108 Ky. 447 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1900
Opinion op the court bx
Reversing.
The plaintiffs (appellees here), John H. Barret, B. G. Witt, and the Market National Bank of Boston, were creditors of the defendant, C. G. Perkins. By assignment from Perkins, Barret and Witt held certificate No. 6, for forty shares of the capital stock of the Ohio River Line Steamboat Company, as collateral security to indemnify them against loss as co-securities with Perkins upon a note due by the Henderson Buggy Company to one G. W. Campbell, for $3,333.33, dated.April 25, 1899, and due in one year after date, while the Market National Bank held a similar certificate for 100 shares of the' capital stock of the same corporation, which was pledged by Perkins as • collateral security to secure the payment of a judgment rendered against him in favor of plaintiff in the circuit court of the United States for the district
The defendant, Perkins, for answer to the petition of Barret and Witt, says that he was only a surety on the note to Campbell; that the note was due on the 25th day of April, 1899, and that Campbell’s cause of action accrued on that day; that more than seven years had elapsed from the maturity of that note to the filing of this suit; and he pleads and relies upon the statute of limitation as a defense thereto.
’The Farmers’ Bank of Kentucky in its answer controverts the material allegations of the petition which are inconsistent with its right to subject the property, and avers that on the 4th day of February, 1895, the defendant, the' Ohio River Line Steamboat Gompany, for value received, executed and delivered to it its two promissory note's (one for $28,100, and the other for $4,900), due four
The pleadings being made up, on final trial the chancellor set aside the judgment of the Farmers’ Bank against the steamboat company,1 but confirmed the sale of the steamer Jewell thereunder, and decided that the bank was liable as trustee for the money arising from the insurance on the Royal and sale of the Jewell, subject to credits of $2,700 and $4,900, amounting in the aggregate to $7,600, which were found to be the debts of the Ohio River Line Steamboat Company; held that the balance of the $23,100 note was the individual debt of C. G-. Perkins, and to that extent the note' and mortgage were void as against the steamboat company; and directed that the overplus of the proceeds arising from the insurance policy and the sale of the Jewell should be paid to the receiver, for the benefit of the stockholders of the steam
The facts out of which this controversy arose, as shown by the bill of exceptions, are as follows: Perkins testifies that he built the steamboat Royal in 1892, and was the sole owner thereof; that subsequently, in 1898, he and J. B. Thompson built the steamboat Jewell in partnership, he being the owner of two-thirds, and Thompson of one-thirdt; that the whole sum of the note for $23,100 was for money borrowed and used by him in the construction of the two boats, except $6,250, which'was borrowed by him for another purpose upon his individual credit; that the whole of the $4,900 note was borrowed for the use of the steamboat company -after its organization; that at the time the money was borrowed from the bank for the construction of the boats the bank knew for what purpose it was being obtained, and looked to the boats, through him, for the repayment thereof; that the steamboat company w-as organized on the 2d day of December, 1893, with a capital stock of $50,000, but that no money was paid therefor by the stockholders; that the two steamboats, by agreement between himself and Thompson, were turned over to the company in payment of the entire stock, and constituted its sole assets; that certificates were issued to himself and wife for 799 shares, to Thompson for 200 shares, and Vanee for one share; that it was understood and agreed by the stockholders at the time of the organization of the company that the indebtedness which had been incurred by him to the bank should be assumed as an indebtedness of the steamboat company, and be paid by it, as this indebtedness was, in the
It seems to us, from the testimony, the attendant facts which surrounded the organization of the steamboat com
The execution of the notes and mortgage by Thompson furnishes very satisfactory evidence that his understanding of the conditions on which the company acquired this property from Perkins was identical with that testified to by Perkins and Starling; and the first question to be determined, therefore, is, did the steamboat company have the right to acquire the interest of Perkins in the boats, 'subject to the condition that it should assume payment of certain definite and specific indebtedness due and owing by him at the time to the bank, and could it execute the mortgage on the boats to secure the payment of such indebtedness?
The common-law powers of private trading corporations of this character are ordinarily the same as those possessed by individuals, and may be employed in the same manner, and, unless restricted by their charters or some positive or clearly implied prohibition of law,
The assumption by the steamboat company of the indebtedness of Perkins, ;who owned three-fourths of its capital stock, to the bank, was in effect a borrowing of that much money from the bank to enable it to consummate the purpose of its creation, which was to acquire and operate the boats in question. And the fact that the bank continued to furnish the new organization the necessary funds to enable it to discharge its outstanding obligations to others and to pay its 'operating expenses is certainly very strong evidence of the existence of the alleged agreement. We think the assumption of this indebtedness was within the powers of the new corporation, especially when it was done with the knowledge and approval of all of its stockholders
It is a well-recognized rule in courts of equity that the doctrine of ultra vires should not be allowed to prevail where it would defeat the ends of justice or work a legal wrong, and certainly it should not be invoked in a case of this sort to defeat the effect of an agreement which is clearly within the scope of the powers of a corporation of this character. It therefore follows that the notes executed to the bank by the steamboat company, and the mortgage made to secure them, are valid and enforceable obligation's in the hands of the bank, and should have been so adjudged.
The judgment is also erroneous on another ground. Ap-pellees are not creditors of the corporation. They only stand, with respect to it, in the attitude of stockholders;
A number of other errors are suggested, but, in view of the conclusions which we have reached on the points discussed, it will be unnecessary to consider them. For the reasons indicated, the judgment is reversed, with instructions to the lower court to enter a judgment dismissing the petition.