Buice v. Scruggs Equipment Co.

250 S.W.2d 44, 194 Tenn. 129, 30 Beeler 129, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 359
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 250 S.W.2d 44 (Buice v. Scruggs Equipment Co.) 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
Buice v. Scruggs Equipment Co., 250 S.W.2d 44, 194 Tenn. 129, 30 Beeler 129, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 359 (Tenn. 1952).

Opinion

*131 Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit in the Chancery Court of Knox County for breach of contract. The bill as filed was demurred to. The demurrer was sustained by the Chancellor and the suit was dismissed. The cause has been seasonably appealed, error assigned and arguments heard and we now have the matter for disposition.

The bill alleged a verbal contract between the appellant and the appellees. The demurrer in its various grounds averred that the contract being verbal could not be enforced under the Statute of Frauds as set forth in Code Section 7197, a portion of the Uniform Sales Act, and subsection 2 of the Statute for the Prevention of Frauds and Perjuries of Code Section 7831. The demurrer was further based on the fact that any act involving the corporation was ultra vires and that the amount claimed was so far in excess of the value of the rights of the appellant that it would have been unconscionable for a court of equity to enforce the contract.

*132 The contract averred in the bill was that the two owners of all outstanding stock of the Scruggs Equipment Company, Inc., had disagreed among themselves and it became evident that one or the other of these two owners of this stock, who were one 'Scruggs and the appellee, Keen, must buy the stock of the other in the corporation. In view of this fact both of these parties, Keen and Scruggs, approached the appellant and stated to him that it was necessary for one or the other to own all of this stock to have control of this corporation. Scruggs told the appellant that if he was bought out, that he, Scruggs, was going to form another concern doing a competing business with the Scruggs Equipment Company, Inc. The appellee Keen approached the appellant and made the proposition to him that if he, the appellant, would assist Keen in carrying out the business of the corporation after Keen had obtained control thereof that the appellees, Keen and the corporation, would give to the appellant a certain contract stipulating the amount per month for his work plus commissions, costs for the operation of his car, etc., and would also make him a Vice President and a member of the Board of Directors of the Scruggs Equipment Company, Inc., and would sell him “300 shares of stock in the respondent corporation at the par value of $100.00 dollars per share upon the following terms, to-wit. Then follows the designation of how this stock should be paid for. In consideration of this agreement the appellee Keen, speaking for himself and the Scruggs Equipment Company, Inc., asked that the appellant remain with Keen and the Scruggs Equipment Company, Inc., and assist in negotiations and the purchase of the Scruggs Equipment Company, Inc., stock and assist Keen and the Scruggs Equipment Company, Inc., in “retaining certain manufacturers accounts, and assist respondents *133 in the purchase and retention of the fabricating business known as the Fabricated Products, Inc., including the equipment thereof, as a going concern, all of which complainant did, * * V’ Under the averments of the hill the appellant completed his portion of this contract by-carrying out everything that he had agreed to do including the surrender of an agreement that he had with the company prior to their disagreement. As a result of his doing so Keen purchased all outstanding stock of Scruggs and became the owner of all outstanding stock in the Scruggs Equipment Corporation. The corporation taking a certain portion of the Scruggs stock as corporate stock and the appellee Keen taking the remainder of the stock for himself. In addition to what has just been-said the appellant was made a Vice President and a Director of the Scruggs Equipment Corporation and did every- • thing to carry out the contract as alleged in the bill. Keen, the now sole owner of all stock in the Scruggs Equipment Company, Inc., and that company refused to deliver the stock to the appellant as had been agreed to. It was alleged in the bill that the stock prior to this agreement was worth some $22,000' more than it was agreed to be sold to the appellant for.

As we read the bill, and the alleged verbal contract as set forth therein, it is one indivisible contract, one part depending on the other. The transfer of the stock to appellant and his giving his notes therefor was an equal and probably the most important part of the contract to appellant while probably the most important part of the contract to the appellees was what the appellant did in assisting this purchase and reorganization and the keeping of certain accounts, etc., for the appellees.

The demurrer, of course, admits all matters of *134 fact well pleaded in the bill as well .as all reasonable, legitimate and natural inferences to be drawn therefrom. When we thus take the bill as demurred to we find a contract'averred between these parties which is not unreasonable and unnatural. The difference between the market value of the stock as alleged and that as averred it was agreed to be sold to this appellant for cannot be said to be unreasonable or out of line in view of the alleged agreement which we must take to be true under these averments. We of course cannot say what the value of these services that the appellant was to render was to the appellees. They knew more as to what this value would be at the time this agreement was made than do we. If they, did make such an agreement, which we must take under the bill as it now comes to us that they did, they certainly cannot now under the record as it is say that this difference in the value of this stock was so unconscionable as not to be enforced by a court of equity for this reason alone. It is perfectly possible and reasonable that the services of the appellant to the appellees, as averred in the bill, were well worth the amount of the difference between the market value of the stock alleged and that as agreed to be sold to the appellant. Then too, it seems perfectly natural that the appellees would want one who was so valuable to their business as an officer in its corporation to retain the accounts that he apparently controlled and with the knowledge that he had in operating this business. For this reason we think that the ground for demurrer going to this feature of the bill certainly should have been overruled.

The main contention made in the demurrer is that the contract alleged is within the Statute of Frauds as set forth in Code Section 7197, which is as follows:

“A contract to sell or a sale of any goods or choses *135 in action of the value of five hundred dollars or upwards shall not he enforceable by .action unless the buyer shall accept part of the goods or choses in action so contracted to he sold, or sold, and actually receive the same, or give something in earnest to hind the contract, or in part payment, or unless some note or memorandum in writing of the contract or sale he signed by the party to he charged or his agent in that behalf.”

This was a verbal contract. It of.course is not enforceable unless there was a part performance of the contract or something in earnest was given to bind the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 S.W.2d 44, 194 Tenn. 129, 30 Beeler 129, 1952 Tenn. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buice-v-scruggs-equipment-co-tenn-1952.