Parker v. Bethel Hotel Co.

31 L.R.A. 706, 96 Tenn. 252
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 22, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 31 L.R.A. 706 (Parker v. Bethel Hotel Co.) 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
Parker v. Bethel Hotel Co., 31 L.R.A. 706, 96 Tenn. 252 (Tenn. 1896).

Opinion

J. C. Bradeord, Sp. J.

On May 24, 1880, P. C. Bethel, W. D. Bethel, Lucius Frierson, Eugene Pillow, J. M. Mayes, and L. W. Black became incorporated, under the laws of the State of Tennessee, as the Bethel' Hotel Company. The business of this corporation, as ■ declared in its charter, was the erection, furnishing, and operation of a hotel in the town of Columbia, Tenn., the hotel building to include storehouses and a concert hall. The. charter was taken out under Chapter 142 of the Acts of 18'75, and is in the form prescribed for hotel companies, except that words were added authorizing it to build and own storehouses and a concert hall. The corporation was duly and regularly organized, with a capital stock of $100,000, divided into shares of $50 each. After its organization, the building contemplated by the charter was erected on a lot, owned by the corporation. The building was so designed and constructed that the part used for hotel purposes was on the second floor, with an entrance on the first floor. The stores were on the first floor, under that part of the building used as a hotel, but the’'precise situation of the con[256]*256cert hall, or, as it is called, the opera house, does not appear.

The corporation occupied and used the building, or leased it, or both, from the date of its completion until September 1, 1885. On that- date the Bethel Hotel Company and Lucius Frierson, for the consideration of $22,500, payable in ten annual installments, evidenced by the notes of the purchasers, conveyed to Mayes & Dodson, certain parts of the building, particularly described, which were designated as the hotel proper part of said building, including the part from the second floor up, and all appurtenances and privileges incident thereto.

The deed to Mayes & Dodson was signed “Bethel Hotel Company, W. D. Bethel, President; Lucius Frierson, Secretary and Treasurer; and Lucius Fri-erson. ’ ’

The sale and conveyance to Mayes & Dodson were authorized by the stockholders of the corporation, at a meeting held shortly before, at which a-majority, but not all, of the stockholders were present or represented. This meeting was the last ever held by the stockholders of the Bethel Hotel Company.

At the time the sale aforesaid was made to Mayes & Dodson, and at the date of the meeting of the stockholders which authorized it, the majority of the stock of the corporation was owned by Lucius Frierson and by W. D. Bethel, individually and as administrator of the estate of P. C-[257]*257Betbel, deceased. The holdings of Frierson amounted to thirty-four thousand dollars or thereabouts, and those of Bethel to sixty-one thousand dollars.

On the twenty-eighth day of August, 1886, Frierson purchased from Bethel all the stock held and owned by him, individually and as administrator. Some time either before or after the purchase of the stock from Bethel, it does not appear which, he acquired such of the stock as was not owned by him and Bethel, and thus became the owner of the entire capital stock of the corporation.

The consideration Frierson paid and agreed to pay Bethel for said $61,000 of stock, was the following: the transfer and assignment to Bethel of the Mayes & Dodson notes, payable to the Bethel Hotel Company, aggregating $22,500, notes of McEwen & Dale for $4,000, payable to Frierson, and his own notes, six in number, for $658.33 each. To secure the payment of Frierson’s notes, the McEwen & Dale notes, and the indorsement of Frierson and the Bethel Hotel Company on the Mayes & Dodson notes, the stock was left in the possession of Bethel, to whom was reserved “all the' power usual tp such a pledge in the case of default in payment and satisfaction of said notes.” The contract between Frierson and Bethel was in writing.

In September, 1885, immediately after the sale to Mayes & Dodson, and the stockholders’ meeting authorizing it, Frierson took possession of the residue of the property of the corporation, and used and [258]*258■treated it as his own. He leasfed it, collected the rents, used them for his own purposes, and accounted "to no one. He used and controlled the property in this manner, without protest or interference from anyone, until January, 1892, when it was conveyed in trust to defendant, W. J. Webster, as will hereafter appear.

During this long period of seven years, the corporation slept, or was dead, as will be hereafter determined. No meetings of the stockholders and directors were held, no officers were elected, and no business seems to have been transacted by the corporation. The explanation of this anomalous condition of affairs will be found in the claim made by Lucius Frierson, that the corporation had ceased to exist after he acquired all its stock, and that he became and was the real owner of its property. He says, and claims, that it was understood by the. stockholders, at the meeting which authorized the sale to Mayes & Dodson, that the corporation would go into liquidation, and that he, as the owner of all its stock, would become the owner of all its property, and that a .resolution to that effect was adopted.

Frierson appears to have been an active trading-man. His business required, the use of considerable money, and he was compelled to borrow largely from others. Both before and after the. date of the alleged resolution of the board of directors, putting. the corporation into liquidation, he made a large number of loans from divers persons. To secure these loans he [259]*259used as collateral his stock in the Bethel Hotel Company. On May 3, 1882, he borrowed from J. M. Mayes, trustee for Mrs. Annie Jackson and her children, §1,000, executing his note therefor, and depositing, -as collateral, to secure the same, one hundred shares of Bethel Hotel Company stock. The note was subsequently renewed, and forty shares more of the stock were added as collateral. This note, with the collateral (140 shares) attached, came into the hands of G. T. Hughes, who succeeded Mayes as trustee. The Second National Bank loaned Erierson §5,000 on the second day of August, 1882, taking his note for that amount, with §6,000 of the stock of the Bethel Hotel Company attached as collateral. This loan was renewed nine different times. At the date of the last renewal, December 31, 1887, it was increased to §6,000. The increased loan was renewed from time to time, until it was taken up on December 28, 1891, by A. N. Aiken and W. M. Mayes, who, at Frierson’s request, and for his accommodation, executed four notes, three of which were for §2,000 each, and one for §325 (the latter being for interest and discount), payable to Frier-son’s order, which notes were delivered to the bank. The hotel company stock securing the original loan was retained as collateral on the new notes executed by Aiken and Mayes. It may as well be stated here, that these notes were renewed from time to time, .and, finally, on February 10, 1893, some payments having been made by Aiken, Mayes and Aiken exe[260]*260•cuted their three notes, two of them being for $2,000 each and one for $1,700. J. Milton Parker made Frierson a loan in October, 1883, and took as security one hundred shares of the hotel company stock. Payments were made by Frierson, and the loan was reduced to $1,994.61, and a note was executed for that amount on November 22, 1891, with the stock attached. Mrs. S. B. Francis loaned Frierson $4,000, on November 1, 1883. This loan was secured by collateral of some kind, but what it was is not shown.

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Bluebook (online)
31 L.R.A. 706, 96 Tenn. 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-bethel-hotel-co-tenn-1896.