Sommerville v. Greenhood

210 P. 1048, 65 Mont. 101, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 197
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1922
DocketNo. 4,917
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 210 P. 1048 (Sommerville v. Greenhood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sommerville v. Greenhood, 210 P. 1048, 65 Mont. 101, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 197 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE FARR

delivered the opinion of tbe court.

This is an action for damages for conversion of a stock of wines, liquors and cigars, furniture and fixtures of a wholesale and retail liquor business in tbe city of Missoula. William Steinbrenner, Henry Greenbood and F. H. Elmore were made parties defendant at the time of tbe commencement of tbe action, and later tbe First National Bank of Missoula was also made a party defendant.

After issue joined a trial was bad in December, 1919, resulting in a judgment of nonsuit as to tbe defendants Steinbrenner, Elmore and tbe First National Bank, and a mistrial by reason of the disagreement of tbe jury as to tbe defendant Greenhood. Tbe second trial was bad in June, 1920, resulting in a verdict for tbe plaintiff, Yerrick, and against the defendant Greenhood in tbe sum of $8,959.67 and interest, upon which judgment was rendered for principal and interest in tbe sum of $13,190.57, and for costs of suit in tbe sum of $685.84. Defendant Greenhood appeals from tbe judgment and from an order denying bis motion for a new trial. Since the appeal has been perfected the respondent W. H. Yerrick has died, and his administrator has been substituted as respondent.

Tbe amended complaint contains tbe usual allegations common to an action in conversion. The separate answer of tbe defendant Greenbood, after denying tbe conversion, alleges, in substance and effect, that in tbe month of July, 1914, plaintiff, being seriously sick, was confined in tbe St. Patrick’s Hospital in the city of Missoula; that be was deeply involved financially and unable to pay bis obligations, and in order to bring about an extension and to prevent bis business from being sold out; and tbe forfeiting and cancellation of bis license as a liquor dealer, in the months of July and August, 1914, be caused to be incorporated under tbe laws of tbe state of Montana the “Yerrick Liquor Company,” and tbe defendants [104]*104William Steinbrenner and Henry Greenhood were solicited to act with Mm as incorporators and directors thereof; that plaintiff, through Ms attorneys, prepared articles of incorporation for incorporating the Yerriek Liquor Company, and signed and acknowledged the same on the thirty-first day of July, 1914, and caused the same .to be filed in the office of the county clerk and recorder of Missoula' county, Montana, on the eighth day of August, 1914, and later caused the same to be filed with the secretary of state; that plaintiff immediately after said incorporation, for a valuable consideration, sold, transferred, and delivered to the Yerriek Liquor Company his entire stock of goods, wares and merchandise, and the Yerriek Liquor- Company thereupon assumed the outstanding obligations, liabilities, and indebtedness of W. H. Yerriek personally, and proceeded to operate the business which had theretofore been owned and conducted by Yerriek as his individual business that thereafter it was discovered that the corporation could not be operated at a profit so as to pay off its indebtedness, and thereupon defendants William Steinbrenner and Henry Greenhood resigned as directors, - and the plaintiff caused to be elected in their place and stead Eddie Randall and Bert Breeding; that in the meantime plaintiff, Yerriek, was restored to his health and returned to his home and personally assumed the management and conduct of the Yerriek Liquor Company, and ran the same as a one-man corporation; that thereafter, to-wit, on the eighteenth day of January, 1915, at a meeting of the directors of the corporation, at which meeting Yerriek acted as president, and Bert Breeding acted as secretary, by resolution passed by the vote of all the directors, there was authorized a general deed of assignment of all the company’s property to one Louis Schramm, for the benefit of the creditors of the company, by reason of the insolvency of the corporation, pursuant to which, on the nineteenth day of January, 1915, the corporation made, executed, and delivered a general deed of assignment to Louis Schramm; that said trust was accepted by Schramm, and the assignment was filed in the office of the county clerk [105]*105and recorder of Missoula county on January 19, 1915; that thereafter, and on the twenty-first day of January, 1915, plaintiff, Yerrick, as president of the Yerrick Liquor Company, and for and in its behalf, made, verified and caused to be filed an inventory and appraisement, in which were set out all the creditors of the Yerrick Liquor Company and an inventory and appraisement of all the property of the corporation; that the assignee thereupon entered upon the discharge of his duties and took full possession and control of the property, converted the same into money, and paid to the sundry creditors of the corporation, which included all the persona] creditors of Yerrick, out of the proceeds' realized from the sale of the property, thirty-two and one-half per cent of their several claims; that the property claimed by the plaintiff to have been converted by the defendant to his damage was the same property which was sold to the Yerrick ^Liquor Company; that all acts and things done by the Yerrick Liquor Company during the time that Greenhood was a director of the same were done with the full knowledge, consent, and approval of Yerrick and at his instance and request and for his use and benefit; and that Greenhood derived no profit whatever from ‘ said transactions or any of the same, and never asked or received any compensation for any service performed by him while he was such director, and all things done by him were for the purpose of assisting W. H. Yerrick.

The reply to the separate answer of the defendant Green-hood alleges, in substance and effect, that at all times in the answer mentioned the plaintiff was ill, sick, diseased and disabled in body and mind, nigh unto death, and confined in Si. Patrick’s Hospital, or at his rooms at Missoula, under the constant care of a physician and nurses, and by reason of his illness and the mental pain and suffering then undergone by him he was during all of said times, and particularly at the times alleged in the answer and at the time of the execution and filing of the articles of incorporation and execution [106]*106of bill of sale, delirious, out of his mind, and totally unable to know or understand or appreciate the effect, purpose, or consequence of any matters transpiring before him; that none of the matters and things and alleged transactions were done or performed by plaintiff or by his authority or with his knowledge or consent; and that the alleged acts and transactions were not the acts of plaintiff.

There is much contradiction in the. testimony, but an endeavor will be made to state in a general way some of the principal facts of the several transactions surrounding Yer-rick and his business affairs so far as they may be involved in this suit, from the time he entered the hospital until the commencement of the action, so far as possible, basing the statement either upon those things which may 'be considered as conceded or proven, and, as to those matters concerning which the testimony is in conflict, to state wherein there is contradiction. The record is voluminous, consisting of 837 pages of printed matter, and the evidence was not put in with' much regard to logical sequence of events, making an accurate statement of the facts most difficult.

The plaintiff, a man seventy years of age and in poor health, for a considerable period of time prior to and on the first day of July, 1914, owned and was engaged in the wholesale and retail liquor business in the city of Missoula, in a building leased from one William H. Houston.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 P. 1048, 65 Mont. 101, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sommerville-v-greenhood-mont-1922.