Nelms v. Weaver

681 S.W.2d 547, 1984 Tenn. LEXIS 900
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1984
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 681 S.W.2d 547 (Nelms v. Weaver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelms v. Weaver, 681 S.W.2d 547, 1984 Tenn. LEXIS 900 (Tenn. 1984).

Opinion

*548 OPINION

HARBISON, Justice.

Appellants brought this action seeking a declaratory judgment that stock certificates in Security Bank & Trust Company held by Mrs. Nancy Nelms Macintosh Wilson were validly and properly issued to her. Appellants sought to require that the stock certificates be executed by T.J. Weaver, Jr., Chairman of the Board of the corporation. Counterclaims were brought against appellants by Mr. Weaver individually and by the corporation to cancel the certificates and to obtain a declaration that they had been improperly issued in violation of both a stockholders’ resolution and a buy-sell agreement between Paul E. Nelms and Mr. Weaver. Mr. Nelms is the father of Mrs. Wilson. He and Mr. Weaver together held ninety-nine percent of the outstanding stock of the corporation at the time when the certificates in question were issued.

The Chancellor held against appellants, finding that the certificates in question were issued in violation both of the stockholders’ resolution and of the buy-sell agreement. He further found that appellants had failed to prove that Mr. Weaver had prior knowledge of the transfer of stock to Mrs. Wilson, and he found that other minority stockholders in the corporation were not consulted before the transfer was made. Mr. Nelms was president of the corporation as well as a major stockholder. The Chancellor found that the other shareholders of the bank were not precluded from enforcing the shareholders’ resolution by reason of estoppel, waiver, acquiescence or laches. He held that Mr. Nelms was the author of his own misfortune in not adhering to the written provisions of both the resolution and the buy-sell agreement.

The testimony at the trial was sharply conflicting, but there is no claim that the findings of the Chancellor lacked support in material evidence. Indeed, on appeal, there was no challenge to the findings of fact of the Chancellor, and these were concurred in by the Court of Appeals. Accordingly the ease comes before this Court on concurrent findings of fact, supported by material evidence, and as a result all factual issues in the case are foreclosed here. T.C.A. § 27-1-113.

In other findings the Chancellor held that Nelms was not guilty of actual fraud in having the certificates issued to his daughter and that his action in doing so had not been secret or concealed. The Chancellor concluded that the dispute in the case essentially involved the rights of Nelms and Weaver, despite the fact that there were other minority stockholders. He accordingly ordered the certificates issued to Mrs. Wilson to be rescinded but then held that Mr. Nelms would be given an option to purchase the shares issued to her. To the extent he failed to do so, the remainder would be reissued to the other shareholders in accordance with the shareholders’ resolution, upon return of the original purchase price to Mrs. Wilson.

The Court of Appeals reversed this portion of the holding of the Chancellor, finding that Nelms, as an officer and major stockholder of the corporation, had violated his fiduciary duties to the other stockholders in having the certificates issued to an outside third person in violation of the shareholders’ resolution. It accordingly affirmed the rescission of the sale of stock to Mrs. Wilson, upon refund being made to her by the corporation, and directed that the shares in dispute then be offered to the other stockholders to the exclusion of Nelms. 1 It treated the actions of Nelms as tantamount to his rejecting or not asserting his pre-emptive rights since he did not exercise them in the manner required of all other stockholders. 2

*549 We are of the opinion that the Court of Appeals reached the correct conclusion. The shares in question were part of a new stock issue authorized by the corporation. The stockholders’ resolution required that each stockholder be offered pre-emptive rights in the new issue, as required by statute, T.C.A. § 48-1-713, and that in the event any shareholder elected not to exercise his pre-emptive rights, the shares should be offered pro rata to the remaining stockholders.

Although owning only one percent of the outstanding shares, the minority stockholders exercised their pre-emptive rights and took all of the shares which they were entitled to receive under the resolution. One of them testified at trial that he was prepared to purchase a substantial block of the stock if he could obtain it, and that he had made this known to other stockholders on previous occasions. It thus appears that the contractual rights of the other stockholders were not academic, and it is clear that Mr. Nelms, as president of the corporation, ignored these in having the shares to which he was entitled issued to an outside person, without consultation with or waiver by the other stockholders.

Both courts below also found that Mr. Nelms violated the buy-sell agreement between him and Mr. Weaver, and, on counterclaim by Weaver, the Chancellor voided that agreement as to all future transactions. Both courts impliedly rejected Weaver’s insistence that the shares in question be offered to him under that agreement, finding that the terms and provisions of the shareholders’ resolution were controlling, and we affirm that decision. This does not preclude his purchase of a pro rata portion of the shares, however, when they are returned to the corporation and offered for reissue. Appellants have not sought any such relief against Weaver as a part of their action, nor have the minority stockholders made any such claim.

Although we granted the application of appellants for further review of the case, we are of the opinion that under the findings of fact made by the courts below the issues presented are without merit. It is the insistence of appellants that the Court of Appeals improperly substituted its judgment as to appropriate equitable relief for that fashioned by the Chancellor. The Court of Appeals, however, relied upon well-settled rules of corporate law, to the effect that officers and directors of the corporation occupy a fiduciary relationship to their shareholders, as, indeed, do majority stockholders toward minority stockholders. See generally Heylandt Sales Co. v. Welding Gas Products Co., 180 Tenn. 487, 175 S.W.2d 557 (1943); Johns v. Caldwell, 601 S.W.2d 37 (Tenn.App.1980).

The principal claims of appellants at the trial of this case were that Mr. Weaver was aware of the issuance of the shares to an outsider, Mrs. Wilson, and that he both expressly agreed to it and thereafter acquiesced in it. The Chancellor found these factual issues against appellants, and the Court of Appeals concurred in those findings.

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Bluebook (online)
681 S.W.2d 547, 1984 Tenn. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelms-v-weaver-tenn-1984.