McDade v. McDade

325 S.W.2d 575, 45 Tenn. App. 487, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 134
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 25, 1958
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 325 S.W.2d 575 (McDade v. McDade) 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
McDade v. McDade, 325 S.W.2d 575, 45 Tenn. App. 487, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 134 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

CARNEY, J.

This litigation involves the validity of the contracts of sale by Clint McDade, Everest McDade and his wife Edith McDade of their several interests in several different businesses sometimes collectively referred to in the record as the McDade enterprises. The purchasers of these interests were Neil McDade; his wife, Ruth McDade; his mother, Grrace Everest McDade; and his sister, Dorothy McDade Ferguson.

Clint McDade is the father of Everest McDade, Neil McDade, and Dorothy McDade Ferguson. He was formerly the husband of Grrace Everest McDade who is the *493 mother of Everest and Neil McDade and Dorothy McDade Ferguson. Grace Everest McDade obtained an uncontested divorce from Clint McDade at his insistence in March, 1950.

The contract price for the purchase of the interests of Clint McDade in said businesses was $300,000. The contract price for the purchase of the interests of Everest and Edith McDade was $150,000.

These contracts of sale were dated January 14, 1950, and finally executed about February 22,1950. The transactions were so complex that it took sixty-three separate documents to complete the transfer of the various interests in said businesses.

By their cross-bills Clint McDade, Everest McDade and wife, Edith McDade sought to rescind their contracts of sale primarily on the grounds of lack of mental capacity and undue influence. After verdict by an advisory jury, the Chancellor dismissed the cross-bill of Clint McDade but sustained the cross-bill of Everest McDade and his wife, Edith McDade.

There are two separate appeals before this Court for decision:

(1) Clint McDade appeals from the action of the Chancellor in dismissing his cross-bill and he has assigned some ten assignments of error.

The purchasers, Neil McDade, Ruth McDade, Grace Everest McDade and Dorothy McDade Ferguson, are the appellees to the appeal of Clint McDade.

(2) Neil McDade, Ruth McDade, Grace Everest Mc-Dade, and Dorothy McDade Ferguson are appellants *494 from the action of the Chancellor in sustaining' the cross-bill of Everest McDade and wife, Edith, and in ordering their contracts of sale rescinded. They have made some sixteen assignments of error. On this appeal Everest McDade and wife, Edith McDade, are the appellees.

There were two separate jury trials below. The second trial consumed some twelve trial days. The record is voluminous, consisting of approximately 3,900 typewritten pages in eighteen volumes. Our task in reviewing such a record has been aided greatly by the excellent indices prepared by the Clerk and Master of the Chancery Court of Hamilton County and by the excellent briefs submitted by solicitors for the parties.

Clint McDade, the father, was the founder of and guiding spirit behind the several businesses involved in this litigation. It was through his generosity that most of the other parties became the owners of their interests in these businesses.

Pi'ior to January 14, 1950, the date of the contracts of sale by Clint, Everest and Edith McDade, the McDade family owned and operated the following businesses involved in this litigation:

1. Clint McDade and Sons, a corporation, engaged in the business of growing and selling orchids, located in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

2. Southland News Company, a partnership, engaged in the business of distributing magazines with its principal place of business in Chattanooga, Tennessee.

3. Southland News Company, Inc., a corporation, also a magazine distributing business and, in *495 reality, a successor to Southland News Company, described above.

4. Pepsi Bottling Company of Chattanooga, Tennessee, a business engaged in bottling and selling non-alcoholic beverages.

5. Semmes Nursery, a partnership, of Mobile, Alabama.

6. Signal Nursery, a partnership of Chattanooga, Tennessee, engaged in raising peonies.

Prior to January 14, 1950, the several businesses were owned by the several parties as follows:

1. Clint McDade and Sons, a corporation:

Clint McDade bO cji

G-race Everest McDade tO m

Neil McDade bO üi

Everest McDade tO oí

2. Southland News Company, a partnership:

Clint McDade ^ co 03

Grace Everest McDade co

Neil McDade co rH

Dorothy McDade Ferguson co rH

Everest McDade SR co tH

3.Southland News Company, Inc., a corporation:

Olmt McDade co (M

Grace Everest McDade co 03

Neil McDade co rl

Dorothy McDade Ferguson co H

Everest McDade co H

*496 4. Pepsi Bottling Company, Inc., a corporation:

Clint McDade 25%

Grace Everest McDade 25%

Neil McDade 25%

Everest McDade 25.%

5. Semines. Nursery, a partnership:

Buth McDade (Wife of Neil)

Edith McDade (Wife of Everest) LO

25% G-race Everest McDade (Former wife of Clint)

25% Fannie Coflin (Widow of business associate of Clint McDade)

6. Signal Nursery, a partnership:

Buth McDade (Wife of Neil) CJ* o

Edith McDade (Wife of Everest) OX o

For some three years or more prior to January 14, 1950, there had existed considerable friction among the leadership of the McDade enterprises. Everest, as president of Clint McDade and Sons, the orchid business, had incurred the displeasure of the others, primarily Clint and Neil, because of his inability to get along with the employees.

In December, 1948, Everest surrendered his presidency of Clint McDade and Sons, ceased active management thereof, and went back to school at the University of Chattanooga where he completed his work for a degree in engineering.

Clint McDade became very much displeased when Neil McDade and Grace Everest McDade, then Clint’s wife, *497 appeared to side against Clint by voting to pay Everest $10,000 per year while lie was going back to school.

The friction increased, profits disappeared, culminating in the realignment of the interests of the parties in the various enterprises by the contracts of date January 14, 1950.

Under their contracts Everest McDade and his wife, Edith McDade, sold all of their interests in and became entirely separated from all of the McDade Enterprises except Signal Nursery, a peony farm, located on Signal Mountain near Chattanooga. This business was of little value in comparison with the other businesses.

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529 S.W.2d 720 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1973)
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447 S.W.2d 29 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1968)
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447 S.W.2d 22 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1966)
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367 S.W.2d 791 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1962)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
325 S.W.2d 575, 45 Tenn. App. 487, 1958 Tenn. App. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdade-v-mcdade-tennctapp-1958.