Tri-State Developers, Inc. v. Moore

343 S.W.2d 812, 1961 Ky. LEXIS 436
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 3, 1961
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 343 S.W.2d 812 (Tri-State Developers, Inc. v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tri-State Developers, Inc. v. Moore, 343 S.W.2d 812, 1961 Ky. LEXIS 436 (Ky. 1961).

Opinion

PALMORE, Judge.

Tri-State Developers, Incorporated, a Kentucky corporation, and H. Nick Johnson, its president, appeal from a $10,180.34 judgment entered against them jointly and severally in a suit for breach of contract brought by the appellees, DuRan Moore and Hollie Conley. Trial was had by the court without a jury, and the judgment followed findings of fact in favor of the appel-lees as against Johnson’s version of the events giving rise to the litigation.

In December of 1955 Miners Memorial Hospital Association needed housing for doctors employed at its hospital in Floyd County. Moore and Conley agreed with the Association to acquire and construct on a site at Drift four houses and rent them for this purpose. A representative of the hospital told them he knew of a company at Harlan that dealt in prefabricated homes, and he arranged a conference for them with Johnson. Johnson, a realtor and insurance agent in Harlan, and one Ray Richmond, a sales representative of Lester Brothers, Inc., of Martinsville, Virginia, manufacturer of “Leseo” prefabricated homes, had recently incorporated Tri-State Developers, Inc., for the purpose of dealing in real estate “and constructing homes and business structures for sale, rental or lease.”

Moore and Conley met with Johnson and Richmond in Johnson’s office at Harlan on or about December 24, 1955. After looking over plans and sketches of the various Leseo homes Moore and Conley went with Richmond to see such a house or houses theretofore erected at Cumberland. They tentatively agreed with Richmond on the purchase and construction of four homes, and Richmond arranged to view the proposed building site at Drift within the next few days. Richmond went to Floyd County and inspected the property on December 31, 1955, and at this time, acting for Tri-State, orally agreed to furnish and build the homes for a total consideration of $45,400. Moore and Conley paid $400, the amount necessary to secure the plans from Lester Brothers, Inc., to bind the deal. Richmond next visited Floyd County on January 19, 1956, at which time the contract was reduced to writing.

The contract was a brief document, signed by Moore, Conley, and “Tri-State Developers, Inc., By: Ray Richmond,” in which the obligations of Tri-State were as follows:

“The parties [sic] of the second part hereby agree to construct the said four houses, two of which will be built according to Leseo Plans K-1255 in brick veneer, and the other two said houses to be built according to Leseo Plans C-960 in brick veneer with full size basement, knotty pine panelled rooms to be finished in each of the two basements.
*814 “It is further agreed that the TriState Developers, Inc., will complete said houses on a turn-key job basis, it is further agreed that the said houses, weather conditions permitting will be completed by April 1, 1956, that being the date that the lease of the parties of the first part with the United Mine Workers Hospital Association becomes effective.”

The contract did not specify a time or times for payment, but this is the manner in which it was actually handled: Lester Brothers had to be paid for the “packages” as they were ordered out, and for that purpose Moore and Conley, over the period of January 20 to February 28, 1956, gave to Richmond four bank checks payable to Tri-State in the amounts of $7,255 each, totaling $29,020. Johnson received these payments and submitted the orders to Lester Brothers. Richmond personally supervised the construction project at Drift, and as the labor and other incidental expenses fell due Moore and Conley drew checks in favor of Tri-State, delivering them to Richmond, or, in several instances, made direct payments for labor and materials on Richmond’s approval.

Came the first of April and the houses were, not .finished. Moore and Conley saw -..that the money would run out before the job could be completed. Richmond had faded from the picture. It appears that Lester ' Brothers, who did not approve of their '■ sales representatives’ engaging on the side in the construction business, had learned of his connection with Tri-State and replaced him. Johnson, too, had decided he didn’t want him and, since Richmond had not put any money into the organization either at or since its incorporation, had severed connections with him. In this state of affairs Moore and Conley telephoned Johnson, with whom they had not been in direct contact since the first meeting on December 24, 1955, and advised him that the contract had not been carried out. Johnson denied knowledge of any contract except to furnish the prefabricated “packages” from Lester Brothers, but in a meeting with Moore and Conley at Prestonsburg during the first week of April agreed that he would nevertheless see to it that the job was completed in order that his or Tri-State’s business reputation would not be damaged. On his return to Harlan he executed, unilaterally, a “supplementary agreement” in the name of Tri-State undertaking “to honor and make good” the contract of January 19, 1956, and “to expedíate [sic] the completion of the four dwellings within thirty (3) [sic] working days from this date,” the date being April 7, 1956.

Moore and Conley accepted Johnson’s assurances and permitted him to continue the construction with a new supervisor and a working crew of his own. But on May 15, 1956, the job was still unfinished and the work lagging, and at this time they assumed control of the project and caused it to be completed on or about June 15, 1956. This action followed, and the $10,180.34 judgment represents amounts expended by them over and above the original contract price of $45,400. They were denied recovery of $560 for one month’s lost rents resulting from the delay in completion of the houses.

The personal judgment against Johnson rests on two theories. First, the court found that in the course of his meeting with Moore and Conley early in April of 1956 he gave them his individual assurance that the contract would be carried out, and that Moore and Conley, relying on this, extended the time for completion and desisted from then treating the contract as breached. We think, however, that their silence on receiving the supplemental agreement executed solely by the corporation precludes them from now claiming a reliance on Johnson himself. They are estop-ped to deny that they accepted this agreement, which in turn had the effect of merging whatever may have been the parol understandings leading up to it.

The second ground on which Johnson’s personal liability is predicated is that *815 at the time of conducting the transaction with Moore and Conley the corporation had not complied with KRS 271.095. This statute provides generally that a corporation organized under Chapter 271 shall not incur debts or 'begin the transaction of business until, inter alia, the first board of directors has been elected and the amount of capital with which, according to its articles, it will begin business has been fully paid in; and that if the corporation transacts any business in violation of this injunction the officers who participate in it, together with non-dissenting directors, shall be liable for the resulting debts of the corporation.

Tri-State’s articles of incorporation were executed on October 20, 1955, by H. Nick Johnson, T. R. Richmond, Thos.

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Bluebook (online)
343 S.W.2d 812, 1961 Ky. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tri-state-developers-inc-v-moore-kyctapphigh-1961.