Nashville Breeko Block & Tile Co. v. Hopton

196 S.W.2d 1010, 29 Tenn. App. 394, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 30, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 196 S.W.2d 1010 (Nashville Breeko Block & Tile Co. v. Hopton) 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
Nashville Breeko Block & Tile Co. v. Hopton, 196 S.W.2d 1010, 29 Tenn. App. 394, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 76 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

FELTS, J.

Complainant is a corporation engaged in manufacturing building blocks. It was organized by defendant and others and he was a director, vice-president, and, from 1934 to 1942, its general manager in charge of its affairs. Then a group in control dismissed him, and it brought this suit to recover of him for having acted without authority certain sums set out and others to be fixed on an accounting sought. His answer denied he had so acted or was in anywise liable.

After the proof had been taken and at the hearing complainant amended its bill so as to state the exact amounts sued for and to leave out the accounting. He then filed an amended answer and cross-bill setting up additional equitable defenses and asking affirmative relief. The pleadings and the proof made these four main issues:

(1) Complainant alleged he was liable for $4,400 drawn by him as "additional salary” — $2,000 December 31, 1939, and $2,400 December 31, 1941 — because these amounts were ‘ ‘ bonuses ’ ’ withdrawn by him without authority and illegally. He averred they were for services rendered complainant by Kim as its general manager under circumstances making it liable for the reasonable value of such services, which exceeded the amounts paid him and for which he asked recovery.

(2) It sought to charge him for losses in what is called "the house-building venture.” In 1941, while the Federal Housing Administration was sponsoring a low-cost housing program, he got it to approve complainant’s building blocks for construction of nine model low-cost *399 houses in different sections of Nashville, and to agree to make mortgage loans on them during the construction. The lots' were purchased, some in complainant’s name and the others jointly in the names of defendant and the contractors doing the work; complainant furnished its building blocks at cost, or at a discount of 45 per cent of the list price; and under the F.H.A. commitments for loans on them the houses were erected for sale to the public generally.

Complainant alleged that this house-building venture was unauthorized and ultra vires and caused it losses to the amount of $5,596.77 — $2,144.39 “actual out-of-pocket loss” and $3,452.38 “discount on the selling price of the building blocks” — and that defendant was liable therefor.

He averred that this enterprise was not ultra vires or unauthorized, but was approved by the directors and undertaken in good faith to advance the interest of complainant, to demonstrate the suitability of its product for low-cost housing, and to open a new market for it in that field; that if it sustained any loss it was because of the unjustifiable action of its directors, after approving the project, in later repudiating it and forcing a sacrifice sale of the houses while some were uncompleted and under construction; and that such action caused him a personal loss of $1,500, for which complainant was liable and for which he asked a recovery.

(3) Complainant claimed he was liable for the sum of $1,725 for use of its office and telephone in his plastering business. He denied he was liable for this.

(4) It sought to recover of him $1,337.53, as the balance due on two accounts on its books, one against him individually and the other against him doing business as Hopton Brothers.

*400 Tlie Chancellor held the amounts under item (1) were bonuses withdrawn without authority, and allowed complainant a recovery- for the $4,400. In this connection he excluded evidence elicited on cross-examination of complainant’s witness Strohm that t'he amounts paid defencb ant were reasonable for his services. Under item (2) thg Chancellor granted complainant a recovery for .$2,902.16^ as the loss from the houses jointly in the names of .defendant and the contractors, but denied recovery as to the other houses. He also denied recovery on item (3) for rent and telephone. He decreed for complainant on item (4) for $1,310.46 as the balance due by account. He dismissed the cross-bill. The result was a decree for complainant for $8,612.62 and ¡costs.

Defendant appealed and has assigned errors upon the allowances under items (1) and (2), .-the exclusion of .the evidence, and the dismissal- of the cr.oss-bill. Complaim ant has assigned errors upon the disallowances under items (2) and (3). So the respective assignments present here the first three main issues above, with the subordinate ones as to the exclusion of the evidence and the dismissal of the cross-bill. - •

(1) The Bonuses or Compensation. While a considerable amount of proof was taken, there is very little conflict in the evidence as to the basic facts of this issue. They appear mainly in the uncontradicted statements of defendant and are to some extent reinforced by the admissions of complainant and its witnesses. We summarize them.

Complainant’s business-was the manufacture and sale of building blocks from cinders and cement. This was a. new product in the building industry in this country, which was originated by defendant. A young man with little formal education, he had come from Ungland, and *401 worked as a journeyman plasterer and later as a plaster contractor. From Ms father in England he got the idea of developing the business of manufacturing building blocks of cinders and concrete; and he and another young man, Charles W. Akers, an engineer, started this business as a partnership, and later transferred it to a corporation they had formed, the Breeko Concrete Products Company. But neither of them had the capital to exploit the business.

In 1926 they, with others, organized the complainant as a Tennessee corporation. Its authorized capital stock was $20,000, divided into 200 shares of preferred stock of par value of $100 each and 400 shares of common stock of no par value. They interested a number of prominent Nashville business executives in the venture. These gentlemen purchased small amounts, most of them $500 each, of the preferred stock and formed an impressive board of directors headed by J. W. Jakes, who was elected president; defendant was elected vice-president, and Akers secretary and treasurer. One-half, or 200 shares, of the common stock was issued to the purchasers of the 200 shares of preferred stock and the other half was issued to the Breeko Concrete Products Company for the business and the exclusive right to manufacture Breeko blocks in Nashville and surrounding territory.

Complainant erected a plant and began operations; but it spent most of its $20,000 paid in capital for the plant and had very little left for working capital. Its authorized capital was later increased to $30,000, but it succeeded in selling only about $6,000 of this additional stock. Its affairs were managed by defendant and Akers. Handicapped by want of capital, it made small progress and created considerable debts. When the economic de *402 pression came in tlie 1930’s, complainant fonncL itself heavily- involved and threatened with failure.

In the hope of saving it defendant and Akers sought the aid of its directors, most of whom were heads of large businesses and men of large financial resources.

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Bluebook (online)
196 S.W.2d 1010, 29 Tenn. App. 394, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-breeko-block-tile-co-v-hopton-tennctapp-1946.