T. M. Dover Mercantile Co. v. Dover

62 S.W.2d 971, 187 Ark. 859, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 160
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 10, 1933
Docket4-3079
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 62 S.W.2d 971 (T. M. Dover Mercantile Co. v. Dover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
T. M. Dover Mercantile Co. v. Dover, 62 S.W.2d 971, 187 Ark. 859, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 160 (Ark. 1933).

Opinion

Butler, J.

This suit was instituted against appellant company by J. A. Dover, Mrs. Daisy Morrow, Mrs. Flora Weaver, Mrs. Oza Butler, James Freeman Dover (minor son of F. D. Dover, deceased) and Mrs. Lima Dover, widow of F. D. Dover. They allege that the appellant was indebted to the estate of T. M. Dover, deceased, for two items of $59.20 and $70, arbitrary charges against the Dover estate made under the direction of M. J. Dover, president of the Dover Mercantile Company ; that said company was indebted for $300 rent for the year 1932 on the store building, for the dividends collected on stock of the Berry Dry Goods Company and for the $4,050 received from the sale of the dry goods company stock belonging to said estate, for which they •prayed judgment for the amount of their respective interests therein.

The mercantile company answered denying the allegations of the complaint and averring in effect that the dry goods company stock was a part of the assets of the Dover Mercantile Company; that the items complained of were proper charges, and it was not indebted to the estate for any rent. It further alleged that the plaintiffs had previously sold all of their right, title and interest in the said corporation, and prayed that their complaint be dismissed for want of equity. The facts sufficiently appear in the decree of the trial court as follows: “This cause was submitted to the court for trial and determination upon the complaint with the interrogatories propounded to the defendants by the plaintiff attached thereto, the answer of the defendant, together with its answers to said interrogatories and the amendment to the answer of the defendant, all of which papers are on file herein, upon the deposition of A. T. Berry and upon oral and documentary evidence taken in open court at the time, from a careful consideration of all of which the court finds that T. M. Dover, who formerly resided at Hatfield, in Polk County, Arkansas, departed this life intestate, on the 18th day of February, 1917, leaving surviving him as his sole and only heirs at law, his wife, America Dover, who departed this life in 1927, and the following children: M. J. Dover, Mrs. Dora Carper, Mrs. Dovie Hilton, E. M. Dover and all of the above named plaintiffs, save and except Joseph Freeman Dover and Mrs. Lima Dover, who are the sole surviving heirs at law of F. D. Dover, who was the son of said T. M. Dover, but who has departed this life since the death of said T. M. Dover, and that all of the indebtedness of the estate of said T. M. Dover and F. D. Dover and America Dover, has been fully paid.

“That the defendant corporation, T. M. Dover Mercantile Company, was organized on or about March 1, 1917, by taking over the merchandise, notes and accounts belonging to the estate of the said T. M. Dover to amount of $30,000, which property constituted all of the assets of said corporation, which issued 300 shares of stock of the par value of $100 each, 23 shares of which were issued to each of said children of said T. M. Dover, deceased, and 93 shares of which were issued to said America Dover, widow of the said T. M. Dover, deceased. That at the time of the death of said T. M. Dover, deceased, he was the owner of 120 shares of stock of the par value of $25 each in the Berry-Beall Dry Goods Company of Fort Smith, Arkansas, a corporation, now known as the Berry Dry Goods Company; that said stock in said corporation was never owned by the defendant, T. M. Dover Mercantile Company, but at all times remained the property of said heirs of said T. M. Dover, deceased, but that the defendant, T. M. Dover Mercantile Company, has at all times since its organization acted as the agent or trustee for all of the said heirs at law of said T. M. Dover, deceased, in the handling of said stock in said Berry Dry Goods Company, collecting the dividends thereon and in the collection of rents on property owned by said heirs at law of said T. M. Dover, deceased.
“That on March 10, 1926, said defendant, T. M. Dover Mercantile Company, without any right or authority, had the stock of T. M. Dover, deceased, in said Berry Dry Goods Company transferred to said defendant on the books of said Berry Dry Goods Company, and on April 19, 1928, sold said stock to A. Y. Berry and received therefor the sum of $4,050; that oil February 23, 1926, it collected a dividend on said stock amounting to $240, but has not accounted to any of the plaintiffs herein for their portion of the proceeds collected from the sale of said stock and said dividends, although due. demand has been made therefor, said demand having been made on March 1, 1932; that the plaintiff J. A. Dover did not knowingly treat said items as assets of the defendant; but that the proof is not sufficient to establish the allegations of the complaint that the defendant ever received the other dividends on said stock mentioned therein.
“That on February 15,1929, said defendant charged the heirs at law of said T. M. Dover, deceased, with $59.20 on account of a loss sustained by said corporation on the note and account of one Ola Barnes, to whom it has sold merchandise without any of the said heirs at law of said T. M. Dover being in any way bound therefor; that on February 15,1929, said defendant corporation, also without any right or authority, charged the heirs at law of said T. M. Dover, deceased, with $70 as commission on $700 rent money collected by the defendant for said heirs at law of said T. M. Dover, deceased, $600 of which was rents paid by said corporation on the buildings occupied by it and belonging to said heirs at law of said T. M. Dover, deceased; that both of said last-mentioned charges are arbitrary and unauthorized, and that the plaintiffs herein should have and recover of and from the defendant their portion of said sum of $4,290 collected by the defendant from the sale of said stock in the Berry Dry Goods Company and the dividend collected thereon as well as said sums of $59.20 and said item of $70, together with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, to this date, amounting to $187.76, making a grand total of principal and interest amounting to $4,606.96.
“That the sum of $300, together with improvements made by the defendant on the store buildings occupied by it was a sufficient rental to be paid by it for said buildings for the year 1932, and that the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover anything on said item.
“That the plaintiff, Mrs. Daisy Morrow, sold all of her interest in the T. M. Dover Mercantile Company and Berry Dry Goods Company to Mrs. Dora Carper, save and except her 1/9 interest in said estate belonging to her mother; that the plaintiff Mrs. Oza Butler, likewise sold all of her interest in said T. M. Dover Mercantile Company and Berry Dry Goods Company, save and except her 1/9 interest in said 1/3' interest of her mother in said property to the plaintiff, J. A. Dover; that the plaintiff, J. A. Dover, still owns all the interest in said estate he has ever owned, together with said interest so purchased from the plaintiff, Mrs. Oza Butler, save and except his stock in T. M. Dover Mercantile Company, or 5/27 of all the amounts involved herein; that the plaintiff, Mrs. Flora Weaver, sold her interest in the real estate belonging to said estate of said T. M. Dover, deceased, and in the T. M. Dover Mercantile Company to M. J.

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62 S.W.2d 971, 187 Ark. 859, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/t-m-dover-mercantile-co-v-dover-ark-1933.