People's Bank & Trust Co. v. Fenwick Sanitarium, Ltd.

66 So. 307, 135 La. 947, 1914 La. LEXIS 1868
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 30, 1914
DocketNo. 19923
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 66 So. 307 (People's Bank & Trust Co. v. Fenwick Sanitarium, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People's Bank & Trust Co. v. Fenwick Sanitarium, Ltd., 66 So. 307, 135 La. 947, 1914 La. LEXIS 1868 (La. 1914).

Opinions

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, C. J.

Prior to the month of November, 1908, Dr. F. F. Young appears, to have owned and conducted, in the parish of Vermillion, an establishment known as “Fen-wick Sanitarium,” in the management of which he incurred debts to the amount of about $60,000, and thereupon a corporation known as “Fenwick Sanitarium, Limited,” was organized, with Dr. Young as the principal stockholder, and the sanitarium and other properties, including, in all, nine lots of ground, in the town of Abbeville, with the [950]*950Improvements thereon, as also the fixtures, appliances, and appurtenances in the sanitarium proper, were sold to the corporation for the recited price of $125,000, of which $2,000 was to have been paid in cash and $63,000 in stock, and for the balance the corporation was to assume the outstanding-indebtedness of Dr. Young. The corporation, then on November 14,1909, employed Dr. Warren G. Young, a brother of Dr. F. F. Young, as “general manager,” at a salary of $3,000 per annum, “with full power and authority to employ all necessary help,” pay all bills, draw such funds as were required against the depository, and with instructions to make his deposits daily in a depository to be selected by the treasurer. The board of directors, at the same meeting, resolved that they had no funds wherewith to pay the debts that they had assumed, and authorized the general manager to negotiate for a loan, upon bonds to be issued by the company, and thereafter money was obtained from the People’s Bank by a sale of notes, issued by the company, indorsed by various persons, and secured by a mortgage, which included in the description of the property all the lots, with the buildings and improvements thereon, and the contents of the buildings, consisting of beds, bedding, surgical instruments and appurtenances, and all necessary appliances, furniture, and other things necessary to operate a sanitarium. The negotiations for the obtention of the money culminated in May, 1909, when the mortgage was executed, and certain of the notes were delivered to the bank, and on July 2, .1909, at a meeting at which Dr. F. F. Young acted as secretary, Dr. W. G. Young reported that he had been obliged to employ that gentleman as “acting manager,” at $400 per month, and tendered his own resignation as “general manager,” which was accepted. Dr. F. F. Young made a report as “acting manager,” in which he criticized the bargain that had been | made with the bank, and concludes as follows, to wit:

“If some means, I repeat, can be devised to again inaugurate the proper system of advertising, the result, financially, would be as sood as, if not better than, before. * * * The outstanding small indebtedness should be met in some manner, and, unless we can see our way to do something of the kind — as great as the loss is to me — I think it, probably, better that I tender my resignation. The great misfortune for me, personally, is that I rebuilt in Abbe-ville. Assuring- the board of directors of my high appreciation. of their efforts, I am,
“Very respectfully, F. F. Young,
“Acting Manager.”

The board ratified all that had been done with the bank and made some provision with regard to the outstanding indebtedness, but, so far from accepting Dr. Young’s resignation, elected him “active manager and secretary,” at a salary of $4,800 per annum, or $400 per month, with the use of the “home place” as a residence, but with no specific grant of authority in the matter of employing ¿elp. In November, following, there was a meeting at which the quéstion arose of allowing the president (Dr. D. L. McPherson) a salary as general manager, and of making Dr. Young medical director, but the matter was not acted on; and at a meeting in December the board was informed that the bank (which, in the transaction with it, had become the holder of a large quantity of the stock of the corporation) would not consent that Dr. Young should be paid more than $3,-600 per year as medical director, or that he should be allowed a night physician, or that he should continue to have the use of the residence, or that he should serve on the board, and the secretary was instructed to write to him and give him that information, and also to send a copy of the letter to the bank, requesting it to be explicit and positive in regard to the management of the affairs of the sanitarium company, “as [to quote the language of the motion] it is the understanding of the members of the board that the company’s policy would be dictated [952]*952by said bank.” Thereafter Dr. Young continued in charge of the sanitarium and appears to have managed it in his own way. In May, 1910, the bank brought this suit on certain of the obligations held by it, which had matured, and prayed for the enforcement of its mortgage, Mrs. Young intervened, asserting title (under a dation en paiement, from her husband) to the fixtures, appliances, and appurtenances contained in the sanitarium, and the matter was brought to this court by appeal and remained pending here until May, 1912, when a rehearing was refused of a judgment in favor of the bank, in which it was held that the property claimed by Mrs. Young had been included in the sale, made by her husband to the sanitarium company, and hence that his subsequent giving of it in payment to her was incompetent and inoperative. It was also held, in effect, that, inasmuch as that property was expressly included in the mortgage from the company to the bank, and as the company was making no objection to its being sold in accordance with the terms of the contract expressed in the act of mortgage, it should be so sold. People’s Bank & Trust Co. v. Fenwick Sanitarium, 130 La. 723, 58 South. 523, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 211, Ann. Cas. 1913C, 1322. While the suit in question was pending, Dr. Young was allowed still to remain in charge of the sanitarium and to operate it, though in March, 1911, the bank sent three of its directors to Abbeville to inquire into the condition of affairs and make some arrangement with him that would be more satisfactory to it than the then existing one appeared to be. Those gentlemen called at the sanitarium on the evening of March 13th, and, having been received pleasantly enough, made an appointment for the next day.

In the meanwhile, the president of the company had (as we find it 'recited in the minutes) called a special meeting of the board of directors, which convened after the interview with Dr. Young, and at which two of the members of the board resigned and were replaced by two of the People’s Bank directors, and then two others resigned, and their places were also filled, and the board was then reorganized, save as to the presidency,' which was retained by the incumbent. The minutes then recite the fact of the interview between Dr. Young and the gentlemen from the bank and the adjournment. The minutes of the following day (March 14, 1911) contain the recitals that the board met and repaired immediately to the sanitarium to keep the appointment as made upon the previous day; that a proposition was made -to Dr. Young that he should be employed as medical director at a salary to be agreed on; that the financial affairs of the corporation should be turned over to a person to be selected by the board, who should receive and dispose of all funds coming into the treasury ; that Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
66 So. 307, 135 La. 947, 1914 La. LEXIS 1868, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-trust-co-v-fenwick-sanitarium-ltd-la-1914.