46 W. Va. 56 | W. Va. | 1899
In the case of Catherine R. Griffith and others against the Blackwater Boom & Lumber Company and others, brought here on appeal from the circuit court of Tucker County, the three items of controversy are two thousand four hundred and seventy-eight dollars, fourteen thousand seven hundred and forty-nine dollars and thirty-four cents, and ninety-eight thousand six hundred and sixty-one dollars and fifty-six cents, adjudged to Albert Thompson by the decrees of August 24, 1896, and November 27,1896,— the first two items being allowed as preferred liens on the assets of the Blackwater Boom & Lumber Company, under the control of the court, and the third rejected as a preferred lien, but allowed to share joro rata with the other claims decreed. The first is commission allowed for collecting the proceeds of lumber sales, the second is for labor done and expenses incurred on logging contract, and the third is damages for breach of such contract.
The appellee Thompson insisted that as to the last, item, being damages for breach of contract, for which, if he had been allowed to perform the same, he would have had a preferred lien on all the company’s assets by virtue of section 7, chapter 75, Code, such damages should be allowed the same priority. The appellants, on the other hand, insist that neither of the items is entitled to prefer
The facts necessary -to determine the matters involved are’ as follows: The Blackwater Boom & Lumber Company was chartered on June 25, 1887, and began its short-lived career in Tucker County with the following board of directors: L. H. Hamilton, president, and C. R. Griffith, W. A. Griffith, John A. Rowland, and Albert Thompson. It ran along getting in debt and acquiring property, until the 24th of December, 1890, when it entered into a contract with Albert Thompson, then a director, to sell its output for five per centum commission, and collect the proceeds for one per centum, and it also entered into certain stocking contracts in which S. W. and Frank S. Thompson figured at first, but which finally devolved upon Albert Thompson. By these latter contracts all its timber was
In 7 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Edit.) 116, the law is stated to be, “When performance of a contract is dependent upon the continued existence of a given person or thing, and such continued existence was assumed as the basis of the agreement, the death of the person or the destruction of the thing puts an end to the obligation.” The continued existence of the corporation was assumed as the basis of the contract with Albert Thompson, and its involuntary dissolution puts an end to performance on its part, and the contract ceased to be binding, as there was no one left to perform it according to .its terms. People v. Globe Mut. Life Ins. Co., 91 N. Y. 174, (1 Am. & Eng. Corp. Cas. 586, note 59.4). Such, however, is not the law where a solvent corporation is voluntarily dissolved. Bj
“The court, however, may order the receiver to complete unfinished contracts, if by so doing- the interests of all parties will be better conserved, and in such case whatever
The decrees complained of, therefore, must be wholly reversed and annulled, and this cause be remanded to the circuit court, with directions by reference to a commissioner, or, if the parties in interest require it, by the impaneling of a jury, to ascertain a just and reasonable compensation to Albert Thompson for the necessary expenditure of labor and money in the part performance of his stocking contract, deducting therefrom all sums heretofore received by him on account thereof; which balance, if any, so ascertained shall be decreed a lien first in priority on the corporate assets in the hands of the receiver, and to be further proceeded in according to the rules and principles governing courts of equity.
Reversed.