118 Ala. 351 | Ala. | 1897
The original bill was filed by the appellees, judgment creditors of the Cloverdale Land & Development Company, a corporation, on behalf of themselves and all other creditors of the corporation; and the defendants are the corporation, the stockholders thereof, and the holders of the first mortgage bonds issued by the corporation. The allegations of the bill, so far as the assignments of error insisted upon in the argument of counsel for the appellants render it necessary to consider them, are, that the corporation was organized in 1892, purporting to have a capital stock of $350,000, divided into 3,500 shares of the par value of $100 each, which were subscribed for by certain of the defendants, payable in money, with the privilege of discharging the same by a conveyance to the corporation of seven miles of fully equipped electric street railway and 232 acres of land, together with all the rights, privileges and franchises which had been granted to the subscribers by the city of Montgomery. At the time of subscription, the subscribers did not own said land, and
Errors are assigned only by Pickering and Dean, stockholders, and Jones and other claimants. The assignments are numerous, but under the well established rules of this court, we will consider only those which are discussed by counsel in their briefs, treating all others as having been abandoned.
The present case is distinguishable from the cases referred to, in which there was a debt due the corporation, and which the corporation was capable of enforcing by legal remedies. Here, the stock may have been paid for, as the parties agreed, and such payment may be good as against the corporation. — Nicrosi v. Irvine, 102 Ala. 648. But that a court of equity will intervene on the insolvency of a corporation, at the instance of corporate creditors, and compel stockholders paying their subscriptions for stock by the transfer of property at a grossly fictitious value, to pay for the satisfaction of corporate debts, the difference between the par value of the stock and the reasonable value of the property, placing the stockholder in the same relation in which he would have stood if his subscription had been unpaid to
It is alleged that the corporation is insolvent and has no assets which can be reached by any proceedings at law, and while it appears by other allegations that it possesses assets of large value, yet it also appears that these are subject to the lien of the deed of trust executed to secure an issue of $350,000 of bonds, which amount greatly exceeds the value of the assets. Although the equity of redemption of the corporation in much of the property is subject to levy and sale under execution, yet a levy and salfe, it is plain, would be barren and unproductive, yielding nothing for the satisfaction of the judgment, and is in no proper sense an adequate remedy the complainants should be required to pursue. Nor did any remedy by garnishment exist, since the corporation itself, having accepted the property at its fictitious valuation in full payment of the stock, could not maintain action against the bondholders to recover in debt or indebitatus assumpsit, as unpaid balance on the stock, the difference between the par value of the stock and the.real value of the property, and this fact, prior to the act of February 18, 1895, (Acts, 1894-95, p. 881), would prevent any recovery by process of garnishment. — Nicrosi v. Irvine, 102 Ala. 648.
Service of process was had on the Cloverdale L. & D. Company on February 20,1893, and on March 21st said corporation filed a demurrer to the bill, but on March 25th, by leave of court, the demurrer was withdrawn, and counsel for this defendant announced in open court that it did not desire to further plead or demur to the. bill. More than thirty days from the date of the service having expired, a decree pro confesso was thereupon rendered against the company. Subsequently, on April 21, 1893, Pickering, for himself and the Cloverdale L. & D. Company, filed an answer to the bill, and on May 23d, by leave of . court, an amended answer, which was asked to be taken as a cross-bill, was filed, but no service was ever had on the cross-bill. The com
The assignments of error of S. J. Jones and other claimants present the single question, whether .their claims are preferential debts constituting liens on the. property of the Cloverdale L. & D. Co. superior to that of the bondholders. The insistence of counsel is, that these claims are for services rendered by claimants as mechanics, motormen and conductors in the operation of the electric cars, on the street railway of said company, within six months next preceding the appointment of the receiver, and that these facts alone entitle them to priority over the bondholders nnder the decision in Drennen v. Mercantile Trust & Deposit Co., 115 Ala. 592. We have carefully examined all the evidence in the record relating to these claims, but have failed to find any evidence tending to show the character of the services rendered, "or the period during which they were rendered, except in the case of three or four of the claimants, whose testimony shows only that they wrere employed and served as mechanics, motormen or conductors during the six months next preceding the appointment of the receiver. It appears in the record of the proceedings on the reference that “by consent the pleading's in this cause and all affidavits made herein are now placed in evidence.” If by this it was meant that the affidavits by which, the various claims were verified were offered in evidence, these were admissible, and can be considered, only for the purpose of showing a compliance with the order of court, which required all claims to be verified by affidavit. They, are mere ex parte, extra-judicial affidavits, not admissible for the purpose of proving the truth of the facts stated therein. If the character of this proceeding, which is not in any sense a suit by the bondholders claiming relief based upon their bonds, and which does not in any way affect the interest of the bondholders, presents a case for the application of the doctrine of preferential debts, the testimony of none of the claimants authorizes the application of the doctrine. It does not appear from any testimony offered in their behalf, or from any of the testimony referred to in support of their exceptions to the register’s report, to which alone the chancellor is required to look in passing upon the exceptions, that
Let the decree of the city court be affirined.