174 Ga. 244 | Ga. | 1932
Lead Opinion
1. Where it is alleged in an equitable cross-action that a defendant purchased “the capital stock and assets” of a named business, demurrers based upon the ground that the purchase of the capital stock necessarily included all the assets of the corporation were properly overruled. It plainly appears from the cross-action in this case that the corporation the shares of stock and assets of which were the subject of an agreement of purchase and sale between certain individuals (who happened to constitute all of the stockholders of the corporation) was in no way involved. No corporate action was sought or obtained. The sale of the shares of capital stock theretofore belonging to each of the sellers was made directly to the purchaser, who was the only other shareholder in the corporation. The vendors, contemporaneously and in connection with the sale of their stock, also guaranteed the existence of certain physical property denominated as assets, and guaranteed the delivery of this property, consisting of cash in bank, lumber, and a certain sawmill outfit remote from the situs of the lumber plant of the corporation. It is alleged that upon the consideration of the delivery of this transient and variable physical property, the character, quantity and value of which the vendors warranted, the vendee delivered, not to the corporation, but to these individuals, the promissory note which is the basis of this suit. The defendant’s answer was based upon a partial failure of consideration, in consequence of the breach of the contract by the payees of the note, and it was contended that the liability for this breach extended to the plaintiff, because it was not a bona fide purchaser, in that the plaintiff purchased the note when there had been default and two past due-installments were unpaid.
2. A corporation, either by corporate action or by the unanimous consent of the stockholders and directors of the corporation, may sell all or any part of the corporate property. A corporation may lawfully sell property which for convenience and purposes of identification may be denominated as “assets,” for the reason that this property is not essential to the conduct and carrying on of the business for which the corporation was chartered; and under like circumstances a corporation, when it has no creditors or the rights of creditors are not affected, may sell its entire property and cease to operate.
3. In a ease where all the stockholders except one agree to sell their
4. In the circumstances just stated it is not unlawful for the contracting parties, comprising all of the stockholders of the corporation, to agree and determine among themselves the nature, quantity, and value of the corporation’s property essential to its operation or which has been contributed to the original capital stock, and likewise to determine what property, if any, consists of profits or property purchased subsequently to the incorporation, which may properly be denominated as assets, aside from the par value of the shares of stock in the corporation.
5. The court did not err in its judgment overruling the demurrers to the cross-action of the defendant.
6. Under the facts of this case the defendant was entitled to set up, by way of recoupment, damages accruing from the breach, by the payees named in the note sued on, of the contract to deliver named articles of personal property, including a stated amount of cash in bank, as set forth in the cross-action. These breadles of contract resulted in a partial failure of consideration of the note which was the'basis of plaintiff’s suit.
7. The evidence authorized the verdict. The assignments of error contained in the five special grounds of the motion for new trial, based upon rulings of the court on admissibility of evidence, are without merit. The court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed,.
Rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing.
In this case the action was a suit upon a note executed and delivered by McBrayer, payable to T. B. Lovelace, T. P. Lovelace, B. A. Lovelace, and W. B. Whiteside, which had