Wood v. Davis (In Re Southeast Community Media, Inc.)

27 B.R. 834, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6749
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 24, 1983
DocketBankruptcy No. 1-81-01204, Adv. No. 1-81-0612
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 27 B.R. 834 (Wood v. Davis (In Re Southeast Community Media, Inc.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Davis (In Re Southeast Community Media, Inc.), 27 B.R. 834, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6749 (Tenn. 1983).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

RALPH H. KELLEY, Bankruptcy Judge.

Southeast Community Media, Incorporated, owned and operated radio station WEDG in Soddy, Tennessee. Before its bankruptcy, the debtor sold the radio sta *836 tion to the defendant, Roberta Davis. In his complaint, the trustee alleged that the sale to Mrs. Davis was an avoidable preferential transfer to the extent the consideration was Mrs. Davis’s cancellation of debts. The trustee also alleged that the transfer was fraudulent because made for an inadequate consideration or with intent to hinder, delay, or defraud the corporation’s creditors.

When Mrs. Davis first became interested in radio station WEDG, George C. Hudson, III, known as Cliff Hudson, was the principal officer and stockholder in the corporation. In transactions between the corporation and Mrs. Davis, Cliff Hudson acted for the corporation. Also involved in the transactions were Mrs. Davis’s son, Robert Davis, who is an attorney, and Mrs. Davis’s husband, Roy Davis.

The testimony at the trial and the accompanying documentary evidence give at best a cloudy and confusing picture of the dealings between Mrs. Davis and Cliff Hudson as to WEDG radio.

Roy and Roberta Davis knew Cliff Hudson before Mrs. Davis became interested in WEDG radio. Hudson had worked at WSIM radio, a station once owned by the Davises (or by Mrs. Davis). In December, 1978, Hudson and Mrs. Davis agreed that she would acquire an interest in the station by buying 50 percent of the stock of the debtor corporation, which owned the radio station. The purchase price was to be $75,-000. The parties at various times said the price was $1,500100 per share. The evidence also indicated that there were 1,000 shares. Obviously the price could not have been $1,500 per share if Mrs. Davis was to acquire 500 shares for $75,000. The defendant’s suggested findings of fact clear up the confusion by pointing out that the price was $1,500 for each one percent of the stock (ten shares).

Mrs. Davis was to pay the purchase price partly in cash and the remainder by assuming part of the debts owed to American National Bank and Lee J. Cooper. The debt to American National Bank arose out of loans made for the operation of the radio station. The debt to Lee J. Cooper arose from Cliff Hudson’s purchase of the radio station from him. Hudson bought the station from Cooper in 1975 for a purchase price of $150,000. The debt to Cooper was secured by a mortgage on the radio station’s property. Mrs. Davis did not assume any of the debt to American National Bank because she did not like the terms offered by the bank. Cliff Hudson testified that after this happened, Mrs. Davis agreed to pay the debt to Lee Cooper.

Mrs. Davis paid about $16,100 in cash and furnished Hudson a car valued at $2,200. About this time Roy Davis wrote a cheek to Cliff Hudson for $2,000.

After the purchase agreement, Mrs. Davis and Hudson agreed that whenever the station did not make enough money to pay operating expenses and debts they would make up the difference by equal contributions. They kept a handwritten record of such contributions for the year 1979. It showed that Mrs. Davis and Hudson each paid about $18,400. The trustee offered into evidence checks written by Roy or Roberta Davis to or for the benefit of WEDG or Southeast Community Media. (Exhs. 10, 11 & 12). The checks written in 1979 and January, 1980, total about $14,000. Mrs. Davis also presented three checks to Pioneer Bank which, she testified, were to repay loans of money put into the station. The checks totaled about $18,000.

Cliff Hudson testified that by February, 1980, Mrs. Davis had acquired 60 percent of the stock of Southeast Community Media. In 1979 Mrs. Davis wrote two checks to Cliff Hudson for $6,000 each, one identified on its face as payment for 5 percent of the stock and the other identified on its face as payment for 4 percent of the stock. At $1,500 for one percent of the stock, $3,000 more was necessary to pay for 10 percent of the stock. Neither party explained when or whether the additional $3,000 was paid.

Mrs. Davis’s son, Robert, represented her in the stock purchases. According to Hudson, Robert Davis had control of the corporation’s minute book after the original purchase agreement was executed and did is *837 sue some stock certificates. Mrs. Davis said that she never received any stock certificates.

After Mrs. Davis’s original agreement to buy 50 percent of the stock, she was vice-president of the corporation. Cliff Hudson was president, and Bob Davis was secretary-treasurer. Mrs. Davis never formally resigned from her position as vice-president.

In December, 1979 or January, 1980, Mrs. Davis discovered that Cliff Hudson had collected some accounts receivable and used the money for personal expenses, rather than depositing it to the radio station’s account. Mrs. Davis decided that she no longer wanted to be in business with Hudson. She testified that she told him she would buy him out or he could buy her out. Hudson didn’t remember Mrs. Davis offering to buy his share of the corporation.

An agreement was reached for Hudson to buy Mrs. Davis’s stock for $56,000. Hudson testified that he had no choice but to agree since Robert Davis and Roy Davis threatened him with criminal prosecution if he did not agree. Hudson testified that he signed a document admitting guilt and delivered it to Robert Davis. The contract of sale provided in Paragraph 6:

Buyer and seller specifically agree and acknowledge that this agreement in all matters pertaining to this sale are subject to Tennessee Law and that this agreement is being executed in Chattanooga, Hamilton County, Tennessee, and agree that these terms are to be met in lieu of criminal prosecution of the buyer by the sellers.

Mrs. Davis testified that she did not threaten to prosecute Hudson and would not have done so because he had a family to support.

The $56,000 price was supposed to repay Mrs. Davis the money she had put into the station from the time of her stock purchase in December, 1978, until the time of the resale to Hudson on February 1,1980. Mrs. Davis’s attorney conceded that they could not substantiate this figure, at least in the sense that they did not have' a detailed accounting of Mrs. Davis’s investment in the station.

Along with the sale contract, Cliff Hudson and others executed a suretyship agreement guaranteeing payment of the debts to the Davises. The agreement and the sale contract each provided that Roberta Davis would retain ownership of her stock until paid in full.

Hudson was to pay $10,000 in cash. To raise this money he sold radio station equipment that was subject to Lee Cooper’s mortgage. Hudson executed a $46,000 promissory note for the balance.

After February, 1980, Mrs. Davis did not take an active part in the management or operation of the radio station until late 1980 or early 1981.

After several months, Hudson defaulted on payments due under the $46,000 note.

During the summer of 1980, Cliff Hudson decided that he should sell the radio station. In June, 1980, Hudson contracted with a broker, C. Alfred Dick, to sell the station.

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Bluebook (online)
27 B.R. 834, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 6749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-davis-in-re-southeast-community-media-inc-tneb-1983.