Augusta Manufacturing Co. v. Vertrees

72 Tenn. 75
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 72 Tenn. 75 (Augusta Manufacturing Co. v. Vertrees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Augusta Manufacturing Co. v. Vertrees, 72 Tenn. 75 (Tenn. 1879).

Opinion

CoopeR, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Action of ejectment, in which the verdict and judgment were for the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed in error.

The plaintiff sues as a corporation chartered fyy the Legislature of the State of Georgia. It introduced in evidence the charter or act of incorporation passed on the 27th of December, 1845, which appoints certain persons named a board of commissioners to open a book of subscription for shares in a manufacturing company, the commissioners to require from the subscribers a payment of not less than five nor more than ten per cent, of the amount subscribed. By the third section of the act, “the subscribers or stockholders in said company shall be, and they are hereby declared to be a body corporate and politic under the name and style of the Augusta Manufacturing Company.” The plaintiff further introduced as evidence a deed executed to it by B.. H. Brockway, acknowledged by him on the 16th of July, 1858, and registered the next day, purporting to convey a lot in the town of Edgefield, which it claims covers the land sued for. It also introduced evidence tending to prove that this conveyance was made in consideration of a debt due to it by Brockway for goods manufactured by it as a corporation, and other testimony tending to show that at the date of the deed it had an agent in Nashville for the transaction of [77]*77its business as a foreign manufacturing company. Upon this state of facts, the Court charged the jury as follows: “To enable the plaintiff to hold property, or maintain an action, it is necessary that the proof should show that the stockholders, by an acceptance of the charter, became a corporation. The fact of acceptance is susceptible of beiug proved by direct proof, such as a resolution 'by the stockholders expressly accepting, or by proof that they have been in the habit of using and exercising the privileges and franchises granted by the chatter, or that they have been recognized as a corporation by the Legislature of Georgia or of this State. But if there is- no other proof of the plaintiff’s corporate existence except its charter, that has been read, and the deeds which have been'read in evidence of title in this case, and the fact of bringing this suit in the name of the Augusta Manufacturing Company, these facts alone are not sufficient to- prove the plaintiff’s corporate existence, or right to sue or hold property.”

The errors assigned on this charge are that there was no plea calling in question the plaintiff’s cor-, porate existence, that the charter incorporated the company directly, that the facts stated by the Court as not sufficient to establish the corporate existence should have been left to the jury to pronounce on their sufficiency, and that the evidence clearly showed a user.

The Code, sec. 3239, provides that the defendant may plead not guilty to an action of ejectment, [78]*78“and. upon such plea may avail himself of all legal defenses.” It would be a good defense to such an action brought by a plaintiff as a foreign corporation, that the plaintiff was not a corporation. While' the rule in other actions may be different, the statute allows the defense in this action under the general issue.

Th$ act of the Legislature of Georgia, offered in evidence, does not directly incorporate the persons named as a body politic aud corporate. It appoints commissioners to open a book for the subscription of stock, and incorporates the subscribers, It was therefore necessary to show acceptance of the charter by user or otherwise. Very slight circumstances of user are required in such eases: Gleaves v. Brick Church Turnpike, 1 Sneed, 491. It was error to charge that the mere execution of a deed to the company by one party, and of a new deed in confirmation by the devisee of that party, and the bringing of an action of ejectment thereon, would not be sufficient proof of user of manufacturing franchises to establish the incorporation. These facts should have been left to the jury to draw ■ their own inference. And there was other proof tending to show an organization of the corporation.

An important question of controversy in the court below was whether the deed from Brockway, under which the plaintiff claimed, covered the land in dispute. Brockway originally owned a parcel of land in the town of Edgefield, in the form of a. [79]*79parallelogram, 568 feet in length from east to west, and 170 feet wide from north to south. It was laid off into lots fronting north on the Gallatin turnpike, afterwards known as Main street, running back to an alley. The land was hounded on the east by Minnick street, and on the west by Tulip street. Each of the lots beginning at Minnick street fronted fifty feet on Main street, except the most westerly lot on the corner of Tulip and Main streets, which had a front, of sixty-eight feet, and all had a depth of 170 feet. The proof leaves no doubt that Brockway sold to the plaintiff the lot on the corner of Main and Tulip streets, but the boundaries in his deed of conveyance tend to locate it at the other corner. The deed conveys “a tract of land in the town of Edgefield, Davidson county, Tennessee, as follows: Beginning at a stake the southwestern junction of Minnick street and the Gallatin turnpike road, thence running along said turnpike sixty-eight feet to a stake; thence at right angles with said turnpike road, and parallel with Minnick street, 170 feet to an alley; thence parallel with said alley, running towards Minnick street, sixty-eight feet; thence along said Minnick street, towards said turnpike road, 170 feet to the beginning.” At the date of this conveyance, Brock-way had sold and conveyed to a third person the lot on the southwestern corner of Minnick and Main streets. He still owned the lot on the corner of Tulip and Main streets, the size of which exactly corresponds with the size of the lot de[80]*80scribed in his deed to the plaintiff, and there is proof tending to show that he put the agent of the plaintiff in possession of this lot under the deed. Brockway died in 1862, having by will devised all of his real estate to Elizabeth A. Brock-way, his wife. On the 25th of March, 1872, she, by deed of that date, reciting the sale and conveyance by her husband to the plaintiff, and the mistakes which had been made in the locative calls therein, undertook, in consideration of the original payment to the husband, to relinquish, quit claim and convey to the plaintiff, by its true boundaries, the lot intended to have been conveyed.

The real defendant in this case claims the lot in controversy, being a part of the lot 68 by 170 feet on the corner of Tulip and ¿Main streets, under a deed made on the 21st of July, 1860, by third persons having, so far as appears, no title. The defendant went into possession about the date of this deed, and has been in possession ever since.

This suit was commenced on the 15th of May, 1872, the declaration averring title in the plaintiff. On the 15th of April, 1874, the plaintiff, by leave of the Court, added a count to the declaration in the name of Elizabeth A. Brockway, to which the defendant pleaded not guilty.

The defense made to the title under the original conveyance from Brockway was, that the calls of the deed did not cover the land in dispute. The defense to the confirmatory deed of Brockway’s de-visee was, that it was void for champerty by reason [81]*81oí* the defendant’s adverse possession at the time.

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Related

Young v. Unknown Heirs
249 S.W.2d 580 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
72 Tenn. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/augusta-manufacturing-co-v-vertrees-tenn-1879.