Pritchett v. Thomas Plater & Co.

144 Tenn. 406
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 144 Tenn. 406 (Pritchett v. Thomas Plater & 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
Pritchett v. Thomas Plater & Co., 144 Tenn. 406 (Tenn. 1920).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Hall

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the validity of the sale of certain stock in the. Nashville Gas Company, owned jointly by A. W. Stockell and Samuel Pritchett (husband of complainant), and also some stock owned by the said Samuel Pritchett individually, to the defendant Thomas Plater & Company (a banking and brokerage corporation) doing business in the city of Nashville, Tenn., on June 21, 1911.

The stock in question consisted of seven hundred and fifty-eight and four tenths shares owned by Pritchett and Stockell jointly, or as partners, each owning an undivided one-half interest in the same, and one hundred and eleven shares owned by Pritchett individually.

The bill was filed by complainant on April 27,1912, as guardian of her husband, who had been declared insane [412]*412in a lunacy proceeding regularly had on April 25, 1912, seeking to have said sale set aside, in so far as the one-half undivided interest of her ward was concerned in the joint or partnership stock, and the one hundred and eleven shares owned by him individually, upon the ground that her ward was insane at the time of the sale and lacked mental capacity to make a valid and binding contract, which fact was known to defendant’s officers, who negotiated the purchase on behalf of defendant, or could have been known to them by the exercise of ordinary diligence.

The hill alleged that the stock was worth $105 per share, while the defendant only paid $80 per share for the entire purchase; that complainant was entitled, on behalf of her ward, to recover this stock in specie; but that she did not desire to visit upon defendant any undue hardship or injustice, and was therefore willing and offered to refund to defendant the consideration paid for said stock, either in cash, or by crediting said consideration upon any legal and valid indebtedness which her ward owed defendant at the time of said sale; that in default of the return to her by defendant of said stock in specie she was entitled to recover of defendant its present value, including any dividends collected and interest, less the sums paid on, or applied to, the discharge of valid and bona-fide debts of her ward. And the bill prayed accordingly.

Defendant answered the bill. It denied:

(1) That complainant’s ward was insane at the time of the sale to defendant, or that he lacked mental ca[413]*413pacity to make the sale, but possessed mental capacity to make a valid and binding contract.

(2) That even if complainant’s ward did not have sufficient mental capacity to make the sale, his incapacity was not known to defendant’s officers, who negotiated the purchase of said stock, nor was it apparent to those who knew and dealt with him.

(3) That complainant’s ward and Mr. A. W. Stocked were partners as to the seven hundred and fifty-eight and four tenths shares of gas stock, the sale of which was, in fact, negotiated and made by said Stocked to defendant, and that Stocked, as a partner in-said stock, had the legal authority to make said sale and bind complainant’s ward, notwithstanding his mental incapacity.

(4) That the price paid was a fair and full price, and was several dollars per share above the market, and the transaction was in all respects fair and open, and made with buyers who stood in no fiduciary relation.

(5) That the sale was made to pay debts owing by complainant’s ward created at a time when he was capable and sane, and it was a sale of stock pledged when the debts were incurred to secure the payment of same, and held continuously thereafter by the owners and holders of the notes, for the payment of which the stock stood pledged, and no prejudice resulted to complainant’s ward by reason of said sale.

Upon the hearing the chancellor decreed in complainant’s favor, adjudging that complainant was entitled to recover of defendant the net sum received by defendant for all of said stock, at $105 per share, with interest from date received, and the dividends collected thereon [414]*414by defendant, with interest, less all the payments and expenditures made by defendant to or for ber said ward, with interest from dates paid, including a note for $794.15, and an item of mistake shown of $274.99, the total recovery amounting to $17,732.37.

• From this decree the defendant Plater & Co. have appealed to this court, and have assigned errors, and seek a reversal of the chancellor’s decree.

It appears from the evidence that Samuel Pritchett (complainant’s ward) died in the year 1915, at the age of sixty-five. He resided in the city of Nashville at. the time of his death, having resided in said city all of his life. He and complainant were married in the year 1881. In the year 1907 he had become the owner of five hundred and fifty or six hundred shares of stock of the Nashville G-as Company, which was of the par value of $100 per share. He had also been connected with the management of the gas company for a number of years, but was dismissed by one D. Shelby Williams when- he became president of that company. This Mr. Pritchett felt keenly and resented. It also appears that the dividends of the gas company were reduced to three per cent, under Mr. Williams’ administration. This also Mr. Pritchett disapproved, and he began the prosecution of a plan to secure the election of a board of directors that would favor and make an increase in the dividends of the company.

Mr. A. W. Stockell, a member of the Nashville bar, and a gentleman of standing and integrity, who represented the Cooper interest in the gas company, and controlled and looked after the stock in that company, which [415]*415passed to the legatees under the will of Judge Wm. F. Cooper, deceased, also disapproved of the reduction in dividends by the Williams administration. Mr. Stockell and Mr. Pritchett were intimate friends, and in 1908 they agreed that they would purchase enough stock in the gas company, together with their own holdings and the holdings of other friendly stockholders, to control the next election, and to elect a board of directors that would increase the dividends.

Pursuant to this plan, on January 2, 1908, they entered into the following agreement:

“Nashville, Tennessee, January 2, 1908.
“This is to witness that Samuel Pritchett and A. W. Stockell have agreed to buy Nashville' Gras Company stock on a joint account, executing their joint notes for the amounts of purchase money with the purchased stock attached as collateral, and where additional collateral is required the said Pritchett provides this and this additional stock is to be returned to him upon payment of the notes to which it is attached. Such profit as is made on the purchased stock is to be equally divided between us.
“[Signed] “A. W. Stockell.
“Samuel Pritchett.
' “January 15, 1910.
“Up to the present time we have bought of gas stock under above agreement six hundred and thirty-two shares, of which four hundred and thirty-two shares stand in the name of Thomas Plater & Company, one [416]*416hundred shares in the name of Goulding Marr, and one hundred shares in the name of A. W. Stockell.
“ [Signed] “A. W. Stockell.
“Samuel Pbitchett.”

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Bluebook (online)
144 Tenn. 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pritchett-v-thomas-plater-co-tenn-1920.