurred; that the other defendants claiming under him were pendente lite purchasers, and they with their vendor should be regarded as trustees of the property for the appellees; and directed a reconveyance thereof to a trustee for their use. And an enquiry was directed to ascertain what portion of the property held by the trustees of Beverly Heth was the property sold to him by John Heth as trust property ; and an account of hires of the personal property, and of rents, profits and permanent improvements was directed.
From this decree an appeal was taken to this court by two of the creditors of Beverly Heth. This appeal brought up the whole case for revision. The correctness of the decree of the 27th of October 1841 against John Heth for the whole amount of the trust
It was assigned as one of the errors committed in the cause, that to repudiate the sales made by the trustee was incompatible with the course pursued, as the appellees had sought to enforce them by every means in their power; had taken a decree against the trustee for the balance due, and in part enforced it. On the 12th of May 1845, this court affirmed the decree.
After this affirmance, further proceedings took place in the court below in relation to the branch of the case now under consideration j and a report was made by the commissioner ascertaining the amount of the debt due from the Black Heath company on account of the slaves purchased at the sale of the trust property. In this account the company receives credit for several sums paid as interest by the company on this debt; and the deposition of John Farrar proves that those charges against the appellees were taken from the books of the company. He also furnishes a list of the slaves purchased for the company, and their prices: and in his answer to the amended bill, he states that a short time after the trust sale the president of the company directed him as clerk fo charge against the company on its books a note given to John Heth for the amount of the company’s purchase at the sale of the trust estate; which entry he made in the presence of the president.
• From this reference to the pleadings and proofs in the cause, there can be no question as to the existence of the debt at one time. It is charged in the original
The original existence of the debt does not appear to have been seriously controverted; and accordingly, in the special statement made out at the instance of the Chesterfield company, the Black Heath company is charged with the amount given for the property purchased at the trust sale.
But it is argued, that the appellees have elected to disaffirm the sale and pursue the property; that the purchase was merely void, and the slaves remained their property. It is true that John Heth having been the agent for the Black Heath company in making the purchase, as well as the trustee who sold, the company could not deny notice; nor have they done so. That it was a gross violation of duty and breach of trust in the trustee, to turn over the trust property to the company of which he was principal stockholder and the manager, without securing and investing the price, has not been controverted; and the cestuis que trust had a right to set aside the sale, and follow the property, if it could be traced, in the hands of the company, or any others, claiming it with notice of the breach of trust.
The question raised by this objection has already been adjudicated in this cause. Although the court gave a personal decree against the trustee for the whole amount for which he sold the trust property, it affirmed the right of the appellees to pursue the purchasers as to any of the subjects mentioned in the bill, if the decree against the trustee proved unavailing;
And where trust moneys are followed into land, the cestui que trust may either take the land for the whole, or may have a decree for a sale; and if there be a deficiency, then prove on the estate of the trustee. Hill 522, n. 1. It is true that where property has been
In this case, as all were before the court, and jointly and severally liable, the decree against the trustee was for their benefit; for if the fund could have been collected and invested according to the stipulations of the deed of trust, they would have been relieved, as it was not alleged that the prices bid for the property were too low; and the trustee was empowered from time to time to vest any part of the property in real estate or other property. The breach of trust resulted from his failure to collect the price, and in permitting the purchasers to take and convert the trust property to their own purposes, without paying for it, or giving any adequate security for the money. It was therefore proper, in every aspect of the case, that an effort should be made to collect the amount from the trustee before resorting either to the property or the purchasers.
If these views as to the effect of the decree in this case, or of the law as applicable to the facts of the cause, are correct, the court did not err in holding that the existence of the debt due to the appellees by the Black Heath company was proved, and that they had not lost their right to proceed against the company for payment: and, therefore, the first exception taken by
The second and third exceptions were sustained, and the credits allowed.
The prices of the two slaves surrendered to the appellees voluntarily by R. Grwathmey and Lewis Rogers, have been applied to the principal of the debt, the most favorable mode of applying the credit for the appellants. And having had the use of the slaves in a dangerous occupation, whereby one is proved to have been badly injured, a credit for their value, as at the time they were returned, is as much as they could claim.
Nor is there any just pretension for a claim to a credit for the whole amount of Beverly Heth’s purchases. They amounted to twenty-five thousand one hundred and three dollars and six cents. The price of the land was fifteen thousand dollars, leaving upwards of ten thousand dollars for slaves and other property. Of the slaves, it would seem six were recovered. For the land which was decreed to be restored and the price of the slaves John Heth would be entitled to a credit; but it is manifest the six slaves restored did not sell for the ten thousand dollars; and that sum, with the interest, would far exceed the value of the slaves returned, leaving Beverly Heth largely indebted to the trust fund. The» assumption that a credit should be given for the whole amount of Beverly Heth’s purchases, because by pursuing the property the sale must be considered as disaffirmed, and the appellees be restricted to the property alone, has already been adverted to. So far as the trust property could be reached, they were entitled to pursue it, without thereby losing their remedy against the fraudulent alienee for the price of so much as was converted to his own use, and could not be restored in specie. Nor does the failure
If then the Black Heath company was alone sued, the appellees would have a right to a recovery against it for the amount of their claim, as ascertained by the decree, and to satisfaction out of the corporate property. And it remains to enquire whether, under the facts appearing in this record, they can charge this debt on the Chesterfield coal and iron mining company, either as holding the property of the Black Heath company, or as its successor liable for its debts at least to the extent of the property received from it.
The Black Heath company of colliers was incorporated by an act passed February 20th, 1833. The preamble, after reciting that B. Randolph, John Heth and Beverly Heth represented to the general assembly that they were owners of certain lands in Chesterfield county, on which there are valuable mines of coal, of a coal yard, and certain personal property, consisting of slaves, &c., and that they were desirous of carrying on their business under the management of a corporate body, proceeded to enact that the capital stock, consisting of the real and personal property aforesaid, should be divided into three thousand shares,' and that as soon as one thousand five hundred shares shall have been sold on the joint account of the proprietors, and by them duly conveyed by deeds recorded in said county, then that the title that the three
On the 29th of April 1840 a deed was executed between John Heth of the first part, Stevenson and5 Broekenbrough of the second part, and various individuals residing in England, of the third part;- which;* after reciting the charter of the Black Heath company as aforesaid, describing its landed property, reciting that two thousand six hundred- and eighteen' shares of the stock were then vested- in' John Heth,
.'On the 15th of December 1840, Bess. Acts 148, an' act was passed to incorporate the Chesterfield coal and 1 iron mining, company, as.provided for in the deed be-. fore referred to, and an agreement of the same date; with the.deed between Jo-bn Heth and the parties of the third part,' named in said deed. By this, act the: company thereby incorporated was invested with full ppwer and-authority in their corporate capacity to take; and receive: valid conveyances and transfers of all the:property, and stock owned or occupied by the Black; Heath company^ setting forth that the said stock con-; sisted. of. three! thousand shares, and describing the.'
After the passage of this act another deed, dated the 3d of August 1841, was entered into' between John Peth and the persons constituting the' ’company, bi^ which certain differences between them were compromised, the terms of the agreement and. the deed to "Stevenson and Brockenbrough somewhat modified, and provision made for the indemnity of the Chesterfield ■coal and iron mining company against incumbranchs and defects of title ia the property agreed to be coniveyed by John Heth. This deed, however, makes ño specific conveyance of any of the property. ¿
-. In the answer put in by A. F. D. Gifford, be states he is the sole general agent of the Chesterfield company,; §nd he exhibits the deed, the articles of agreement, and .the articles of agreement and compromise before mentioned, to show how the company acquired their pror perty. He avers, that as such agent he -holds certain conveyances of real estate, all recorded in Chesterfield county, intended in part to carry into effect the con*tracts made with said John Heth, and which it is not deemed material, to the purposes of this suit to file or describe particularly. The answer further alleges^ $hat all the stock of the Black Heath company was regularly transferred to John Heth, and by him com veyed .to Stevenson and Brockenbrough, the trustees of the company, and afterwards transferred upon the books of the Black Heath company to the Chesterfield company.
. There does not appear, in any part of the record, a conveyance of any real property by the Black Heath company of colliers to the Chesterfield coal and irou mining company. The amended bill averred that John Heth, as an individual, had no legal power or authóí
The proviso of the act of January 10th, 1837, making the stock personal estate, whilst it authorized the gale and conveyance of real estate theretofore created . into stock, declared the law should not be construed to authorize the conveyance of such real estate in any other manner than that prescribed by law for the conveyance or disposition of real estate. Such conveyance must be by deed duly executed in the name of the corporation by its duly authorized agent. In the absence of any such conveyance, the property still belongs to such company or its successor, the transferree of the stock.
Under this aspect of the case, it is unnecessary to consider many of the propositions so elaborately discussed at the bar: such as that,
ft The right of a corporation to dispose of and convey its real estate is commensurate with that of an individual.^’’
That although creditors may subject the corporate property, this right does not give a lien so as to attach to the property in the hands of the bona fide purchaser.
And although creditors may follow the assets in the hands of corporators who have sold out the whole corporate property and fraudulently appropriated the proceeds, yet such fraudulent appropriation would not affect the bona fide purchaser.
These propositions may all be sound; but they do . pot affect the present ease.
If the appellees had procured- a judgment or decree against the Black Heath company of colliers eo nomine» and issued their execution, what would have prevented a levy on the real estate of the company % Once vested in the company, it could be divested only by a conveyance executed by the company. A transfer of all the stock by the old to new stockholders, would
A share in a joint stock company is not strictly speaking a chattel, but bears a greater resemblance to a chose in action. “ If (says C. J. Shaw) a share in a bank is not a chose in action, it is in the nature of a chose in action, and what is more to the purpose, it is personal property.” By bank stock, say the Supreme court of Tennessee, is meant individual interest in the dividends as declared, and a right to a distribution <pro rata of the effects at the expiration of the charter. Angel & Ames Corp. § 560, where the cases are cited.
A corporation may be seized of real property, as well as be possessed of personal property ; but, as has been said by Lord Abinger, “ the interest of each individual shareholder is a share of the net produce of both when brought into one fund.” Bradley v. Holdsworth, 3 Mees. & Welsb. R. 422. And in Humble v. Mitchell, 11 Adol. & Ell. R. 205, 39 Eng. C. L. R. 46, it was held that shares in a joint stock company such as this, are mere choses in action, incapable of delivery, and not within the scope of the statute of frauds requiring certain contracts for the sale of goods, wares und merchandise, to be in writing. It would seem, therefore, to be clear law, that where, as in this case, the stock is declared to be personal estate, and the certificates are made transferable on the books of the corporation, and it is authorized to acquire real estate, such estate is vested in it as a corporation, and not in the individual shareholders; that the certificate of stock is evidence of the right of the owner to his proportion of the profits or dividends, and on the expiration of the charter, to his proportion of the assets remaining after the payment of the debts; and every purchaser of the stock takes it subject to the same liabilities. The transferree occupies the place- — sits in the seat of his predecessor.
It was decided in Rider v. Union Factory, 7 Leigh 154, that as a corporation, without express provision of law, could never hold property, and can only hold it for so long a time as the charter permits, that after the expiration of its charter it can hold no property; and therefore a judgment against it would be fruitless. And 1 Lev. 237, is cited to show, that by the principles of the common law debts of a corporation, either to it or from it, are extinguished by its dissolution. This decision was in 1836. And afterwards, and no doubt
As this law in terms was limited to joint stock com-' panies thereafter incorporated, a grave question might' arise as to the' right of the Chesterfield company to hold any of the property of the Black Heath company, since the time limited for its existence has expired, if the argument of the appellants and their construction of the agreements of the parties and the charter of the Chesterfield company be correct. The property was vested in the Black Heath company. The law. expressly provided for the mode of conveying such property; and no such conveyance is shown.- The: legal title must therefore have continued in the Black Heath company until its existence, as limited by the-charter, expired. No such difficulty arises, by giving the act incorporating the Chesterfield company the' construction contended for by the appellees, as authorizing the latter company, by accepting a transfer of: the stock, to take the place of the former company,to incorporate the former company with itself, and as' its successors to hold its property, with all its rights,' and subject to all its liabilities under the new charter.-
This, it seems to me, is the true construction to be • given to the'acts of these parties, and the charters re-: ferred to. -It conforms with the understanding of the' parties, as manifested by their acts. John Iieth, in-his answer to the original bill filed after the -deed to -
Nor do I think the appellees were under any obligation to convene all the creditors of the Black Heath company. They were asserting their individual claim against their personal debtor. It is not a creditor’s bill calling for a distribution of the assets of an insolvent corporation amongst all entitled to- participate. They occupy, the position of any other creditor of a. corporation seeking satisfaction by judgment and execution against their debtor. The corporate property can alone be charged, and there would be as’ muck reason to require every creditor, the nature of whose claim compels a resort to equity, to convene all the creditors, as to e.xact it from these appellees. They have
But an order was made to convene the creditors. If they failed to appear before the commissioner and prove their debts, the appellees were not in fault.
After the decree establishing the right of the appellees, a petition was offered by William J. Barksdale and others, asking, for the reasons set forth in the petition, that the appellees should be required to amend their bill, and make them defendants. The motion was overruled, and they have united in the petition for an appeal; and the refusal of the court to require them to be made parties, is assigned as- error. The parties have not brought before this court the record of Barksdale v. Heth, referred to in the petition; but that perhaps would not vary the case. The motion of these petitioners seems to be of a somewhat anomalous character. The appellees have proceeded against the Black Heath company, and the Chesterfield company as its successor, to establish a personal debt; and after a decree in their favor, third persons, strangers to the proceeding, and who do not claim to be creditors even of either company, insist upon being made parties, upon the ground, in substance, that they are creditors-of John Heth, who, as they allege, was a creditor of the Chesterfield company, for certain royalties* &c. That if the Chesterfield company is compelled to pay this debt to the appellees, they may insist on deducting the amount so applied from the sum they would otherwise be liable for to John Heth, and so the ability of John Heth to pay the petitioners would be diminished to that extent.
For the same reason, every creditor might insist on his right to intervene between any other creditor and the common debtor. For a recovery and satisfaction of the debt due to one creditor would diminish the means of the common debtor.
I think the decree should be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
Reference
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- Barksdale & als. v. Finney & als.
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