Court Opinion

ID: 3280828
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:54:35.301667+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:00:00.611129
License: Public Domain

The action is upon a promissory note, dated July 26, 1891, for $9,500, and interest. The answer, for want of information and belief, denies its execution and nonpayment and further sets up as a defense a want of consideration. The answer being insufficient to raise an issue upon the question of the execution and nonpayment of the note as an entirety, the only question for consideration on this appeal is whether or not the note executed was without consideration.
The case is this: On the 12th of June, 1900, Mary C. Greene, W. H. Fuller, T. R. Garnier, and G. W. Beck were the owners jointly of a mining bond conditioned for the conveyance to them, or their assigns, upon payment of $3,000, of a certain mining property. They had made various contracts in relation to the disposition thereof to a corporation thereafter to be formed; and on the date last mentioned, after the formation of such corporation, finally agreed in writing to convey their equity in the property to defendant corporation for its entire capital stock, and in such agreement Greene, Garnier and Fuller undertook to pay the $3,000 due on said property and to procure a conveyance thereof to the corporation. On the same day the corporation, by resolution, regularly adopted, agreed to accept the assignment of such bond and the deed of the original owner of such property and issue therefor the whole of its capital stock — one-fourth thereof to each of said holders of the bond. Anticipating this agreement, Mrs. Greene had already advanced and paid into the corporation, through Fuller, her attorney, the $3,000 due to the owner, and which, under the agreement, she, Fuller and Garnier were to pay as a part of the consideration for the issue of the stock to them. Before this time, however, on the 31st of May preceding, Mrs. Greene had paid to Fuller $2,000, to be used in development of the mine and payment of expenses already accrued in its development. This money was credited to Mrs. Greene on the books of the corporation, as was the $3,000 before mentioned, together with $3,176, the one-fourth of previous expenditures in the purchase of the bond and the development of the property. The undisputed testimony is, that this $2,000 was not paid or advanced, except upon the agreement that it should be refunded out of the first earnings *Page 429 
of the mine before any dividends were paid, and the corporation seems to have received this $2,000 and to have expended it in payment for labor and materials before the incorporation, as well as for machinery, supplies and development thereafter. After this $2,000 had been received by the corporation, and under the agreement before mentioned, large blocks of stock were sold to various persons, and afterward, in March, 1901, the corporation executed to Mrs. Greene a note covering all advances and sums credited to her upon the books, which included the $3,176 expended before the promoter's agreement and the $3,000 paid out for the acquirement of the mine, the renewal of which note is sued on in this action.
We are of opinion that the trial court was justified in finding that, as to the $3,176 and the $3,000, there was no consideration moving to the corporation. The stock was issued in consideration of the conveyance to it of the bond for a mine in its then existing developed condition, and a conveyance from the owner for the consideration of which the other parties, and not the corporation, were to pay. But as to the $2,000 the case is different. Mrs. Greene was under no legal obligations to pay any liens for labor, if any existed upon the mine, or to do any development work after its acquirement by the corporation; and the corporation having received from her the $2,000 and credited the same upon the books, even the payment of a portion thereof on account of debts due from the original promoters would not warrant a finding that there was no consideration for the note, even to the extent of such payment by the corporation on account of its previous debts; nor is there any offset claimed or demanded in the pleadings on account thereof. Subsequent to the conveyance of the property to the defendant, Mrs. Greene advanced $2,250 additional; but this seems to have been paid her with interest, and is not involved in the case. We think, therefore, that there is no testimony in the record supporting the finding of an entire want of consideration, but that, on the contrary, to the extent of $2,000, the original note was a valid and subsisting obligation of the corporation, and to such extent, with interest, is still an obligation evidenced by the note sued on in this action. *Page 430 
The judgment and order are reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Gray, P. J., concurred.