Hamby v. Fouche

15 Tenn. App. 248, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 92
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 27, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 Tenn. App. 248 (Hamby v. Fouche) 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
Hamby v. Fouche, 15 Tenn. App. 248, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 92 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

The bill in this ease was filed in the Chancery Court of Hamilton County on November 1, 1930, by Horace Hamby, Receiver of Hamilton Printing Company, against John S. Fouche and T. G. Bush, Jr., citizens and residents of Hamilton County, Tennessee, to recover a judgment against said defendants for $8,900 as the face or par value of eighty-nine shares of common stock in the Hamilton Printing Company, which shares, it is alleged, were issued to the defendants and received and accepted by them, and which were never paid for.

A bill brought by the Clements Paper Company in the Chancery Court of Hamilton County was sustained as a general creditor’s bill to wind up the Hamilton Printing Company (a Tennessee corporation with its principal place of business at Chattanooga, Tennessee) as an insolvent corporation, and Horace Hamby, the present complainant, was appointed Receiver thereof, and, upon a finding that it will be necessary, in order to discharge the indebtedness of the Hamilton Printing Company, for the Receiver to collect in full all amounts due said corporation on account of any stock issued without a valid consideration having been paid therefor, the Receiver was, by decretal order in said case of Clements Paper Company et al. v. Hamilton Printing Company, authorized, empowered and directed to bring suit or suits for the collection of any unpaid subscriptions to the capital stock of the Hamilton Printing Company, which order further provided that “said Receiver is expressly authorized, empowered and directed to bring suit or suits against T. G. Bush, Jr., and John S. Fouche for the purpose of collecting from them • any amount or amounts owing by them, or either of them, by reason of the issuance to them of stock in said Company.”

Defendants Fouche and Bush answered the bill of the Receiver in the instant case, denying material averments thereof and interposing defenses which will appear later herein. Proof was taken and filed on behalf of the parties, respectively, in the form of depositions of witnesses, with exhibits thereto, and the record in the case of First National Bank v. F. E. Pickard et al., theretofore tried in the Chancery Court of Hamilton County, and the case was thereafter heard by the Chancellor on the bill, answer and proof, whereupon it was *251 adjudged and decreed that the complainant is entitled to recover of and from the defendants John S. Fouche and T. G. Bush, Jr., the sum of $8,700, together with interest thereon from November 1, 1930, or so much thereof as may be necessary to pay in full amounts due creditors of the Hamilton Printing Company, and the cause was thereupon referred to the Master, with directions to take and state an account showing the amount necessary to pay creditors of the Hamilton Printing Company in full after exhaustion of the other assets of the Company.

Defendants Fouche and Bush excepted to the aforesaid decree and prayed an appeal to this Court, which appeal was granted by the Chancellor and perfected by the defendants.

In this Court the appellants have filed nine assignments of error, but only one of these assignments — the ninth — is leveled directly at the decree of the Court. This is, in effect, admitted in the appeRants’ brief, wherein it is said that “the first eight assignments allege error committed by the Chancellor in the premises and reasoning by which he reached the conclusion that appellants are liable in this ease.” Such assignments may be quite inconclusive. "Where the lower Court decides a ease correctly, but upon an erroneous ground, the appellate court will affirm the decree, basing its decision upon what it conceives to be the correct theory. Sheafer v. Mitchell, 109 Tenn., 181, 183, 193, 71 S. W., 86; Chambers v. Chambers, 92 Tenn., 707, 714, 23 S. W., 67; Railway Company v. Wilson, 90 Tenn., 271, 16 S. W. 613; Terrell v. Murray, 2 Yerg., 384, 390; Brooks v. Paper Co., 94 Tenn., 701, 705, 31 S. W., 160.

It would seem to be a necessary corollary of the rule just stated that assignments which do not assert error in the decree appealed from, but merely challenge the soundness of reasons which moved the Chancellor to render such decree, are insufficient as assignments of error within the contemplation of the rules of this Court and the Supreme Court. However, as the appellants here assert, through their ninth assignment, that the decree is erroneous, we may examine the first eight assignments to ascertain whether or not the grounds upon which the learned Chancellor rested his decree are sound. If they are, we need not look for other support for the decree.

The Chancellor filed a written opinion, containing his findings of fact and conclusions of law thereon, which opinion is in full as follows:

“In the case of the Clements Paper Company V. Hamilton Printing Company, pending in this court, the bill was sustained as a general creditors’ bill to wind up the defendant therein as an insolvent corporation and Horace Hamby was appointed receiver thereof. As such receiver and acting under a special order in that cause the said receiver has filed the bill in the present *252 cause to recover of the defendants the par value of certain shares of the common stock of the - Hamilton Printing Company, for which certificates were issued to the defendants but Avhich it is alleged were never paid for. The certificates in question are the following, viz: Certificate No. 6 dated April 18, 1928, for one share issued to the defendant Fouehe; certificate No. 7 dated April 18, 1928, for one share issued to the defendant Bush, and certificate No. 8 dated July 9, 1928, issued to T. G. Bush, Jr., and John S. Fouehe, Trustees, for 150 shares, in which it is alleged were included 87 shares that have not been paid for, making a total of 89 shares unpaid.
‘ ‘ The defendants in their answer allege that they were intimate personal friends of one Frank B. Pickard, who was operating the Hamilton Printing Company and represented to them that he was the owner of all of the capital stock of said corporation and that it was fully paid for, which representation they believed and relied upon. As to the certificates for one share of stock that was issued to each of them on April 18, 1928, they say that at said Pickard’s request they accepted the office of directors in said Company and that at his instance and upon his representation that it was necessary in order to qualify them as directors, said two certificates of stock were issued to them, which they accepted believing that it w'as stock owned by Pickard and that immediately upon the issuance of said certificates they endorsed the same back to him. As to the certificate No. 8 for 150 shares of the common' stock, they say that this certificate was issued to them in connection with a certificate for 75 shares of the preferred stock of the Company, also issued to them as trustees, and that both of said certificates were issued for the purpose of being hypothecated to the First National Bank of this City as security for a note for $7,500 which they executed to the Bank on which they borrowed $7,500 for the use and benefit of the Hamilton Printing Company. They deny that they ever subscribed directly or indirectly for any of the stock of said corporation either common or preferred, and say that all they did was without any expectation of profit to themselves but solely for the accommodation and assistance of their friend Frank B.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Tenn. App. 248, 1932 Tenn. App. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamby-v-fouche-tennctapp-1932.