144 S.E. 410 | W. Va. | 1928
The plaintiff was a coal selling agency. The Smith-Pocahontas Coal Company conducted a coal mining operation in Wyoming county. Its property was sold under a deed of trust and purchased by J. C. Pack. The Poca-Pack Coal Company is Pack's grantee of that property. Pack purchased some stock in 1918 in the Smith-Pocahontas Coal Company (hereinafter usually referred to as "the company" or "the coal company"). In 1919 he became a director, and on April 17, 1924, he was made its president. The financial statement of the company for the year ending December 31, 1923, shows an aggregate investment in permanent improvements, real estate, mine equipment and other personal property, less depreciation, of $304,964.17, and notes and accounts payable amounting to $59,818.28. Included in the last list is the entry of $10,345.91 in favor of plaintiff. In the summary of losses for that year is a demurrage charge of $13,359.91. While the books of the company gave no indication of insolvency at that time, the company was badly in need of money, and its plant was deteriorating for lack of funds. On February 4, 1924, the board of directors resolved that it was necessary in order to rehabilitate the plant and reestablish its credit, to negotiate a loan not exceeding $40,000.00. The loan was not secured, and Pack accepted the presidency upon the condition that bonds of the company to the extent of $75,000.00 be sold for the purpose of financing *612 it. On May 1st, the stockholders authorized the issuance of bonds to that extent, and the execution of a deed of trust on all of the property and assets of the company to secure the payment of the bonds. The proceeds of the bonds were to be applied, according to the language of the stockholders' resolution, as follows: "The said Board of Directors are further fully authorized and empowered to apply the proceeds of a sale of said bonds to the discharge and payment of the existing indebtedness of the Company, so far as necessary, and the residue shall be applied for betterment to the plant and mining operations of the Company and in the conduct of the business as to the Board of Directors may seem to the best interest of the Company." Pack agreed with other directors to undertake the sale of one-half of the bonds, and they assumed a like obligation as to the other half. As there was a short delay in the printing of the bonds Pack advanced the company $40,000.00 on May 1st as a "temporary loan" to satisfy "emergency debts and the payrolls", as he says, taking its note as evidence of the advancement. On May 15th bonds of the par value of $40,000.00 were accepted by Pack in lieu of the note. The other directors failed to sell any of the bonds, and Pack then purchased the balance of the issue (except $1,000.00) and used the proceeds to improve the plant. No bad management is attributable to Pack. But because of the company's inferior coal and a slump in the coal market, it was unable to meet even the interest on the bonds. Its property was sold under the trust deed on July 3, 1925, and purchased by Pack with the bonds he held against it.
The demands of plaintiff arose as follows: In the summer of 1920, J. C. Sullivan, who was then the managing officer of both the plaintiff and the coal company, anticipating a rise in the price of coal, had the coal company ship a quantity of coal to ports in eastern Virginia on consignment to the plaintiff as its agent. The rise in price did not materialize. Before the coal was unloaded, demurrage was charged to the plaintiff by the railroads, which it paid as follows: to the Southern Railway Company, $7,832.00 in October, 1923, and $3,007.00 on April 16, 1924; and to the Virginian Railway Company, $2,210.00 in October, 1923. *613
The entries on the books of the coal company were made during Sullivan's management. On January 31, 1924, a check of the coal company for $3,007.00 signed by Sullivan as treasurer was issued to the plaintiff. Sullivan's connection with the company terminated February 21, 1924. On April 15, 1924, J. R. Hancock, a director of the company, wrote the plaintiff calling attention to several changes in the management of the company, which had occurred since January of that year, stating that the affairs of the company were disorganized, and requesting plaintiff to recall the check and accept a ninety-day note in its place. No reply appears to have been made to this letter. The check was returned to the plaintiff on May 16, 1924, by the bank upon which it was drawn, unpaid, with the explanation of "no funds".
The first demand which plaintiff seems to have made of the coal company for payment of the demurrage was by a letter of June 21, 1924. Pack says he did not receive that letter. On July 22nd, H. W. McNeil, acting for plaintiff, again wrote the company. Pack replied on July 24th, stating that he was not as familiar with the claims of the plaintiff as he would like to be, and requested that the matter rest until he could see McNeil and Sullivan. McNeil had a conference with Pack about the 1st of August, 1924. Pack then requested that he be furnished a copy of the sales contract between the plaintiff and the coal company. On August 13, 1924, McNeil informed Pack that no written contract existed and expressed willingness "to go further" into the matter at Pack's earliest convenience. Whether other conferences were had does not appear, but on October 17, 1924, settlement was requested by plaintiff, which was definitely refused by Pack on November 10, 1924.
This suit was brought in 1926 to recover the demurrage payments. Pack was impleaded on the theory that the proceeds of the bond issue was a trust fund to pay the plaintiff; that he as a managing officer of the coal company was a trustee of that fund; that he diverted and misapplied the fund to the detriment of the plaintiff, and is therefore personally responsible. Poca-Pack Coal Company was made defendant *614 on the theory that as Pack's grantee it also is impressed with that trust. The lower court found in favor of the plaintiff against Pack and the Smith Pocahontas Coal Company.
The only witness as to the shipment of coal and payment of the demurrage is McNeil. He was chief clerk under Sullivan during the joint management of the sales company and the coal company. Appellants say that McNeil's evidence is insufficient, and that there is a presumption against the validity of the demands against the coal company because of plaintiff's failure to use as witnesses Sullivan and J. C. Morrison (who was president of the coal company in 1923).
By reason of his official position, McNeil was fully informed of the affairs of both companies. He made a straight-forward statement of the transaction. He exhibited no prejudice. We perceive no reason to doubt his testimony. It established aprima facie case against the coal company, and not being denied, other witnesses were unnecessary.
The fact that Sullivan was manager of both the shipper and the consignee of the coal company is immaterial, no bad faith being shown on his part, and both corporations being fully cognizant of his dual agency. Lbr. Co. v. Terry,
The main question is whether the proceeds of the bond issue may be regarded as a trust fund for the payment of plaintiff's claims. The so-called "trust fund doctrine" is traceable in the United States to the celebrated case of Wood v. Dummer, 3 Mason 308, 30 Fed. Cas. 435, decided in 1824. It was there held that the capital stock of a corporation is a trust fund in favor of corporate creditors. That decision was followed generally by the earlier cases. Some courts even held that the very assets of a corporation were a trust fund for the benefit of creditors. But the Federal Courts have long since receded from the doctrine. In Hollins v. Brierfield Co.,
Was a special trust to pay plaintiff's debt established by the stockholders' resolution? Specific reference is not made to that debt. The discharge of all the indebtedness of the company was not contemplated, but only payment "so far as necessary". Therefore, the contention of a special trust in favor of plaintiff must fail, unless its demands were included among the debts then necessary to be paid. Referring to the situation existing when he assumed the management of the company, Pack said: "a good many suits were being threatened. I would get telegrams and phone calls almost daily from the time it became known that I was president of the company." The word "necessary" as used in the resolution evidently applied to the debts which had become clamerous and for which suits were threatened. This obvious construction is further supported by the uncontradicted evidence of Pack as to the purpose of the resolution: "There was no thought in the minds of the stockholders or directors to create *616 a trust fund. The whole spirit of the meeting was to find a way to put the mine on a paying basis." There is no evidence that plaintiff threatened suit or was importunate either before the bonds were issued, or at any time thereafter before the proceeds of the bonds were expended. In fact, plaintiff seemed willing to negotiate with Pack during the entire summer of 1924. There is nothing to show that payment to plaintiff would have tended "to put the mine on a paying basis." On the contrary, such payment would have materially lessened the funds available for needed improvements. Consequently, we are unable to classify plaintiff's debt among those "necessary" to be paid under the resolution.
The plaintiff charges that the application to betterments of so much of the bond issue as would have paid its debt, was a diversion of the fund. That contention overlooks the fact that the fund was not provided exclusively or even primarily to discharge indebtedness, and that the resolution expressly authorized the expenditure on betterments of the residue of the issue after paying such debts as were necessary.
The plaintiff also says that Pack, as the managing official of the coal company, "had no right to prefer and to pay himself out of such trust fund to the exclusion of plaintiff." Had Pack used the bonds to repay himself a debt in existence prior to May 1st, that complaint might be justified, but such is not the case here. Pack described the occurrence in this way: "Immediately after the bond issue was authorized, I had the work started * * * I advanced temporarily to the company while the bonds were being printed, and prior to their receipt, $40,000.00 to take care of emergency debts and the payrolls while this work was going on." Why does he say the money wasadvanced? Why was the advancement temporary? It was obviously advanced until such time as the bonds should be delivered. And while Pack himself refers to the advancement as a "loan", the entire transaction shows that it was not a loan, but a pre-payment of the purchase price on the bonds which he afterwards appropriated.
It makes little difference, however, whether we regard the advancement as a pre-payment on the bonds or as a loan *617
which contemplated the bonds as security. If the latter, equity will treat the advancement and the issuance of the bonds — though fifteen days apart — as contemporaneous in legal effect. Terhune v. Weise,
The trust deed executed by the coal company to secure the bond issue provided that until in default, etc., the company should remain in possession of, and operate and receive the proceeds from, the mortgaged property. The plaintiff contends that under Gilbert v. Peppers,
In Cochran v. Paris, 11 Gratt. 348, 355, the Supreme Court of Virginia refused to hold a trust deed of real estate fraudulent as to creditors, because it conveyed growing crops, and was not to be enforced until two years from its date, saying: "The deed may embrace other property, to the improvement, support or sustenance of which, such perishable property is essential; and in such last supposed case the fact that the perishable property is embraced in the deed, so far from being indicative of a fraudulent purpose, might rather serve to show an honest and a provident design and effort to make the main subjects of the trust a more certain and productive security." In Bartles Dillon v. Dodd,
The rule that equity will retain jurisdiction, once assumed, and dispose of all matters in litigation, is limited to cases where that jurisdiction has been rightfully invoked. While equity extends its aid upon mere averment, it withdraws that aid upon failure of proof. The plaintiff has not established a single allegation upon which equity jurisdiction was assumed. The fact that the evidence shows prima facie a legal demand in its favor against Smith Pocahontas Coal Company for the demurrage paid, will not justify a court of chancery in entering a decree on that demand. "The rule is that where a cause of action cognizable at law is entertained in equity on the ground of some equitable relief sought by the bill, which it turns out cannot for defect of proof or other reason, be granted, the court is without jurisdiction to proceed further and should dismiss the bill without prejudice." McDowell v.Mitchell,
The decree of the lower court will accordingly be reversed and the plaintiff's bill dismissed without prejudice as to Smith Pocahontas Coal Company.
Decree reversed; bill dismissed without prejudice as to thenamed defendant. *621