83 So. 139 | Ala. | 1919
(It must be borne in mind, in order to properly understand this opinion, that, while there is quite an identity in name, the "Burnwell Coal Company" and the "Burnwell Coal Mining Company" are separate and distinct corporations.)
The bill as last amended is in the alternative and seeks: First, to declare the conveyances in question a general assignment under section 4295 of the Code of 1907; or, second, to have the same declared fraudulent and void as to the complainant and existing creditors. The conveyances were not preferences to an existing creditor or creditors so as to operate as a general assignment under said section 4295, but were sales to a purchaser for a new or subsequent consideration, and must have been fraudulent and void as to this complainant in order for him to obtain the relief sought. The fact that the bill sought this alternative relief did not render it bad. Hard v. A. T. S. Bank,
There can be no doubt but what the complainant's claim was an obligation against the Burnwell Coal Company, whether the bill charged that the deceased was killed through its negligence or not. The bill charges, and the proof shows, that he was killed in the mine before the conveyance to the American Company, that suit was brought for the death of the deceased, and eventually resulted in a final judgment against said Burnwell Coal Company. The complainant's claim accrued upon the commission of the tort, and should date therefrom regardless of the time of bringing suit or of obtaining judgment. Gunn v. Hardy,
It is true the judgment was only evidence of a debt or demand as of the time of its rendition, and it was therefore incumbent upon the complainant to establish the existence of his debt or demand when the conveyance was made by the Burnwell Coal Company to the American Company. The bill of complaint charged a judgment under a complaint filed against the Burnwell Coal Company, that the intestate, while an employé of the defendant, was killed in the mine on the 21st day of March, 1911, that complainant subsequently brought suit as administrator of intestate, and recovered a judgment, etc. True, the bill of complaint does not specifically charge that the judgement recovered was for the death of the deceased, and counsel contend that there was no proof of the existence of a demand when the first conveyance was made. There is an agreement admitting the recovery of the judgment as charged in the bill of complaint, and there is also an agreement dispensing with the necessity of setting out the complaint in the action at law upon which the judgment was obtained, and that the counts were under section 3910 of the Code of 1907. The suit being by the plaintiff as administrator of Roy Setzer, and under section 3910, it could have only been for his death under section 3912, and the complainant testified that the said Roy Setzer was killed in the mine March 21, 1911, and which was prior to the conveyance from the Burnwell Coal Company to the American Company on, to wit, May 10th. While the averment and proof are not as specific as they might be, we think the only reasonable inference to be drawn is that the judgment so recovered was for the wrongful death of the intestate by the defendant, Burnwell Coal Company, and which occurred prior to the conveyances in question, thus bringing this case within the influence of the rule declared in Yeend v. Weeks,
The bill also charges, and the proof *397
shows, that the conveyance from the Burnwell Coal Company to the American Company embraced substantially all of the former's property, and left nothing which could be subjected to the plaintiff's demand under an ordinary execution. This being the case, it was incumbent upon the respondent Burnwell Coal Company to set up and prove a bona fide purchase; that is, that it bought the property for a valuable and reasonably adequate consideration, and it then devolved upon the complainant to show notice of its claim at the time of the purchase, or facts which should have put a reasonable man upon inquiry, and, which, if followed up, would have led to a discovery of the complainant's claim, and that he would be hindered, delayed, or defrauded in the collection of same by reason of the said conveyance. We think that the evidence shows that the Burnwell Coal Company was disposing of all of its property, and that the natural, legal result would be to hinder, delay, or defraud all of its existing unsecured creditors, and who were not provided for in the said conveyance; and that the purchasing corporation was chargeable with the information of its president, Gilreath, of the existing claims against the grantor corporation, and, of which the said Gilreath was also president, Gilreath being the alter ego of both corporations, and in fact a seller to himself, the purchasing corporation could not, under any principle of law, be considered an innocent purchaser without notice, upon the theory that such a transaction was a sale in the usual course of trade. Gilreath, as president of the Burnwell Coal Company, was chargeable with notice of the existing debts against the corporation, and when he purchased all of its assets for the American Company, of which he was also president, it could not be an innocent purchaser in the usual course of trade. McEntire v. Rockhill Co.,
Moreover, the consideration recited in the conveyance under which the American Company acquired the property was in part stock in said company. In other words, part of the purchase price was stock in the vendee company to the vendor company, and which necessarily created a benefit or interest in the property so conveyed in behalf of the vendor corporation. Northern Pac. Co. v. Boyd,
The next question arising is, was the Burnwell Coal Mining Company, which bought from the American Company, a bona fide purchaser? The conveyance under which it acquired the property showed that its vendor the American Company had purchased it from the Burnwell Coal Company, and that the conveyance embraced practically all of its property, and the conveyance to it from the American Company also showed the source of the title and referred to the conveyance. These conveyances disclose the fact that Gilreath, who executed the conveyance to the Burnwell Coal Mining Company, was president both of the Burnwell Coal Company and the American Company at the time of the first sale, and so executed the deed or conveyance, and which was referred to in the conveyances under which the Burnwell Mining Company acquired the property, and which disclosed that a part of the consideration for the purchase was stock in the vendee company, and that the sale was therefore invalid as to the creditors of the vendor company; and these facts should have put the last purchasing company upon inquiry as to the existence vel non of creditors against the first vendor. It may be laid down as a safe rule that when one corporation acquires the property of another under conditions as existed in the sale of Burnwell Company to the American Company, whether it be designated as a sale, consolidation, or merger, the purchasing one is not protected against existing creditors of the selling corporation, and when the full transaction is a matter of record and is referred to in the conveyances to a subsequent purchaser, said subpurchaser has notice of all the infirmities of the title of its vendee, and in effect occupies no better position. Marks v. Cowles,
The decree of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
McCLELLAN, SAYRE, and GARDNER, JJ., concur.