46 W. Va. 527 | W. Va. | 1899
Bernard Pratte purchased from. P. 0. Buffington and Garland Buffington sixty-six shares of the stock of the Huntington Ice & Storage Company for the sum of seven thousand five hundred dollars, on account of which he paid in cash six thousand dollars, and made the following note for the residue:
“$1,500.00. Huntington, W. Va., July 26,1893. Twelve months after date I promise to pay to Garland Buf-fington the sum of fifteen hundred dollars, with interest at the rate of- six per cent, per annum, — value received, — with the privilege of paying this note at any time prior to maturity, and with the right of renewal at maturity for twelve months. Bernard Pratte.
“Deferred payment on ice-factory stock.”
At the same time P. 0. Buffington and Garland Buf-fington made and delivered to said Pratte the following guaranty:
“We, the undersigned, P. O. Buffington and Garland Buffington, of Huntington, West Va., in consideration of the sale made this day of sixty-six (66) shares of the stock of the Huntington Ice and Storage Co. to Bernard Pratte, ■of Huntington, West Va., for the sum of seventy-five hundred dollars ($7,500), do hereby guaranty an annual net dividend of (20) twenty per cent, on said $7,500 to the said Pratte, for the term of two years from date hereof. But this guaranty is subject to the following conditions: First, that this said factory shall be operated in a skillful, businesslike manner: and, second, that this said guaranty is not*529 to take effect in case this said factory is not run, whether fro'rn accident or otherwise. And the said guarantors are not to he held responsible for any delay or loss occasioned by breakage on account of any negligence or mismanagement of the said factory.”
Garland afterwards assigned said one thousand five hundred dollar note to said P. 0. Buffington, who in turn assigned the same to F. B. Enslow, who brought an action at law in the circuit court of Cabell County against said Pratte upon said note. On the 9th day of July, 1897, Pratte filed in said court 1ns bill in chancery against said Enslow, P. C. Buffington, and Garland Buffington, alleging the purchase of said sixty-six shares of stock, the payment of the six thousand dollars, and giving the note for the one thousand five hundred dollars, and the making of the. said guaranty by the said Buffingtons to said Pratte as a part of the contract of the purchase of said stock; that said stock was assigned and delivered to plaintiff, and afterwards transferred on the books of said company; that the factory of said ice and storage company was continuously operated in a skillful and businesslike manner for the two years immediately succeeding the 26th day of July, 1893, and said company did not for either of said years earn, declare, or pay a dividend on the said sixty-six shares of stock equal to twenty per cent, for each year on the said sum of seven thousand five hundred dollars, as guaranteed and promised by the said Buffingtons; that, instead of said sixty-six shares earning and paying a net annual dividend of one thousand five hundred dollars, they only earned for the year ending July 26, 1894, eight hundred and twenty-five dollars and five cents, and for the second year, ending July 26, 1895, the sum of five hundred and thirty-six dollars and seventy-two cents. And he made a statement of the accounts between plaintiff and said Buffingtons pursuant to and in accordance with said contract of guaranty, in which he claimed, according to said statement, that there was due him the sum of two hundred and ninety dollars and nine cents, alleging that there was nothing due on said note, either principal or interest, but, on the contrary, there wa.s due from the Buffingtons on their said guaranty to plaintiff, over and above said note, including interest to 14th of February, 1896, the said sum of two hundred and ninety
Defendant’s answer admits the sale of the stock to the plaintiff, the execution of the note and guaranty; denies that the factory was continuously operated in a businesslike and skillful manner since the 26th day of July, 1893, and as to the allegation that the company did not earn, declare, and pay a dividend of twenty per cent for each year on the seven thousand five hundred dollars, as guaranteed, respondents say that matter is alone within the knowledge of the plaintiff and the company, and call for strict proof of what was made, earned, and what dividend declared; that, if the business had been operated in a skillful and
The cause was finally heard on the 1st day of January, 1898, upon the bill and exhibits, the answer of defendants, the report of the commissioner, and exceptions of defendants thereto, and the depositions taken before the commissioner and filed in the cause, when the court was of opinion that the exceptions should be sustained in part, and the report in part, and that, upon the true state of accounts between the parties, there is due from Bernard Pratte to F. B. Enslow, assignee, upon the said note, the sum of four hundred and sixty-three dollars and forty-four cents,afterallowingallcreditsandoffsets to which Pratte is entitled, and on account of the contract of guaranty, and decreed that Pratte pay said sum of four hundred and sixty-three dollars and forty-four cents, with interest from .date of decree, and costs of the suit, in full payment, settlement, and satisfaction of all claims arising out of the transaction set out in the cause, and in full settlement of the note sued on by plaintiff, Enslow, at law, set up in this suit; and it was further decreed that said lawsuit brought by Enslow, assignee, against Pratte, having been settled by said decree, and the rights of the parties therein adjudicated, the same be dismissed at the costs of defendant, Pratte, and awarded execution on said decree. From which decree plaintiff, Pratte, appealed to this Court, assigning as grrpr j;he sustaining of the exceptions to the commissioner’s
It is contended by appellant that the court, on the idea that “dividend” is synonymous with “profit,” and under an erroneous notion as to how the account should be stated, sustained the exceptions in part, and entered the decree complained of. It is true, the guaranty is for “an annual dividend of 20 per cent, on said |7,500 to said Pratte for two years from the date thereof”; but, under the evidence, it matters not what the payments made to Pratte are called, — whether “dividends” or “profits,” — as it is clearly shown that the dividends paid left no surplus profits in the treasury. All the profits were divided at the time of making the several dividends. I have been unable to find how the court arrived at the amount of four hundred and sixty-three dollars and forty-four cents. Taking the commissioner’s report as a basis, where he finds in favor of Pratte the sum of one hundred and seventy-three dollars and eighteen cents, and the contention of defendants, as stated in commissioner’s report, that they should have credit with the item of one thousand three hundred and sixty-eight dollars and ninety-four cents on the credit side of profit and loss account at the time of the sale of the stock to Pratte, and that there should be deducted from the expense account the sum of nine hundred and sixty-one dollars and sixty-seven cents, which is an aggregation of several items of expense incurred before the selling of said stock, also, the sum of one thousand eight hundred and forty-six dollars and eleven cents, which sum was incurred the second year, and' which, if all were allowed as contended by defendants, would make the said Pratte indebted' to1 them in the sum of eight hundred and thirty-three dollars and forty-five cents. It seems to be conceded that Pratte’s stock, of seven thousand five hundred dollars, represents eleven-fortieths of the whole of the company. Should these several items, or any of them, contended for by the defendants,
Modified and ajfirmed.