University of Tennessee v. Memphis Hospital College Building Co.

6 Tenn. App. 131, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 6 Tenn. App. 131 (University of Tennessee v. Memphis Hospital College Building Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
University of Tennessee v. Memphis Hospital College Building Co., 6 Tenn. App. 131, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

ITEISKELL, J.

This is a bill filed on June 23, 1925, by the University of Tennessee, seeking the specific performance of a contract entered into by the University with the Memphis Hospital Medical College Building Company, under. date of June 1, 1913, whereby the University leased for twenty years a lot and building on Union avenue, in the City of Memphis, Tennessee, known as Rogers Hall. The lease contract contains a clause giving the University the right to purchase the property for a certain sum, at any time during the term of the lease. Before this bill was filed the University tendered the amount stipulated and the tender was refused by the defendant company. The Bank of Commerce & Trust Company was made defendant also by reason of being trustee, under a deed of trust to se *133 cure a bond issue on said property, but tlie Building Company will be treated as the sole defendant.

The defendant Building Company filed an answer denying that the purported lease contract was validly executed, maintaining that same was not authorized by the stockholders or directors of the Building Company, who had no knowledge thereof, and that the Building Company is bound neither by authorization nor estoppel. The answer further contends that the Building Company repudiated any obligation under the lease contract in the year 1920, and that the University is guilty of laches for not having sooner filed this suit; also that the leased premises have now enhanced five times the amount stipulated in the option clause of the lease contract, and that the enforcement of the contract would be unconscionable and unjust. In addition to .its answer, the Building Company filed a cross-bill expressly repudiating any obligation under the lease contract and praying the court to award it a judgment for rent against the University on the basis of $12,000 per year. The court below found for the complainant in all respects and entered a decree for the specific performance of the contract, from which the Building Company has appealed.

The Chancellor’s finding of facts gives a full and detailed history of the events leading up to the alleged lease and option upon which this suit is based and the circumstances surrounding the execution thereof. At the same time the findings decide the issues of fact in dispute between the parties. Many of the facts set out are not controverted. The findings are satisfactory to the complainant. The defendant has in its assignments of error addressed many objections to the findings of the Chancellor, but even then the .history of the controversy as given in the findings is for the most part admitted by both parties. ¥e can, therefore, see no better way to present this ease for discussion than to set out the Chancellor’s findings and then take up the assignments. The findings will be given in full. They are as follows:

“(1) The Memphis Hospital Medical College was a proprietary medical school in the City of Memphis. By ‘proprietary’ is meant a school or college owned by the members of the faculty. In the year 1901 the faculty of the College conceived the idea of erecting a new school building and proceeded to incorporate a Building Company, under the laws of the State of Tennessee. The organization meeting of the corporation, named ‘Memphis Hospital College Building Company’ was held on January 19, 1901. At this same meeting the board of directors authorized the purchase of the lot on Union avenue near Marshall avenue, here in controversy, at the price of $9,900. All of the stock in the corporation was owned by the faculty of the College. The board of. directors of the Building Company, and the *134 stockholders, authorized and provided for the issuance of $60,000 of bonds of the company, and the execution of a trust deed on said property to secure the payment of the bonds. The capital stock of the Building Company was $40,000. This, with the proceeds of the issue, gave total resource of $100,000 Avith which to pay for the lot and erect the schoolhouse. This improvement cost $82,046. On the completion of the building it was, on March 15, 1902, leased to the Memphis Hospital Medical College for a period of fifty years, at an annual rental of $10,000. At first all of the stock in the Building Company AAas owned by the members of the faculty of the college, later, some of this stock passed into outside hands.
“(2) About the year 1910, the exact time not appearing .in the recoi’d, the educational council of the American Medical Association erected certain standards and according to these standards classified colleges as ‘A,’ ‘B,’ ‘C.’ It AAms instantly recognized that no college except class ‘A’ could continue to exist. Among the specifications laid down by the educational council was that a certain number of teachers should be employed who Avould devote their entire time to teaching. This would necessitate the payment of relatively large salaries, which no proprietary school, such as the Memphis Hospital Medical College, could afford to pay out of the income derived- from fees obtained from students. It was plain that no medical college could continue without an encloAvment or State aid. The proprietary school AAras a vanishing type in 1912 and 1913. Even piior to this classification of medical colleges by the American Medical Association, the number of students attending the Memphis Hospital Medical College had steadily declined. The requirement that students be graduates of high school lessened the attendance. Then came a lival school, called the College of Physicians and Surgeons in Memphis, and the field was too small for tAAro medical schools. Things looked dark and gloomy for the Memphis Hospital Medical College in 1912, and for some time prior thereto. On May 22, 1911, the Building Company reduced the_ annual rental of the school building to $8,000.
“The University of Tennessee had maintained a medical school at Nashville, and it had proven a failure. The trustees of the University thought of moving its medical department to Knoxville, but, on reflection thought it well to locate iix Memphis. So it was that in the year 1911 the University purchased and took over the College of Physicians and Surgeons, at Memphis. This added to the desperate strait in which the Memphis Hospital Medical College found itself. In this situation negotiations wei'e opened by the College looking to the amalgamation of the College Avith the University of Tennessee. During the summer of 1912, Dr. Brown Ayi’es made a specific offer of amalgamation. This offer did not meet with *135 the approval of the faculty of the Memphis Hospital Medical College and was declined. Dr. W. B. Rogers, a leading physician in the City of Mempliis, was the leading spirit in the College and was president of the Building Company. He was ill and could not undertake to do anything personally looking towards renewed negotiations with the University. Dr. B. F. Turner, a member of the faculty of the College, and a stockholder in the Building Company, went to Dr. Rogers and asked him if nothing further could be done. Dr. Rogers was willing for Dr. Turner to make a try, and shortly thereafter Dr. Turner got in touch with Dr. Brown Ayres and met him in Jackson, Tennessee, and there obtained Dr. Ayres’ consent to meet Dr. Rogers for a further conference looking towards amalgamation. Dr. Ayres and Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Tenn. App. 131, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/university-of-tennessee-v-memphis-hospital-college-building-co-tennctapp-1927.