Acuff v. J. Albert Robbins Co.

1 Tenn. App. 708, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 11, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Tenn. App. 708 (Acuff v. J. Albert Robbins 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
Acuff v. J. Albert Robbins Co., 1 Tenn. App. 708, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 11 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

J. Albert Robbins was for a number of years engaged as an insurance agent and realtor carrying on an extensive business in Knoxville and Knox county. He found that a personal operation of the business hampered him, so he organized the Knoxville Trust Company, in September, 1921, and carried on his real estate and loan business through this corporation, retaining his insurance business for a while. The insurance business was *709 profitable, lie held the agency with the right to write insurance for many responsible insurance companies, and this agency was a thing of value. lie decided to sell his insurance business to the Knoxville Trust Company, of which he was the president and controlling spirit, and the sale took place about January the 1st, 1923, the consideration passing from the trust company to Robbins was $3500. About three months after this transfer the-Knoxville Trust Company discovered it could not legally carry on an insurance business and in April, 1923, it promoted and organized a corporation to carry on this insurance business under the style of J. Albert Robbins Company, Inc., and after the organization the trust company transferred to the new company the ássets and business purchased by it from J. Albert Robbins, and in consideration of the same the trust company received all the capital stock of the new company. The purpose of the organization of the J. Albert Robbins Company, which will hereafter be referred to as the Robbins Company, was to' provide a legal way for the. trust company to carry on an insurance business, the trust company purchasing all the stock, whether or not this purpose was accomplished it is not necessary to decide, as no ultra vires act of the corporation is at issue and involved in this laiv suit.. The officers and directors of both corporations were the same until October the first, 1923, when Mr. John N. A cuff was engaged as manager of the Robbins Company. No other changes were made.

On December 3. 1923, the Robbins Company borrowed from the Holston National Bank the sum of $2500, which money was credited to the account of Robbins Company, and used by it. The note ivas renewed from time to time until September 27, 1924. On this date, which was the date of maturity, Mr. Robbins, president and active head of both the companies, ivas called into conference by Mr. Gaut, president of the Holston National Bank, who knew nothing of the original loans and wanted to make inquiry of the Robbins Company. At the conference Mr. Robbins told. Mr. Gaut the facts as here detailed with reference to the purpose and organization of the Robbins Company, stating the Robbins Company was in reality the trust company. Mr. Gaut then said :

“I asked him then, ‘Why does not the Knoxville Trust Company borrow this money, why does the J. Albert Robbins Company put in its note? ‘Well,’ Mr. Robbins said, ‘it was only for convenience, just to keep the two accounts separate.’ Mr. Gaut said: ‘What objection is there to the Knoxville Trust Company giving its note?’ Robbins said, ‘Absolutely none.’ Mr. Gaut then said, ‘I said I would renew it if he would make it that way, and he said he ivould. Now, about the bookkeeping in regard to changing from the J. Albert Robbins Company *710 to the Knoxville Trust Company, I had no concern with that, but he said it was all one and the same thing.’ ”

When this was agreed upon the trust company, through its president, executed its notes for a loan of $2500, drew a check on its account and paid the Robbins Company _ note, at the same time making an entry on the books of the trust company of a charge or loan against the Robbins Company and in favor of the trust company, and also receiving as evidence of said loan the note of the Robbins Company, executed by its president for a like sum, which note it carried as an asset.

The notes were to run ninety days, and before the expiration of this time both the Knoxville Trust Company and the J. Albert Robbins Company failed and each was in the hands of a receiver. At the date of the failure of the Robbins Company it had on deposit in the Holston National Bank $1,117.55. The receiver of the Robbins Company drew a check in the name of the company and in favor of himself for this fund and re-deposited it in the same bank to his account as receiver. A few days thereafter the bank made an entry on its books charging the receiver with the said sum of $1,117.55 and re-entering it in the name of the Robbins Company, and asserting the right of the bank to set it off and apply it against the $2500 note executed by the trust company under the circumstances above mentioned. The affairs of the Robbins Company were being wound up in the chancery court of Knox county under its officer, the receiver, and the Holston National Bank filed a petition in the cause setting out the above facts and asserting the right to appropriate the aforesaid sum. Issue was made and the case was heard upon this branch when the chancellor dismissed the petition and the bank has appealed to this court. The assets of the J. Albert Robbins Company are insufficient to pay its creditors in full.

As we understand this case there are two primary questions made on behalf of the petitioner, under either of which if true it seeks to appropriate this fund; they are stated as follows:

1. Was the execution of the note by the trust company a payment of the note of like amount of the Robbins Company? If not a payment the bank is entitled to apply the funds of the Robbins Company as a payment on the Robbins Company’s indebtedness to it.

2. Is the Robbins Company a “dummy” corporation, dominated and controlled by the trust company, thereby making the trust company liable for the debts and obligations of the Robbins Company, and if so, does it then follow that the assets and funds of the Robbins Company are the assets and funds of the trust company and subject to be set off against the debts of the trust company?

*711 The receiver, replying to the first proposition above, ■ states that the execution of the new note by the trust company and the payment by it of the Robbins Company’s note, and the execution by the Robbins Company of a note of like amount to the trust company was in law a payment in satisfaction of the Robbins Company note held by the bank, and was so intended. And further, if this were not the case then, when the bank honored the check of the receiver, drawn in his favor, on the Robbins Company’s funds and credited the said funds to the account of the receiver the bank then lost the right to make the application a set-off, the funds having passed into the custody of the court, and the mistake in payment being a mistake of law and not of fact.

In answer to the second proposition he states that the creditors of the Robbins Company stand upon higher grounds and possess greater equities than the bank, and a court of equity will not invoke its aid in behalf of the bank to the detriment of the Robbins Company’s creditors.

The rule of law applicable to the execution of a note in lieu of a prior obligation and the discharge of said obligation is stated as follows:

“Whether the discount'of a note by a bank be in renewal of a prior note or an original transaction, depends upon the intention of the parties, to be gathered from the circumstances of the discount and the previous dealings of the parties.” Gates v.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. App. 708, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acuff-v-j-albert-robbins-co-tennctapp-1926.