Allgood v. First Nat. Bank of Piedmont

139 So. 100, 224 Ala. 169, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 44
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 17, 1931
Docket7 Div. 7.
StatusPublished

This text of 139 So. 100 (Allgood v. First Nat. Bank of Piedmont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allgood v. First Nat. Bank of Piedmont, 139 So. 100, 224 Ala. 169, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 44 (Ala. 1931).

Opinions

On September 28, 1925, A. S. Edwards, who was then engaged in the business of selling automobiles, trucks, tractors, and their parts and accessories at Piedmont, Ala., became indebted to J. P. Allgood, Jr., now deceased, in the sum of $4,500, for money advanced to said Edwards and used in said business, and, to secure the payment of the same, executed to said Allgood a mortgage covering office fixtures, machinery, and tools, not constituting a part of his stock kept for sale, and also his "entire stock of Ford automobile and Fordson tractor parts now (then) situated in the parts stock room," then occupied and used by the mortgagor, and, as the mortgage on its face shows, constituting a part of his stock in trade.

The mortgage stipulated: "It is understood and agreed that the mortgagor herein shall keep said stock up to at least the net amount of $3,000.00, invoice price and may sell such Ford Automobile and Fordson Tractor parts out of his stock in the usual course of his business, and apply the receipts of such sales in the usual course of his business to the indebtedness of said business, except that the sum of $200.00, Two Hundred Dollars, out of such proceeds shall be retained for and paid to the mortgagee herein every month. The first payment in said amount of $200.00 to be made on the first day of November, 1925, and continue until the entire indebtedness is paid."

Payments were made under this agreement from time to time up to October 8, 1929, reducing the indebtedness to approximately $2,750, including interest.

Allgood's mortgage, soon after its execution, was duly filed for record, and recorded in the probate office of Calhoun county, Ala.

Some time before this controversy arose, Allgood died, leaving as the only distributees of his estate his wife and minor child, Joseph Allgood.

From about the 3d of April, 1925, said Edwards occupied a building belonging to the appellee, First National Bank of Piedmont, under a lease at a rental of $75 per month, and on October 8, 1929, Edwards was in arrears in the payment of rent for the months of July, August, and September, 1929.

From time to time the First National Bank of Piedmont advanced to Edwards money on notes and mortgages covering automobiles, constituting in part his stock in trade, and in this way Edwards became indebted to the bank in the sum of about $4,800, with the arrangement that, when automobiles covered by such mortgages were sold, the proceeds or a part thereof were to be applied to the indebtedness due from Edwards to the bank. These mortgages, as a rule, were withheld from record, and the last, which was subsisting at the time Edwards went out of business, was not recorded until the 9th day of October, 1929. *Page 171

On October 8th the directors of the bank discovered that Edwards was insolvent and in a failing condition, and the evidence goes to show that Sharp, the cashier of the bank, had previous notice or knowledge of such insolvency. Some of the directors, in the absence of Edwards and without his knowledge or consent, went to his place of business, directed his manager in charge to lock the doors through which automobiles were moved in and out of said building, and not to allow any of said automobiles to be moved therefrom, and on the following day Haslam, one of the directors, tagged all the automobiles in stock as property of the bank. This was done, so far as the evidence shows, without the authority or consent of Edwards. On the same day that the automobiles were so tagged by the officer of the bank, Mrs. Allgood, the appellant, who had been authorized to do so by Edwards, placed cards or tags on all the bins containing Ford automobile parts and Fordson tractor parts as her property, and had a complete inventory made thereof, and at this time, as the evidence shows, some of the bank directors were present and at least acquiesced in if they did not expressly consent thereto.

After Edwards had authorized Mrs. Allgood to take possession of the property, he executed and delivered to the bank a bill of sale to the automobiles claimed by the bank, and the automobile parts and accessories, stipulating therein that it was "subject to the landlord's lien for rent and other liensnow existing on the same." (Italics supplied.)

Thereafter the bank assumed possession of the automobiles and sold some of them, and retained possession of the others as its property, realizing on those sold several hundred dollars, but not sufficient to satisfy its debt due from Edwards.

The business of Edwards was purchased and taken over by the Evans Motor Company, a corporation formed for that purpose, and the automobile parts were sold to it through a joint bill of sale given by Mrs. Allgood and the bank, with a written agreement of the parties, Mrs. Allgood and the bank, that the proceeds thereof should be deposited in the First National Bank of Anniston and held by it until the right thereto was determined by agreement between Mrs. Allgood and the Piedmont bank, and, if they could not agree, until their rights thereto were adjudicated.

Thereafter, without any effort, so far as the evidence shows, to reach an agreement as to their rights, the First National Bank of Piedmont filed the bill in this case against Mrs. Allgood and the First National Bank of Anniston, claiming ownership of the money under the bill of sale given by Edwards, and alleging in the bill that the automobile parts were conveyed to it "for a valuable consideration."

After the filling of the bill, Edwards and Joseph Allgood, the minor, were brought in as parties, and the minor was represented by a guardian ad litem appointed by the court.

The case was thereafter brought to final hearing, and on submission the circuit court decreed that the complainant, First National Bank of Piedmont, was entitled to the proceeds of the sale in the hands of the First National Bank of Anniston, allowed the complainant solicitor's fee for filing and prosecuting the bill, and taxed the respondent, Mrs. Allgood, with the costs of the suit.

The evidence shows without dispute that the indebtedness due to Mrs. Allgood and her minor child was bona fide, that, at the time the mortgage was given to Allgood, Edwards was not insolvent, and that there was no actual fraud in the transaction culminating in the execution of the mortgage.

There is no evidence that there was any consideration passing to Edwards for the execution of said bill of sale, that any credit was given on his indebtedness to the bank, or that any part of said indebtedness was credited or abated. In fact, the complainant proved and claimed as due the full amount of its indebtedness less the proceeds of the sale of the automobiles. Therefore said bill of sale was, as to the rights of the distributees of Allgood, a mere nudum pactum. Richardson Bros. Co. v. Fields, 124 Ala. 535, 26 So. 981. Moreover, the bill of sale under which appellee claims excepted existing liens on the property covered by it.

The effect of the transaction between Mrs. Allgood and Edwards prior to the execution of the bill of sale to the Bank of Piedmont, followed by the assumption of actual possession of the property by Mrs. Allgood, operated as a pledge of the property to the payment of the valid pre-existing debt due to her and her minor son, and this was a sufficient consideration to support said pledge. B. C. Bynum Merc. Co. et al. v. First Nat'l of Anniston, 187 Ala. 281, 65 So. 815; Alabama State Bank v. Barnes, 82 Ala. 607, 2 So. 349; American Pig Iron Storage Warrant Co. v. German, Ex'x, 126 Ala. 194

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Related

Means v. Bank of Randall
146 U.S. 620 (Supreme Court, 1892)
Alabama State Bank v. Barnes
82 Ala. 607 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1886)
Richardson Bros. & Co. v. Fields
124 Ala. 535 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1899)
American Pig Iron Storage Warrant Co. v. German
126 Ala. 194 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1899)
B. C. Bynum Mercantile Co. v. First National Bank
65 So. 815 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1914)

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Bluebook (online)
139 So. 100, 224 Ala. 169, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allgood-v-first-nat-bank-of-piedmont-ala-1931.