Anaconda Aluminum Co. v. Sharp

136 So. 2d 585, 243 Miss. 9, 99 A.L.R. 2d 1307, 1962 Miss. LEXIS 308
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1962
Docket42116
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 136 So. 2d 585 (Anaconda Aluminum Co. v. Sharp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anaconda Aluminum Co. v. Sharp, 136 So. 2d 585, 243 Miss. 9, 99 A.L.R. 2d 1307, 1962 Miss. LEXIS 308 (Mich. 1962).

Opinion

*12 Rodgers, J.

The appellee brought an attachment suit in the Chancery Court of Hinds County against Frank J. Byrnes, a nonresident of Mississippi who is domiciled in Dallas, Texas, and who does business under the trade name of “Lone Star Display Company”. Process was had upon the defendant by nonresident publication. The jurisdiction of the court was established by a garnishment in *13 the attachment suit against a resident debtor, to-wit, “The Downtown Jackson Association, Inc.” and a garnishment was served upon the Town of Prentiss, a Mississippi municipality.

The appellee alleged that the defendant Prank J. Byrnes was indebted to the complainant Chester T. Sharp in the sum of $8,965.91, which represents commissions dne to Mr. Sharp as salesman .for the Lone Star Display Company of Christmas decorations to various customers, including the Downtown Jackson Association and the Town of Prentiss. The complainant alleged that the Downtown Jackson Association, Inc., had purchased Christmas decorations but that it still owed the nonresident defendant for this purchase. It was also claimed that the Town of Prentiss owed $645 to the defendant Prank J. Byrnes. Before this case could be tried the Anaconda Aluminum Company obtained permission to file an intervenor, in which it alleged that it was a nonresident corporation domiciled in Kentucky, and that the account due from the Downtown Jackson Association, Inc., hereinafter called the Association, to Prank J. Byrnes had been transferred and assigned to the Anaconda Aluminum Company, hereinafter called the intervenor.

The Association filed its answer to the bill of complaint and admitted that it owed to the defendant Prank J. Byrnes the sum of $5,756.37 and offered to pay this sum into court.

The complainant Chester T. Sharp then filed a motion asking the court to require the intervenor to marshall assets. In this motion the complainant Sharp alleged that before the date shown in the written assignment of the account due by the Association to defendant Byrnes, to-wit, June 27, 1960, defendant Byrnes had verbally assigned the Association’s account to the complainant Sharp. The intervenor denied there was an assignment to the complainant Sharp and denied that *14 it was required to marshall assets. A decree pro confesso was taken against the defendant Frank J. Byrnes fox the amount alleged to be due to the complainant and a decree pro confesso was taken against the Town of Prentiss for the sum due from the Town of Prentiss to Frank J. Byrnes. Thereupon the Town of Prentiss paid into court the sum of $625.

The case was then tried and the Chancellor reserved his ruling on the motion to marshall assets, and also reserved his ruling to the objection of the intervenor to the testimony offered by the complainant Sharp that on June 27, 1960, the Association’s account was verbally assigned to complainant, on the ground of “election of remedies”. The case was tried on the pleadings and the testimony introduced and after the trial the chancellor rendered an opinion in which he concluded that: (1) The defendant Frank J. Byrnes, who is doing business under the trade name of Lone Star Display Company, was indebted to the complainant Chester T. Sharp in the sum of $8,956.91 plus accrued interest; (2) that the complainant should recover from the Town of Prentiss the money due to the defendant Frank J. Byrnes and paid into court by the Town of Prentiss; (3) that the assignment from defendant Byrnes to complainant Sharp of the account due by the Association was a good and valid assignment; (4) that the objection to the testimony with reference to the assignment to Byrnes on the ground of a failure to elect one of two actions should be overruled; (5) that the verbal assignment from defendant Byrnes to complainant Sharp on June 27, 1960, was a lien superior to the lien of the assignment from the defendant Byrnes to the appellant Anaconda Aluminum Company, dated August 2, 1960; and (6) that the complainant Sharp would be permitted to draw the funds paid into court by the Association and the Town of Prentiss upon depositing proper bond.

*15 The Appellant Anaconda Ahiminum Company insists upon appeal that the Chancery Court was in error in holding the verbal assignment from Byrnes to appellee Sharp was superior to the assignment to the appellant because no notice was given to the Association after the verbal assignment was made and because the complainant Sharp was barred from pleading the verbal assignment by the doctrine of “election of remedies” and could not introduce evidence on his alleged claim of a verbal assignment since under the common law he could not file inconsistent pleas. The appellant’s claim that the verbal assignment was invalid is based upon the opinion of the Chancellor in which he said that he took all of the conversations together in reaching his conclusion that there was an assignment, and that thereafter no notice was given to the Association of such an assignment.

The testimony in this case shows that Frank J. Byrnes is the owner of a, company that manufacturers Christmas displays and operates under the name of Lone Star Display Company. Mr. Byrnes employed Chester T. Sharp as a salesman to sell his product to towns and associations desirous of displaying municipal Christmas decorations, and that he became indebted to Mr. Sharp in the sum of $8,965.91 for commissions on sales made by Mr. Sharp. It appears from the evidence that Mr. Byrnes came to Jackson, Mississippi, on the 27th day of June 1960 to talk to the representatives of the Downtown Jackson Association, and to Mr. Sharp. Prior to his visit, on April 6, 1960, the attorney for Mr. Sharp had written to Mr. Lester Wren, the manager for the Downtown Jackson Association, advising him of an agreement between Mr. Sharp and Mr. Byrnes in which it was understood that the check from the Association would be made payable to Mr. Byrnes and Mr. Sharp jointly. At the time that Mr. Byrnes, came to Jackson, Mr. Lester Wren, in the presence of Mr.' Sharp, asked *16 Mr. Byrnes about the letter he had from the attorney and asked him if it were satisfactory for this account to be paid over to Mr. Sharp. After the business was concluded in the office of Mr. Yaughn Watkins, the attorney for Mr. Sharp went with Mr. Sharp and Mr. Byrnes down in the elevator to the lobby of the bank, and while there asked Mr. Byrnes if he assigned the Association account to Mr. Sharp and was advised that he did.

The Chancellor held that these two conversations perfected the verbal assignment. It is the law in this state, and has been for many years, that an assignment of an account can be made verbally. Pass v. McRae, 36 Miss. 143; Shell Petroleum Co. v. Yandell, 172 Miss. 55, 158 So. 787; Tully v. Herring, 44 Miss. 626; Hutchinson v. Simon, 57 Miss. 628; Ashby v. Carr, 40 Miss. 64. Although there is authority to the contrary, our Mississippi Court has planted itself firmly upon the proposition that where there are several parties claiming property in the hands of a third party by virtue of an assignment, the assignee who first brings notice to the attention of the debtor has a prior right, and his lien is superior to assignees who later present assignments.

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Bluebook (online)
136 So. 2d 585, 243 Miss. 9, 99 A.L.R. 2d 1307, 1962 Miss. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anaconda-aluminum-co-v-sharp-miss-1962.