Bass Harbour Furniture and Carpet Co. v. Harbour

1914 OK 197, 140 P. 956, 42 Okla. 335, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 363
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 17, 1914
Docket3242
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1914 OK 197 (Bass Harbour Furniture and Carpet Co. v. Harbour) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bass Harbour Furniture and Carpet Co. v. Harbour, 1914 OK 197, 140 P. 956, 42 Okla. 335, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 363 (Okla. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

GALBRAITH, C.

The principal parties in interest in this action, J. F. Harbour and J. M. Bass, were formerly partners in business in Gainesville, Texas. They removed to Oklahoma City at an early day in its history and purchased the business of the Oklahoma Furniture Company, and organized a corporation under the laws of Oklahoma Territory, under the name of Bass & Harbour Furniture and Carpet Company, with a capital stock of $50,000, divided into 500 shares of the par value of $100 each. The last meeting of the stockholders and board of directors of this corporation seems to have been held on the 15th day of June, 1903. At that time the interest of a third party in the corporation was purchased by Bass and Harbour, and from that time until July 10, 1910, when the dissolution of the business occurred, Harbour owned and controlled 260 shares of the capital stock of the company, and Bass owned and controlled 24-0 shares. In June, 1910, Bass gave notice to Harbour of a dissolution, and informed him that one or the other of them must get out of the business. After frequent negotiations extending over a period of several days, it was agreed that Bass should submit to Harbour a “give or take proposition,” and a contract in writing was entered into between Bass and Harbour, in which Mrs. Harbour joined, for the reason that she and Bass jointly owned the property known as the Insurance Building in Oklahoma City, but the corporation as such was not a party to the written contract. It was agreed that the property in which the parties were interested, and subject to division, should be divided into two groups. One of these included the Insurance Building, *337 located on lot 27, block 7, in Oklahoma City, which was in the name of J. M. Bass and Mrs. .J- F. Harbour, and valued'at $250,000, and the stock of merchandise, the store building, where the business was conducted, and the warehouse used in connection therewith, constituted the other group. Bass made the propositions as agreed and Harbour accepted the one which gave him the property in group one, and the sum of $71,000 as his individual share of their property. .He transferred the 260 shares of stock controlled by him and executed deeds conveying his interest in the lots where the business was conducted, and, also, the warehouse lots -as provided in the agreement of dissolution. In a written agreement, setting out the details of the dissolution, it was stipulated that each party should pay his “personal" ác- • counts” to the Bass & Harbour Furniture and Carpet Company,' and this law suit has grown out of a misunderstanding and disagreement between the parties as to what was included in this term “personal accounts.” ' ' ''

The books of the corporation show a personal account against Bass, and one against Harbour. The parties agree that these respective accounts are correct, and there is no trouble about them, but in the department of the ledger kept on behalf of the Corporation in which were kept the personal accounts, is an account given as “warehouse account.” It is agreed that this account arose in the following manner. Bass and Harbour, in the 'year 1909, owned four lots, in block 20, in South Oklahoma Addition to Oklahoma City. They agreed to erect on these lots á warehouse for the use of Bass & Harbour Furniture and Carpet Company, and that the corporation should advance the money to'erect this building, and that the corporation would be repaid the advances so made in rent at the rate of $250 per month. The corporation advanced some $24,000 for this building and this “warehouse account” was opened on its books showing such advance’. At about the time of the dissolution this account was credited with $1,250, being five months’ rent at $250, and Bass gave his note to the corporation for one-half of the balance, and it is sought by this action to recover the remaining óne-half of Harbour, which,' it is charged, he- agreed to pay under the stipulation that he ■ would *338 pay his “personal accounts” to the corporation. There are two counts in the petition, the first claiming judgment for $11,462.09, as balance due on this “warehouse account,” and the second asking for $126 due on Plarbour’s personal account. The answer admits the correctness of the account claimed in the second count, and tenders payment, but denies that anything is due as claimed in the first count, averring that this “warehouse account” was settled and paid in the dissolution arrangement. It is claimed that this account was changed, or rather the heading of it, after the agreement of dissolution had been made, by writing “J. M. Bass and J. E. Harbour, personal,” thereon. . It seems that each of these parties had the assistance of counsel during the negotiations leading up to the agreement of dissolution, and that neither of .the parties mentioned this “warehouse account” to his respective counsel, and, also, that the parties conferred with their mutual friend and banker, Mr. Hogan, prior to the dissolution agreement and during the negotiations in regard to the terms of the settlement, and neither referred to this “warehouse account” in that conference.

It is contended by the plaintiff in error that this warehouse account was a part of the assets of the corporation, and that the corporation is a separate and distinct entity from its stockholders, and that the corporation was not a party to the dissolution agreement between Bass and Harbour, and cannot be bound thereby, and that the corporation cannot be divested of its property by the individual act of its stockholders, and that the integrity of the assets of the corporation must be maintained, and that the defendant, Harbour, owes one-half of this account, that it is and was a “personal account” and that he should pay it.

Xhe cause was tried to the court and jury, and at the trial the defendant claimed, and was allowed, to assume the burden of proof. The verdict of the jury was for the defendant on the first count, and for the plaintiff on the second count of the petition.

The cause was tried upon the theory that there was an ambiguity in the written agreement of dissolution; that it was uncertain as to what the parties intended to include under the term *339 "personal account” as therein used; that it was uncertain whether or not they intended to include by this term “warehouse account.” The trial court allowed, over the objections of the plaintiff in error, oral testimony to show how the parties had conducted their business and how they had treated this “warehouse account” as tending to throw light on the question in dispute.

The principal question submitted to the jury and determined by it was as to how the parties had treated this “warehouse account,” and whether or not it was their intention at the time of entering into the written agreement of dissolution that it should be included under the term of “personal account,” or whether it was the intention and purpose of the parties under that contract to treat this account as settled and paid by the dissolution agreement. The verdict of the jury sustained the contention of the defendant in error, and the verdict and finding, being supported by sufficient evidence, is conclusive upon the court upon this appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1914 OK 197, 140 P. 956, 42 Okla. 335, 1914 Okla. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bass-harbour-furniture-and-carpet-co-v-harbour-okla-1914.