Charles A. Hill & Co. v. Belmont Heights Baptist Church

69 S.W.2d 612, 17 Tenn. App. 603, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 94
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 10, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 69 S.W.2d 612 (Charles A. Hill & Co. v. Belmont Heights Baptist Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Charles A. Hill & Co. v. Belmont Heights Baptist Church, 69 S.W.2d 612, 17 Tenn. App. 603, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 94 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

This was a suit by Charles A. Hill & Co., a corporation, to recover money wrongfully converted by its manager, Hill, and contributed to his church, the defendant.

The bill alleged that Charles A. Hill, stockholder, manager, secretary, and treasurer of Charles A. Hill & Co., fraudulently and without right or authority issued checks of the corporation in the sum of $2,660 in payment of his private subscription to defendant church, and said church knew or should have known that Charles A. Hill was fraudulently converting the corporate funds without right or authority at the time it accepted and cashed them; that said defendants were put upon inquiry as to his power to use the corporation’s checks; that Hill concealed from the stockholders the fact that he had issued these checks. The bill further alleged that said money, with the exception of one check for $160, went into the construction *605 of a church building on certain land on Belmont avenue in Nashville, described in the bill. The bill prayed for a decree against defendants; that a lien be declared on said real estate; and that said lien be declared superior to the lien of the trustees to secure bonds, etc.

All of the defendants answered, except Charles A. Hill, and a pro confesso was taken as to him.

The defendant church and others answered and denied that the church knew that said checks were wrongfully appropriated by Charles A. Hill out of the corporation’s funds, and denied that they were put upon notice of any wrongful conversion of said funds, and alleged that said Charles A. Hill was in the habit of paying his personal bills with checks of the company and was authorized by custom to give corporate checks in payment of his bills, and that the complainant knew or could have known by the exercise of the slightest degree of care that Hill was paying his personal bills with cheeks of the company and had done so for years without protest..

The chancellor found that the church had "no actual knowledge of any defect in the title of Hill to the checks involved and on the facts developed in this record no knowledge that would charge it with bad faith in accepting them in payment of Hill’s subscription,” and he dismissed complainant’s bill.

Complainants excepted to said decree and appealed to this court, and have assigned thirty-six errors, which are, in substance, as follows:

(1) There is no evidence to support the decree of the chancellor.

(2) The evidence preponderates against the decree of the chancellor.

(3) The chancellor erred in holding and decreeing that the church had no actual or constructive knowledge of any defect in the title of Hill to the checks involved, and was a bona fide purchaser for value in due course of trade of said checks.

(4) The chancellor erred in holding that the complainant corporation was estopped to recover on said checks.

Complainant’s assignments of errors raise two questions: (1) That the chancellor did not correctly find the facts. (2) And the chancellor erred in failing to find that the defendant church accepted money from Hill, to whom It did not belong, in payment of his personal debts.

Charles A. Hill & Co. was a corporation organized for the purpose of dealing in grain, seed, etc. In 1922, John M. Butler, of Murfreesboro, became the owner of one-half the stock. Mrs. Donna P. Hill, wife of Charles A. Hill, owned the other half. It is not shown who were directors. Hill was secretary, treasurer, and active manager, and Butler was president.

Butler lived in Murfreesboro, where he was interested in other business. The active management of Hill & Co. was left to Hill, and *606 also the bookkeeping, the handling of the money, and issuing of cheeks. Hill conferred with Butler from time to time about the affairs of the company. Butler did not know bookkeeping and made no attempt to examine the boobs. He relied on Hill to see that the books were properly kept.

Prom 1922 to 1927, Hill paid his personal bills with checks of the corporation and charged the checks to himself on the books. He had a personal account and a special account on the books. B.utler did not know that Hill was paying his personal bills "with the corporation’s checks and did not know that he carried an account on the books against himself. He did not examine the books. Hill had no authority to issue the company's checks in payment of his own bills.

In 1924 and 1925 Hill issued five checks of the corporation, four made payable to W. R. Creal, treasurer, for the following amounts:

Cheek No. 6789 8-13-24 $ 500.00

Check . No. 7379 12-10-24 500.00

Cheek No. 7545 1-14-25 1,000.00

Counter check 4-30-25 500.00

■ — and one made payable to N. B. Petzer, treasurer, check No. 7732, for $160, dated February 11, 1925. The three $500 checks- and the $1,000 check were issued to pay Hill’s private subscription to the building fund of the Belmont Heights Baptist Church, and the $160 check was a donation to the church. The checks were on the planted form of Charles A. Hill & Co., signed “Chas. A. Hill & Company” in printing, by “Chas. A. Hill” in the handwriting of Hill, “Secy. & Treasurer.” Pour of the checks were indorsed “W. R. Creal, Treasurer Building Fund, Belmont Heights Baptist Church,” and one “N. B. Petzer, Tr., ” and were paid by the bank and the church received the proceeds.

The stubs bearing the numbers of these checks were not filled out to correspond with the checks, but bore fictitious entries purporting to purchase stock for the company which the stock book showed was not purchased. The canceled cheeks were concealed and not given to the bookkeeper. She entered her books to correspond with the check stubs. So there was nothing on the books to show that these checks were so issued. None of these checks were charged to Hill’s personal account. Nobody connected with the corporation, except Hill, knew that these checks were so issued.

When the church treasurer received the checks he did not notice how they were drawn or signed. He says he did not give the matter any thought; and that he thought Hill was “Hill & Company.” No inquiry was made as to the authority of Hill to give checks of the corporation in payment of his debts. It is not shown that the defendants, when they accepted and cashed the checks and used the proceeds, knew that Hill was in the habit of paying his debts with the company’s checks.

*607 Chas. A. Hill & Co. was borrowing money to operate on in 1924 and 1925, and was insolvent when the cheeks were issued to the church.

About July, 1925, Hill informed Butler that he had overdrawn his account. Later he executed a mortgage to the company for $10,000 on his property, but it developed that the property was of very little value. At this time Butler did not know that there was any misappropriation of funds by Hill, but thought he was simply overdrawn.

In September, 1926, Butler’s son was employed by Hill & Co. In a short time he discovered that the business was not being properly conducted.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W.2d 612, 17 Tenn. App. 603, 1933 Tenn. App. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-a-hill-co-v-belmont-heights-baptist-church-tennctapp-1933.