Jones v. J. S. H. Company

35 S.E.2d 288, 199 Ga. 755, 1945 Ga. LEXIS 368
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 10, 1945
Docket15229.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 35 S.E.2d 288 (Jones v. J. S. H. Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. J. S. H. Company, 35 S.E.2d 288, 199 Ga. 755, 1945 Ga. LEXIS 368 (Ga. 1945).

Opinion

1. Whenever a transaction is between husband and wife and the creditors of the husband attack it for fraud, if the wife claims the property purchased or received from the husband, the onus is upon her to make a fair showing about the whole transaction.

(a) Under the foregoing ruling, the court did not err in overruling the demurrer as to the prayers of the petition asking that the stock in the plaintiff corporation and in two other corporations be decreed back into the husband, that a lien be established thereon in favor of the plaintiff corporation, and that in the meantime the wife be restrained from transferring such stock.

(b) The evidence fails to show, however, any participation by the wife in the alleged wrongful acts of the husband. Accordingly, a personal judgment against the wife for the claims against the husband is unauthorized, but since material relief was obtained against the wife, the judgment against her for the court costs in the court below is not disturbed; and, since the court has not as yet exercised its discretion in awarding the auditor's costs, that matter remains in the sound discretion of the court.

2. Where the members of a solvent partnership joined in the organization of a solvent corporation, to which they transferred all the partnership assets without any other consideration being paid into the corporation, or other capital invested, and where stock in the corporation was issued to the partners in exactly the same proportion in which they had been interested as partners, and the corporation continued the operation of its former business under the same management, the partnership at the same time ceasing to do business, it will be assumed, in the absence of anything to the contrary appearing, that the partners by the action thus taken between themselves, intended that the corporation would take over the assets cum onere, insofar as pertained to partnership debts owing to its own members; and this is true irrespective of any contrary rule which might obtain with respect to outside creditors who were not in any wise parties to any such merger, and who did not *Page 756 consent to a substitution of their claims against the partnership and its members, and the partnership assets, by virtue of such a merger.

(a) This rule would obtain irrespective of the validity or invalidity of subsequent action taken by the stockholders of the corporation, undertaking to specifically assume such previous partnership obligations owing to its members.

(b) Under the provisions of the Code, § 3-707, any such mutual claims for indebtedness existing between a partner and the corporation would not be barred by the running of the statute.

3. The rulings of the auditor, as set forth in full in the statement of facts, have been examined, and with the exceptions above noted, are approved as being in conformity with the law and supported by the evidence.

No. 15229. SEPTEMBER 10, 1945.
This was a suit in equity by J. S. H. Company and two of the three equal stockholders therein against the third stockholder, Jones, in which his wife was joined as a defendant. It was alleged that Jones actively managed the business of the corporation, and with his wife was indebted to it in the sum of $10,224.70 arising out of various transactions had and performed by Jones through a long period of years, for which no accounting had been made. By amendment it was further alleged that Jones, with the intent to defraud the plaintiffs and in order to avoid payment of his obligations to the corporation, had transferred almost all of the stock in the corporation to his wife by voluntary conveyance, and that he had mingled the funds of the corporation with the funds of two other corporations in which Jones was largely interested and which he managed and controlled. The petition prayed for an accounting, and asked a general judgment against Jones and his wife, including amounts alleged by amendment to have been collected by both of them, and that his wife be restrained from transferring the stock in the plaintiff corporation, that she also be restrained from transferring the stock in the two other corporations mentioned, and that the title to the stock transferred by Jones to his wife in all three of these corporations be decreed back into him, and that a lien be decreed against all of such stock in favor of the plaintiffs to enforce the judgment to be rendered in their favor. The case was referred to an auditor, who found in favor only of the corporation in the sum of $5330.69 against both Jones and his wife, and also found that the transfer of the *Page 757 stock in the three corporations was fraudulent as against the plaintiffs, and recommended that a lien thereon be established in favor of the plaintiff corporation, and that Mrs. Jones be restrained from transferring the same. On exceptions to the auditor's report, the court sustained the findings of the auditor that the transfer of the stock was fraudulent and void as against the plaintiff corporation, and overruled and disapproved all exceptions of law and fact except certain ones of fact which were submitted to a jury for determination. The jury having found in favor of the plaintiff and against all the exceptions thus submitted to them, the court overruled such exceptions of fact, thus sustaining the auditor in all of his findings both of law and fact, and made such findings the judgment and decree of the court. The court, having directed a verdict against the defendant for costs, entered judgment accordingly. After a motion for new trial had been made and overruled, the exceptions of law, which had been reserved pending the jury's findings on the approved exceptions of fact, were overruled, and a decree was entered in favor of the plaintiff corporation against Jones and his wife for $5330.69; restraining Jones and his wife from transferring any stock held by them in the three corporations referred to; declaring a special lien therefor on the stock in J. S. H. Company registered in the name of Mrs. Jones; and taxing costs against Jones and his wife. The record is very voluminous, but a comprehensive view of the points at issue can be obtained from the report of the auditor, which we have here embodied and the paragraphs of which we ourselves have numbered for the purpose of reference.

The report of the auditor was as follows: (1) "Mrs. L. L. Shreve, H. G. Hubbard, and J. S. H. Company, a corporation, filed suit on April 24, 1941, against W. A. Jones, Mrs. M. D. Jones, his wife, and Madronah Sales Company, alleging that J. S. H. Company was duly chartered in Fulton superior court and began doing business in January, 1933; that P. C. Shreve, H. G. Hubbard, and W. A. Jones each owned 33 1/3 shares of its capital stock; that cash and various real estate were put into the corporation by its stockholders; that Jones was elected president and was in active charge of its business; that he transferred his stock in the company to his wife except for two shares; that in March, 1941, a stockholders' meeting was held at which Hubbard was *Page 758 elected president and Mrs. Shreve was elected vice-president and secretary (she being the widow of T. C. Shreve and his stock having been bequeathed to her); that demand was made that Jones turn over all books and cash to the new officers; that Jones turned over a book of accounts; that this book shows various receipts by Jones, and various credits for amounts paid on corporate indebtedness; that Jones failed to account to the company for large sums received by him for its account; that Jones put money, wrongfully taken from the company, with the money of his wife, Mrs. M. D. Jones."

(2) "Plaintiffs pray that Jones and Mrs. M. D.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.E.2d 288, 199 Ga. 755, 1945 Ga. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-j-s-h-company-ga-1945.