Burnett's Lumber & Supply Co. v. Commercial Credit Corp.

51 So. 2d 54, 211 Miss. 53, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 331
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1951
Docket37843
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 51 So. 2d 54 (Burnett's Lumber & Supply Co. v. Commercial Credit Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burnett's Lumber & Supply Co. v. Commercial Credit Corp., 51 So. 2d 54, 211 Miss. 53, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 331 (Mich. 1951).

Opinion

Hall, J.

Appellant corporation is chartered under the laws of Mississippi and is authorized by its charter “to buy, own, hold, sell, and lease timber and timber lands; to buy, manufacture, and finish lumber and lumber products; to do a general wholesale and retail lumber and building material business, dealing in all building materials and supplies used in general lumber and supply business; to buy, hold, own, build, improve, sell, mortgage, lease, and rent real estate; and to buy, own, hold, sell and assign notes find mortgages and other written evidence of indebtedness on real estate, ’ ’ and to exercise the rights and powers conferred by Chapter 100, Code of 1930, and amendments thereto.

In the year 1946 appellant corporation was the owner of three used automobile trucks and a trailer and sold this equipment to appellant, O. L. Booker, who was engaged in logging and who was delivering logs to a mill operated as a partnership by G. S. Burnett, Sr. and G. S. Burnett, Jr., both of whom were officers in appellant corporation. The transactions were evidenced by conditional sale contracts between the two appellants and notes executed by Booker to appellant corporation. These *56 instruments were sold by appellant corporation to ap-pellee for a cash consideration pursuant to a written assignment with recourse duly executed by Gr. S. Burnett, Sr. who was then president of appellant corporation, and who, according to the company’s bylaws, was authorized so to do.

Gr. S. Burnett, Sr. died thereafterward in September 1946, and his said son became president. The business of the company then began to get into financial difficulties and on April 14, 1947, a meeting of all the stockholders and directors, three in number, was held. At this meeting Gr. S. Burnett, Jr., was removed as president and Mrs. Ella M. Burnett was elected president, the office of vice-president was left vacant, and E. G. Sessions was reelected secretary and treasurer. These facts are all shown by written minutes prepared and adopted on that date. On the same date, according to the undisputed testimony, and at the same meeting E. G. Sessions was elected general manager of the company and was placed in full charge of its business, but this fact is not reflected by the minutes. Mrs. Burnett knew practically nothing about the business and was, in effect, president in name only; she was the largest stockholder and authorized the company’s regularly retained attorney to represent her in looking’ after the company’s business. At this time the aforesaid notes and conditional sale contracts were considerably in default and appellee was pressing appellants for the arrears due thereon. Conferences were held with the appellee’s representative and an agreement was reached to refinance the balance due on these notes and contracts by the execution of new paper. According’ly Booker executed new notes and contracts with appellant corporation covering the balance then due and, on the advice of the attorney for the company, Mr. Sessions, the general manager as well as the secretary and treasurer, endorsed and assigned these notes and contracts, with recourse, to appellee on April 23, 1947. Thereby the appellant corporation obtained an extension *57 of the indebtedness which, in turn, relieved the pressure immediately upon it. The old notes and contracts were mailed hack to appellant corporation, and it began making payments on the new notes and contracts and continued making these payments until one-half of the amount due thereon had been paid, after which it defaulted as to further payments.

The corporate stock was sold to other parties about eight months after the date of the last mentioned notes and contracts and nothing further was paid thereon. Appellee then brought suit thereon in the county court against both of the appellants. Appellant corporation did not deny the correctness of the amount sued for hut defended upon the ground that the act of the corporation in selling this equipment to Booker and in taking his notes and contracts therefor and in assigning the same with recourse to appellee was ultra vires and upon the further ground that Sessions had no authority to endorse and assign the same to appellee. The trial judge granted a peremptory instruction to appellee and, upon appeal, the circuit court affirmed the judgment rendered thereon from which action this appeal is taken.

It is here contended that the act of the corporation in acquiring and selling this equipment and in assigning and endorsing the paper with recourse is ultra vires and not binding upon it. Appellant was engaged in a general wholesale and retail lumber and supply business and under the above quoted provisions of its charter was fully authorized to transact any business which was incidental to its general corporate purposes. “A corporation may have implied power not only to acquire or purchase personal chattels, but also to take choses in action which are transferable by assignment; and it may itself become the payee of commercial paper, bonds, etc., for indebtedness owing to it, unless in the pursuit of its authorized business there is no necessity for so doing.” 13 Am. Jur., Corporations, Sec. 773. “A corporation has full power to alienate its property both *58 real and personal, unless restricted by its charter, statute, or considerations of public policy. The implied power of a corporation to alienate its property extends to commercial paper and other choses in action which are transferable by indorsement or assignment.” Id. Sec. 801. “An express grant is not necessary to confer upon a corporation the power, in the legitimate transaction of its business, to become a drawer, acceptor, or indorser of a bill of exchange or to become a party to any other negotiable paper. This power is generally implied in the case of a business corporation as a necessary incident of its express powers. Such power is, for example, incident to the power of a corporation to borrow money or incur indebtedness.” Id. Sec. 817. “It is well settled that where a corporation acquires commercial paper or bonds in the legitimate transaction of its business it may sell them, and in furtherance of such a sale it may, in order to make them the more readily marketable, indorse or guarantee their payment.” Id. Sec. 821.

In the early case of Haynes v. Covington, 13 Smedes & M. 408, 411, 21 Miss. 408, 411, this Court said: “The distinction is obvious between a contract by a corporation, made in reference to a subject lying entirely without the range of the objects for which its powers were granted, and an irregular or illegal exercise of a right conveyed by its charter. If a corporation make a contract entirely foreign to the purposes of its institution, the act is void, simply for want of power in reference to the subject-matter. [Commercial Bank of Manchester v. Nolan] 7 How. [Miss.] [508] 532. But where a corporation enters into a contract in reference to a subject embraced within the scope of its granted powers, but in so doing exceeds them, the contract will not thereby be rendered void. It might constitute a ground for the resumption of its franchises by the state, but could not be objected by the party sought to be charged. [Fleckner v. President, Directors and Co. of Bank United States], 8 Wheat. [338] 353 [5 L. Ed. 631]; The Banks v. Poitaux [Poiti- *59 aux], 3 Rand. [Va.] 136; [Inhabitants of Shutesbury v. Inhabitants of Oxford] 16 Mass.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Keene v. BROOKHAVEN ACADEMY, INC.
28 So. 3d 1285 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2010)
Dudley Keene v. Brookhaven Academy, Inc.
Mississippi Supreme Court, 2008
Chevron Oil Company v. Clark
291 F. Supp. 552 (S.D. Mississippi, 1968)
Pendleton v. Williams
198 So. 2d 235 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1967)
Ralston Purina Co. v. Como Feed & Milling Co.
256 F. Supp. 5 (N.D. Mississippi, 1966)
Community Credit Union, Inc. v. Connors
105 A.2d 772 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 So. 2d 54, 211 Miss. 53, 1951 Miss. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnetts-lumber-supply-co-v-commercial-credit-corp-miss-1951.