268 F. 433 | 6th Cir. | 1920
This is an appeal from a decree of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky in an equity-cause in which Walton Sudduth was the plaintiff and the Storm King Coal Company, J. W. Nolan, L. E. Yoder, A. M. Clark, and the First National Bank of Hazard were the defendants. It appears from the evidence that the Storm King Coal Company is a corporation, that J. W. Nolan is its president, L. E. Yoder its vice president and general manager, and A. M. Clark its secretary; that these
“TMs contract, made and entered into by and between Storm King Coal Company, a Kentucky corporation, of the first part, and Walton Sudduth, of the second part, witnosseth: “Whereas, first party is incorporated with a capital stock of fifty thousand dollars; and whereas, said company is now the owner of a certain lease of coal land in Perry county. Kentucky, and has made certain improvements on said lease; and whereas, said company is indebted in the sum of approximately eighteen thousand dollars:
“Now’, in consideration of one hundred dollars, cash in -ha ¡id paid to first party by second party, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and other consideration as hereinafter .sttpula ted, first party hereby agrees to sell, transfer, and assign, and cause to be sold, transferred, and assigned, all of the shares of the capital stock of said corporation, viz. fifty thousand dollars, and to deliver possession of said lease and improvements of the said Storm King Coal Company free from all liens and incumbrances on May 1. 11)18, and from all claims of damages due to any act of first party prior to May 1. 1018. Second party agrees to pay therefor the sum of forty-five thousand dollars — eight thousand nine hundred dollars in cash, on taking possession of said lease, mine improvements, and said stock properly transferred; nine thousand within six months; and nine thousand within twelve months thereafter. It is agreed that second party also assumes the indebtedness of first party to the extent of eighteen thousand dollars, which sum is to be paid to the debtors of first party as same become due. Second party shall < secute his notes to first party for the deferred payment herein, with 6 per cent, interest: from date thereof. It is understood by the parties hereto that there is an option outstanding on said property, which expires May 10, 1918, and it is agreed that said option be assigned to the second party by first party, and in event the same is exercised by the grantees therein within said time second party shall be entitled to the benefit accruing by reason of same.
“Witness our hands April 23, 1918.
“Storm King Coal Company,
“By L. IB. Yoder, Vice President & G. M.
“Attest: A. M. Clark, Secretary.
“Walton Sudduth.
“Witness: T. L. Hudgins.”
At the time this contract was executed, Sudduth gave his check payable to the Storm King Coal Company for $100. This check was deposited in the Perry County State Bank at Hazard, Ky., to the credit of the payee, and was in the due course of business paid by the Commercial Bank of Bluefield, W. Va., upon which it was drawn. On the 1st day of May, 1918, the persons holding the option mentioned in the foregoing contract elected to take the property at the price named therein, to wit, $75,000; but it appears that, the coal company had agreed to' pay $10,000 for negotiating this sale. It further appears that Sudduth was orally advised of that fact at the time the contract was signed, and agreed to that arrangement.
On the 1st day of May, Sudduth came to Hazard prepared to make the cash payment and take over this property. On account of missing his train connection at Shelby Junction, he did not reach Hazard until about 6:30 or 7 o’clock on the evening of that day; but he sent a telegram from Ashland to the Storm King Coal Company, advising that he had missed connections at Shelby, but would arrive at Hazard
All parties, however, were willing to have the sale consummated to the first option holder, and in order to facilitate this deal and permit it to go through without friction, a trust agreement was entered into between Sudduth, on the one part, and Nolan, Yoder, and Clark, on the other, that $20,000 of this purchase price, in United States government Second Liberty Loan bonds, should be deposited in the First National Bank of Hazard, Ky., to be held by that bank in trust for the benefit of whichever of these respective claimants might later he adjudged the owner by decree of any court of competent jurisdiction. The First National Bank of Hazard, Ky., has no other or further interest in this controversy, but merely holds these bonds subject to the order of the court.
Sudduth then brought this action in equity in the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Kentucky, making the Storm King Coal Company, Nolan, Yoder, Clark, and the First National Bank of Hazard, Ky., defendants, and praying for a decree against the Storm King Coal Company for the sum of $20,000, with interest from the 1st day of May, 1918, and costs of suit, for a decree against’the First National Bank of Hazard, Ky., directing that bank to deliver to him the bonds held by it under the trust agreement, and for such other and further equitable relief as the court might find to be just and proper. His cause of action is based upon the contract of April 23, 1918.
The defendants, other than the First National Bank of Hazard, filed an answer, denying that Sudduth had performed or attempted performance of his part of the contract, and alleging that the contract never was valid, binding, or enforceable, because it is unilateral in its nature, and does not contain any stipulation on the part of Sudduth to perform any act whatever; that by mutual mistake of the parties thereto at the time, and of the draftsman who prepared the same, the price named therein is $45,000, when it should have been $63,000; that the contract is not signed by either of the individual defendants, Nolan, Yoder, or Clark, and is therefore not a valid or binding contract against either of them; that the Storm King Coal Company was not then or at any other time authorized to sell or transfer the stock held by these defendants; that the plaintiff was intending and attempting to purchase nothing else than all the shares of capital stock and. the assets of said defendant coal company, and neither the coal company, Yoder, or CÍark were authorized or empowered to sell or transfer any share of the capital stock in said corporation then held and owned by the defendant J. W. Nolan, who at that time owned in his own right one-third of the issued and outstanding shares of the capital stock of this company; that the Storm King Coal Company was the owner of
Upon the issue so joined, the District Court found that by mutual mistake of the parties the written contract did not embody the oral contract, and allowed recovery in favor of Sudduth for the $100, without interest, paid by him upon this contract, and ordered and directed the First National Bank of Hazard, immediately after the expiration of 30 days from the date of the decree, to deliver the bonds deposited with it to the defendants Nolan, Yoder, and Clark, and dismissed the plaintiff’s bill.
This contract, or a copy of it, remained in the possession of Yoder from its date until May 1st, and yet no objection was made by him, nor was notice given to Sudduth that it did not fairly state the agreement of the parties. Yoder testifies that “up here on the ground after a few days” he did make such a statement to Sudduth. Later he testified that it. was Sudduth’s counsel he notified the first day he came to Hazard, but he does not inform the court when he discovered that mistake. Certainly it was not between the time that Sudduth reached Hazard and the time of the signing of the trust agreement. Mr. Woot-on, a member of the bar of Hazard, Ky., was present at these early conferences, and particularly the conferences about May 3d between Sudduth and his counsel and these defendants, and he heard no statement from any one in reference to a mistake in the contract. Mr. Clark does not testify that he had at any time called Sudduth’s attention to any mistake in this contract, or that he heard Yoder do so, until some time after the trust agreement was made. Mr. Nolan, when he told Sudduth that Yoder and Clark had no authority to act for him, and that the Storm King'Coal Company had no authority to transfer this lease without the consent of the owner of the fee, did not mention anything about mistake. Evidently up to that time Yoder had not communicated that information to him.
¡ 5] The claim is made in brief of counsel for appellees, and is also discussed at considerable length in the opinion of the trial court, that Sudduth was buying only the stock of this corporation that had heen issued to Nolan, Yoder, and Clark. It is clear that this was not the intent or purpose of either party to this contract. Paragraph 5 of ap-pellees’ answer expressly avers that Sudduth—
“was intending to and attempting to purchase nothing else than all of the shares of the capital stock and assets of said defendant the Storm King Coal Company.”
This is not only the claim of the appellant, but would seem to be a correct interpretation of this contract, which in terms provides for the transfer and assignment of the capital stock and — ■
“the delivery of the possession of the lease and improvement» of the Storm King Coal Company, free from all lions and incumbrances.”
For this reason we cannot agree with the construction reached by the trial court that the subject-matter of this contract was solely and only the capital stock of the corporation. It is, of course, true that a corporation cannot sell the stock it has issued to its stockholders; but it must be remembered that this was a close corporation, owned entirely by these three men, all of -whom testified that there were very few directors’ meetings, and that the management of the corporate business was all informal. It was no more than a legal entity through the agency of which this property was acquired and these business activities conducted.
The transfer of the stock was merely incident to the sale and transfer of all the property of the corporation. If a corporation disposes of its entire assets, its stock in the hand of its stockholders is worthless, and might just as well be transferred to the purchaser of its property. It is the usual and ordinary method by which the transfer of, not only all the corporate property, but the control of the corporation itself, is accomplished.
In this jiarticular case the final contract with E. E. Hadley provided, just as in the Sudduth contract, not only to deliver possession of the lease and all improvements, but also for the transfer and assignment of all of the capital stock of the Storm King Coal Company. This fully appears from the following provision found in the last paragraph but two of the Hadley contract that—
*440 “This contract, and the said sale and transfer of said property, stock, lease, and equipment, fully consummated, shall not be exceeding fifteen days from date hereof.”
And it is further, provided in the last paragraph but one of this contract that—
"It is understood that the Storm King Coal Company executed to H. H. Cupler an option to purchase the said property and stock of the said Storm King Coal Company on April 10, 1918, and that said option expires May 10, 1918.”
It therefore not only appears from these several contracts, and particularly from the construction given the Cupler contract by these defendants themselves, as that construction is expressed in. the last paragraph but one of the Hadley contract, that they not only contemplated in all of these contracts the sale of all the property and assets of the corporation, as well as the transfer of stock to the purchaser, but that they in fact did accomplish the transfer and sale to Hadley of all corporate property and all stock of the corporation in this identical manner.
If this contract contemplated merely a transfer of stock in the corporation, then provision as to payment of debts would have been wholly unnecessary, for the corporate property would still remain subject to the payment of these debts. That these provisions are made in this contract to pay all the outstanding debts of the corporation is some evidence, at least, that the purpose and intent of the contracting parties was that all of the property of the corporation should be transferred to Sudduth. The fact that this contract was made in the name of the Storm King Coal Company is almost conclusive proof that the main object and purpose of that contract was the purchase and sale of the corporate property of that corporation. It is hardly conceivable that men experienced in business affairs, intending either to buy or sell only the shares of-the capital stock held by the separate stockholders, should attempt to accomplish that purpose by a contract in the name of the corporation itself. Certainly the lawyer who wrote the contract would not be guilty of such a monumental folly.
Yoder and Clark made many option contracts for the sale of this property. They made the option contract with Cupler; under which Hadley & Co. finally purchased this property. Yoder insisted he had authority from Dr. Nolan ¡to sell this property. Cupler demanded to be shown this authority, and Yoder produced a letter from Dr. Nolan authorizing Yoder to act for Nolan. There was no price fixed in this letter. Both Nolan and Cupler testified that Nolan signed this option contract; but later Cupler was recalled to the stand, and the original contract was exhibited to Ijim, which he identified as the original by the fact that he had glued a corner down as he was going to New York, because it kept coming apart, and from the paper itself it appeared that it was not signed by Dr. Nolan, but only by Yoder, vice president, and A. M. Clark, secretary. Dater, however, when Cupler transferred this contract to Hadley, Dr. Nolan signed his name as a witness to the signature of Cupler to the transfer. This no doubt explains the former testimony of Cupler, and the testimony of Nolan, that Nolan had signed the original contract.
The judgment of the District Court is reversed, and cause remanded, with directions to the court to enter judgment for the appellant, and directing the First National Bank of Hazard, Ky., to turn over and deliver to Sudduth the bonds held by it under the trust contract, and also judgment for $100 against the defendants for the advance payment made by Sudduth upon the purchase price of this property, together with costs of suit.