277 P.2d 122 | Okla. | 1954
•This is an action brought by Jack W. McMichael and J. D.- McMichael, partners doing business under the firm name of McMichael Concrete. Company against Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company, Inc., a corporation, Jacobson’s Lifetime Buildings, Inc., a corporation, and Kay Construction Company, a corporation, to recover a bal-, anee due for material alleged to have been sold and delivered to defendant Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company. It is sought to hold the other defendants liable on the theory that under an agreement entered into between Jacobson’s Lifetime Buildings, Inc., and Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company the entire assets of the paving company were to be transferred to the Kay Construction Company and that the building company and Kay Construction Company agreed to assume and pay all the debts and liabilities of the paving company.
Jacobson-Lampkin Company in its separate answer denies that it is indebted to plaintiffs in any amount and denies that the material in question was contracted for or purchased by it from plaintiff and affirmatively pleads that such materials were purchased by Kay Construction Company and that it alone is liable therefor.
The Jacobson’s Lifetime Buildings, Inc., in its answer pleads substantially the same defense. The defendant Kay Construction Company did not answer but defaulted.
A jury was waived by all parties and the case was tried to the court resulting in a judgment in favor of plaintiffs against defendant Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company and discharging all other defendants. Defendant paving company appeals and relies for reversal on the ground that there is no evidence to support the judgment as against it.
The record discloses that the Jacobson-Lampkin Paving Company was organized about one year prior to the time suit was brought and is engaged in the paving'biisiness. Its main activities were confined to
The property covered by the mortgage above referred to was sold at foreclosure sale on July 12, 1952. The record does not show who the purchaser was at that sale nor the price for which the property was sold.
The only evidence offered by plaintiffs to establish their case consists of the evidence of Mrs. Martha Giles. She testified in substance: She was bookkeeper and credit manager for plaintiffs. She has charge of the accounts receivable. The books of the company show that the paving company opened an account with plaintiffs sometime in July 1951 (the exhibit introduced in evidence shows the exact date to be July 12, 1951). She did not know by whom the account was opened or who contracted for the purchase of the material; whether the material in question was ordered by letter or by personal contact at the office or by telephone. The entry in the books shows that the account was opened by the paving company. The books were made up from signed delivery tickets returned to the office. The tickets showed that the various materials appearing in the invoice which were delivered under these tickets were charged to the paving company. She did not make up the delivery tickets. She did not take the orders for the material but they were taken by some other employee of the office and she did not know by what authority the materials contained in the delivery tickets were charged to the paving company. She further testified that prior to July 12, 1951, the paving company had carried no account with plaintiffs and had transacted no business with them.
W. C. McKnight testified that prior to July 12, 1951, he was an employee of the paving company as its manager; that he was thereafter employed by the Kay Construction Company and is now manager of that company. On the evening of July 11, 1951, Mr. Lampkin called him by telephone and advised him that the Kay Construction Company had taken over the assets of the paving company and that he was now working for that company. On the morning of July 12, under directions from Mr. Lam-pkin he called the office of plaintiffs by telephone and told the person with whom he was talking that he was working for the Kay Construction Company; that the
I. A. Jacobson, president of the paving company, likewise so testified and further testified that immediately after the assets of the paving company were transferred to the Kay Construction Company he notified all persons with whom the company had been dealing of this transfer and advised them to charge no further materials for use in paving the streets in these areas to the paving company. He further testified that after he ascertained that plaintiffs had been charging certain items to the paving company he wrote a letter to the plaintiffs bearing date of August 18, 1951, advising them that on July 12, 1951, the Kay Construction Company purchased all the assets of the paving company, and requested plaintiffs to mail all invoices for materials delivered for use in connection with the Ranch Acres project to the Kay Construction Company.
The record shows that after having received this letter plaintiffs changed the entry in the books to show that all materials delivered and sold subsequent to July 17, 1951, were charged to Kay Construction Company and the paving company. A bill was thereafter presented to Kay Construction Company showing the balance of the amount due up to date and payment was demanded. The Kay Construction Company was not then able to pay the bill and asked for an extension of time. The extension was granted but at the end of that time a new bill was presented to that company and it still was unable to pay. There was then due and owing plaintiffs the sum of $1,852.22, for material delivered to Ranch Acres. The evidence further shows that the attorney for plaintiffs then wrote a letter to Kay Construction Company advising it that unless the bill was paid immediately a materialmen’s lien would be filed to secure the payment of the account.
The building company was interested in developing the Ranch Acres project. It had constructed a number of dwelling houses on that area. It was advised that plaintiffs were about to file a lien against the land lying within that area to secure the payment of the bill. I. A. Jacobson, president of the company, then called plaintiffs by telephone and told them that if they would agree not to file the lien for a period of 30 days and the Kay Construction Company failed to pay the bill in that time the building company would pay the bill. He then further told plaintiffs that the building company could not afford to have a materialmen’s lien filed against the land in that area and he thereafter wrote a letter as president of the building company confirming the conversation over the telephone and in writing agreed to pay the bill in the event the Kay Construction Company failed to do so. Plaintiffs however did not agree to wait 30 days to file the lien but filed it immediately. The building company then paid the bill and account in full as it agreed to do and the lien was discharged.
The only issue here involved is as to whether defendant paving company is liable for the material delivered by plaintiffs between July 12 and July 17, 1951. We do not think the evidence is sufficient to establish liability against this company. The burden of proof was certainly upon plaintiffs to show that the paving company had in some manner contracted with them for the purchase of the material in question before it would be entitled to judgment against it. In our opinion plaintiffs have failed to establish that any such contract had ever been entered into between the paving company and plaintiffs.
Plaintiffs rely solely upon the signed delivery tickets above mentioned to establish their case against the paving company. Some of these tickets were signed by W. C. McKnight, others by G. I. Deramus.
It is contended by plaintiffs that the paving company and the construction company are owned by the same persons and •constitute one and the same' company and that one of these corporations ordered thé •concrete in question from plaintiffs upon which there is due the sum of $522 and both companies are liable therefor and seek to invoke the following principle:
“Where two corporations are owned by the same parties and the assets of one corporation are sold to the other both corporations are liable for the debts of the first corporation.”
Plaintiffs are in error in asserting that the paving company and Kay Construction Company are owned by the same persons. I. A. Jacobson, one of the principal stockholders in the paving company owns no stock or has no interest whatever in Kay Construction Company nor does s A. M. Covington own any stock in that company. Ben Lampkin who was one of the main stockholders in the paving company was responsible for the organization of Kay Construction Company and is the main stockholder in that company but no other stockholder of the Kay Construction Company owns any stock in that company.- The evidence shows immediately after the sale of the assets of the paving company to the Kay Construction Company, Ben Lampkin resigned as a member of the board of directors of the paving company and-sold his stock in that company to a man by the name of Evans and no longer has any interest whatever in, the paving company. The name of the paving company was then changed to Jacobson Paving Company. We think it quite clear from the evidence that these two corporations are separáte and distinct corporations. The contention that they are one and the same corporation cannot be sustained.
The principle of law relied upon by plaintiffs is well established, Oklahoma Title Co. v. Burrus, 172 Okl. 94, 44 P.2d 852; S. & J. Supply Co. v. Warren, 191 Okl. 683, 133 P.2d 201, but is not applicable under the evidence in this case.
The evidence is undisputed that the paving company had never transacted any business with plaintiffs and was not indebted to them at the time the assets of the paving company were transferred to the Kay Construction Company nor does the evidence show that it was then indebted to any other person'.' Since plaintiffs were not creditors of the paving company at the time the Kay Construction Company acquired its assets they could in no manner have been defrauded thereby and may not therefore complain. First State Bank of Mangum v. Lock, 113 Okl. 30, 237 P. 606.
The issue here involved is not as to whether either or both of the corporations above named might have been held liable for debts existing against the paving company at the time it transferred its assets to the Kay Construction Company since under. the evidence no such debts then existed. The real issue here involved is as to, whether the paving company is liable for material sold and delivered subsequent to the time the Kay Construction Company acquired such 'assets. As above pointed out plaintiffs failed to offer any evidence tending to establish that the paving company
What is above said disposes of all other questions discussed by plaintiffs.
Judgment reversed for a new trial.