American National Bank v. Wade

12 Tenn. App. 367, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 77
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 1, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Tenn. App. 367 (American National Bank v. Wade) 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
American National Bank v. Wade, 12 Tenn. App. 367, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 77 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

PIEISKELL, J.

The bill of complaint in this cause was filed in the Chancery Court of Obion County, Tennessee, on June 13, 1927, by the American National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee, against S. T. Wade, W. M. Warterfield, individually and as trustee, Reagor Motlow as trustee, The Union Joint Stock Land Bank of Louisville, Ky., and Walter Howell, trustee, the purpose and aim of which bill was to have the Chancellor declare that the release by W. M. War-terfield of the vendor’s lien upon the tract of land described in the bill to secure the series of ten notes described in the deed from W. M. Warterfield and wife to S. T. Wade was null and void and ineffective in so far as the last seven notes of said series held by complainant were concerned. The enforcement of the vendor’s lien by a judgment upon said seven notes and the sale of the land was the incidental relief sought by complainant.

- An answer was filed by W. M. Warterfield and an answer and cross-bill was filed by The Union Joint Stock Land Bank and Walter Howell, Trustee, the defense made being that at the time of the release of said lien Warterfield was in possession of the notes by consent of the American National Bank with authority to release the lien thereof so as to permit The Union Joint Stock Land Bank to make a loan upon said tract of land to retire the matured encumbrance superior to the series of vendor’s lien notes and other pressing claims against the property. The Union Joint Stock Land Bank and Walter Howell, Trustee, in their cross-bill sought to have a decree of the Court declaring their deed of trust to be a first lien upon said tract of land and ordering the land sold under *369 the terms of said deed of trust to satisfy the indebtedness secured therein, the indebtedness having matured by a default in the payment of a part thereof as provided in said deed of trust.

Issue having been joined along the line above mentioned, proof was taken and the case heard before the Chancellor, when the Chancellor adjudged and decreed that said release in so far as it affected the lien of the last seven of said series of vendor’s lien notes held by complainant was null and void. The decree awarded complainant a personal judgment on the notes against Wade and Warterfield and ordered a sale of the land'under the vendor’s lien. Under this decree the Chancellor held that the Union Joint Stock Land Bank was subrogated to a certain extent by virtue of the payment of the first lien, certain taxes and a note upon which the first three notes of the series of vendor’s lien notes were pledged.

The defendant, Union Joint Stock Land Bank of Louisville, Ky., excepted tO' this action of the court and prayed an appeal therefrom to this Court. The appeal was granted upon condition that a good and sufficient appeal bond be given in double the amount of_the personal judgment recovered by complainant on the notes against Wade and Warterfield, the Chancellor-being of the opinion that the only appeal he could grant would be a general appeal from the whole decree.

Feeling that it could not afford to perfect its appeal under' these circumstances, The Union Joint Stock Land Bank has brought this cause before this court by petition for writ of error, in order that it may present the record for review, and has assigned errors.

On February 27, 1920, W. M. Warterfield and wife, Jennie War-terfield, conveyed to S. T. Wade the lands described in the record for and in consideration of $1,750 cash, the assumption of the payment of a note for $1,462.50 executed by W. M. Warterfield to W. M. Btalcup, then held by E. H. Lannom, Administrator of the estate of D. M. Pearce, deceased, which was a first lien upon 26 acres of the land conveyed, and the execution and delivery by the said Wade to the said Warterfield of nine notes in the sum of $1,272.12 each- and one note in the sum of $1,272.14, due and pay-able serially in from one to ten years after date, with a provision contained therein that default in the payment of any one of the series of notes should make the entire series due and payable, an express vendor’s lien being retained in the deed to secure the payment of this series of notes as well as the Stalcup note. This deed was recorded in the Register’s office of Obion County, Tennessee, in Book 8 Q at pages 495-496.

At the time of the above-mentioned conveyance W. M. Warter-field was in the grain business in Nashville, Tennessee, operating as the Neil-Shoffner Grain Company. The banking business of the *370 firm was being handled through the Cumberland Valley National Bank which was later consolidated and merged into the American National Bank, the complainant below. At this time the Neil-Shoffner Grain Company was in good shape financially. However, for the protection of the firm’s account, W. M. Warterfield voluntarily deposited with the Cumberland Valley National Bank as general collateral, the entire series of S. T. Wade vendor lien notes as well as other notes including nine notes in the sum of $800 each and one note for $866.28 executed by Bruce Kirkman and payable to the order of Warterfield secured by a vendor’s lien retained in a deed from W. M. Warterfield and wife to- Bruce Kirkman covering certain lands adjoining the S. T. Wade land in Obion County, Tennessee, these notes being of date February 27, 1920, the date of the deed, and being inferior and subordinate to a prior encumbrance in the sum -of $4,000 held at the time by the estate of IT. A. Compton.

At some later date the first four of the Wade notes were returned by the Cumberland Valley National Bank to Warterfield. However, it appears that the fourth of the series was again deposited as collateral with said bank.

In 1920 or 1921, the Cumberland Valley National Bank was merged with the American National Bank which took over its business and securities. The affairs of the Neil-Shoffner Grain Co., prosperous at first, became involved, owing to losses sustained, and Warterfield became considerably indebted to the complainant bank. During this time, say 1921 to 1923, Wade and Kirkman were having a difficult time with their farming operations, neither being able to pay the first mortgages on their lands or the vendor lien notes. They were being hard pressed to be able to pay the taxes on their land and the interest on the first mortgages. The situation- did not suit, the holders of the first mortgages inasmuch as both notes were held by the administrators of estates who were anxious to make settlements. They were accordingly insisting upon the payment of these first mortgages.

In the winter and spring of 1922 and 1923, Wade and Kirkman were behind with interest on their notes and with taxes on the land and had failed to pay the matured notes. The holders of the first liens were pressing for payment. Tn fact, E. H. Lannom, administrator of D. M. Pearce who held the Stalcup note, the first lien on the Wade land, had filed a bill to foreclose, in November, 1922.

The three Wade notes withdrawn by Warterfield had been hypoth-ecated with the Third National Bank of Union City to secure a note, for $2500 executed by Warterfield and while this note had been renewed, yet the holder was pressing for payment.

*371 This was the situation in the spring of 1923 just preceding the release by Warterfield of the lien of all these notes of Wade and Kirkman, on May 12, 1923.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

W. C. Early Co. v. Williams
135 Tenn. 249 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Tenn. App. 367, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-national-bank-v-wade-tennctapp-1930.