128 Ky. 437 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1908
Reversing
This is the second' appeal of this case to this court. The first opinion is to he found in 29 Ky. Law Rep. 322, 93 S. W. 14, 5 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1072. The former appeal was from a judgment of the trial court sustaining a general demurrer to the petition and dismissing it, upon the plaintiffs (appellants) declining to amend. This judgment was' reversed, the opinion holding that the petition stated a good cause of action; and the case was sent back to the circuit court, Vith directions to overrule the demurrer, and for proceedings consistent with the opinion. It is hardly necessary to say that whatever principles of law were settled on the former appeal are now the law of this case,'and not open to reargument. The appellants, Sanders and Walker, were, with seven other persons (among whom was the appellee William Herndon), sureties for the Lancaster Oil Company upon a note for $5,000, executed to the National Bank of Lancaster, Ky. When the. note fell due it was not paid, and the hank brought suit on it against the principal and all the sureties, and obtained judgment against them for the sum of $5,000, with accrued interest and costs. In order to prevent an execution which isssued on this judgment from being levied on their property the appellants paid it off in full to the bank, and took an assignment of it to themselves, and then had an execution issued against all of the other sureties,, which was returned “no property found” by the-sheriff into whose hands it came for execution. Thereupon the appellants obtained a copy of the execution and return of the sheriff, and instituted this equit
We are inclined to think the appellants failed to establish, by a -preponderance of the evidence,' that they were the sureties of Herndon, and that the court correctly so adjudged; but it does not follow that’ the petition should have been dismissed, because, on the facts stated in the pleadings and not disputed by either party, the appellants were, at 'least, the co-sureties of appellee Herndon, and1 they having paid
The question which arises from the facts as above stated is, •’What 'are the relations of the parties to this transaction? Are they to be treated as shareholders in a completed organization, or are they simply partners’in a disastrous oil speculation? It is clear that' the original organization of the corporation with $100 capital stock was a mere tentative step in the organization of the corporation which was really contemplated, and was to be organized thereafter. It would be absurd for a corporation to be organized with only $100 capital stock to engage in the business of buying lands and leases, boring wells, and constructing pipe lines; and, although these large powers were given by the words used in the articles of incorporation as they were originally prepared, it requires no argument to show that the parties were only tentatively organizing, and that, if they started into the oil business’ at all thereafter, the articles of incorporation were to be amended and the capital stock increased so as to make the venture, at least, feasible. The evidence shows that there was an oil well on the Wages farm called a “gusher,” and it was the presence of this “gusher” which seems to have unduly excited the hopes of the incorporators of the miniature organization, and made them anxious to purchase the farm. Pending the 30 days the testimony shows that another “gusher” was developed oh the same farm, and it is not difficult to understand how the anxiety of the parties to acquire the farm before the option expired was increased by this opportune development. It was no doubt believed that it was inexpedient to wait for the slow process of selling
It seems to us that the facts detailed above show that there was never a valid incorporation at all, and the miniature corporation, the capital stock of which was only $100, ought not to be treated as a completed organization; but the court should pass by the mere form of incorporation and treat the first articles as simply a step in the organization of the real corporation which- was to be afterwards formed. The original corporation was organized merely to have a name and a legal entity in and by which to -commence operations in the oil fields. If anything was done at all beyond the m'eré organization of a corporation in
The judgment, is therefore reversed, with directions that the appellants be allowed to amend their petition and bring the necessary parties before the court, and the case referred to the commissioner, so that the partnership affairs may be fully settled and adjusted, and for such other procedure as may be necessary and not inconsistent with this opinion.