Telephone Manufacturing Co. v. Sumter Telephone Manufacturing Co.

41 S.E. 322, 63 S.C. 313, 1902 S.C. LEXIS 71
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 1, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 S.E. 322 (Telephone Manufacturing Co. v. Sumter Telephone Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Telephone Manufacturing Co. v. Sumter Telephone Manufacturing Co., 41 S.E. 322, 63 S.C. 313, 1902 S.C. LEXIS 71 (S.C. 1902).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

This action was commenced on the third day of May, 1 goo. The nature of the issues raised by the pleadings can be the more readily and thoroughly understood by embodying the pleadings in this opinion. The complaint, omitting the caption, was as follows :

“The plaintiff, complaining of the above named defendants, alleges:
“1. That the plaintiff is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of South Carolina.
*321 “2. That the defendant, the Sumter Telephone Manufacturing Company, is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of South Carolina.
“3. That in 1896 and the early part of 1897, the defendant, Chas. T. Mason, was engaged in the city of Sumter and said State in the manufacture of telephone and electrical supplies, conducting his business under the trade name of ‘The Mason Electrical Works of Sumter, S. C.’
“4. That the Southern Brass and Iron Company, of Knoxville, Tenn., of which Peter E- Blow was president, was engaged in the handling and selling of telephones and other electrical supplies in all parts of the country as one of its branches of business, and during the latter part of 1896 and the early part of 1897, commenced to handle and sell the telephones and other electrical supplies manufactured by the Mason Electrical Works of Sumter, S. C., and at that time the defendant, F. C. Manning, was employed as traveling salesman of the Southern Brass and Iron Company, of Knoxville, Tenn., above referred to, and was especially entrusted by said company with the business of soliciting purchasers for the Mason telephones and electrical supplies; and during said employment, reported to the said Peter E. Blow, that the defendant, Chas. T. Mason, had stated to him that he, the said Chas. T. Mason, was limited .in the amount of capital available for the conducting of said business, and did not himself possess the business capacity which would qualify him for the successful development of the said enterprise on a large scale, and that he desired to get some one of business capacity and capital to go into the enterprise with him, and that he thought it could be made a success.
“5. That, induced by said representation, the said Peter E. Blow came to Sumter, S. C., and conferred with the defendant, Chas. T. Mason, which conference resulted in an agreement between the defendant, Chas. T. Mason, and the said Peter E. Blow, that they should form a corporation with a capital stock of $5,000, which amount the said Chas. T. Mason represented would be sufficient for the development *322 of the enterprise above referred to, it being agreed that each of the said parties should talr-e one-half of the said amount of stock, and that the corporation so organized should purchase from the defendant, Chas. T. Mason, all of the manufactured stock and raw material on hand, and should take a lease of the buildings and machinery occupied and used by him for a term of years; and in pursuance of said agreement the plaintiff corporation was duly organized under the laws of the State of South Carolina under the corporate name of Telephone Manufacturing Company of Sumter, S. C.; the defendants, Chas. T. Mason and F. C. Manning, and the said Peter Blow and Hiram J. Grover, jr., being elected the board of directors of said corporation, and the full amount of said capital stock was subscribed and paid into said company, and the contract with reference to the purchase of the stock and material and the lease of said building and machinery was carried into execution.
“6. That by the further terms of said agreement, the said Chas. T. Mason was to be elected -general manager and electrical expert of said company, and was to- have full charge of the manufacturing department of said corporation’s business, and to be charged with the duty of providing, at the expense of the corporation, all materials, tools,-machinery and labor connected with said department; and for the first year to be paid a salary of $ioo per month, the amount of said salary being- fixed at his own suggestion; and the said Peter E. Blow was to be elected president of said corporation and to have charge of the financial part thereof, but was to manage-the same from his office in the city of Knoxville, Tenn., upon such information as was to be derived by him from the other officers and employees of the said corporation; his salary, at his own suggestion, being fixed at the sum of $50 per month; and it was understood and agreed that the said Chas. T. Mason, as such general manager and electrical expert, should exert his energies and exercise his inventive genius for the successful operation of the said department and for the improvement of the telephones and *323 other electrical apparatus to be manufactured by said corporation, it being well known that the said Chas. T. Mason was possessed of considerable inventive genius, and his reputation as such being a part of the consideration which moved the said Peter E. Blow to enter into the said agreement; and upon the organization of said corporation, at the first meeting of the board of directors, held at the office of the said corporation in the city -of Sumter, S. C., the said Peter E. Blow was elected president, and the said Chas. T. Mason was elected general manager and electrical expert of said corporation, with the duties it had been- understood and agreed upon should be imposed upon the said respective officers, and the salaries of the said defendant, Chas. T. Mason, and the said Peter E. Blow were paid during the first year at the rate fixed upon in the said agreement; and after the first year the salary of the defendant, Chas. T. Mason, at his solicitation and by mutual agreement between the said Peter E. Blow and Chas. T. Mason, but without formal action of the board of directors, was raised to the sum of $2,000 per annum, and the salary of the said Peter E. Blow remaining at the sum of $50 per month.
“7. That the business of the said corporation so organized, prospered and developed so rapidly that it soon became apparent that the capital of'the corporation was not sufficient to enable it to conveniently handle its business, and the said Peter E. Blow furnished the necessary funds to carry on the same, and has continued to do so up to the present time, the profits of the corporation from the said business steadily increasing from year to year, but went, by mutual agreement, to the increase of the available funds of the corporation for the handling of its said business.
“8. That at the time of the organization of the said corporation, the defendant, P. C. Manning, was employed as traveling agent of said corporation for the sale of its telephone and other electrical appliances, a part of his duties being to gather information for said corporation as to the names and addresses of the different telephone exchanges *324

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.E. 322, 63 S.C. 313, 1902 S.C. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/telephone-manufacturing-co-v-sumter-telephone-manufacturing-co-sc-1902.