Atlanta Nat. Bank v. Four States Grocer Co.

135 S.W. 1135, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 160
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 135 S.W. 1135 (Atlanta Nat. Bank v. Four States Grocer Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlanta Nat. Bank v. Four States Grocer Co., 135 S.W. 1135, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 160 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinions

8224 Writ of error denied by Supreme Court April 26, 1911. Appellants, the Atlantic National Bank, the First National Bank of Atlanta, and the Atlanta Lumber Company, and appellee, the Four States Grocer Company, are creditors of the Alamo Mills, a corporation, whose property was placed in the hands of a receiver by an order of the district court of Cass county made July 22, 1909. By an intervention in the receivership suit appellee obtained a judgment against said Alamo Mills for the sum of $7,828.48, due on certain promissory notes, and for the sum of $3,667.37, claimed by the grocer company to be due it on an open account against said mill company. The $3,667.37 was adjudged to be a lien on certain lumber belonging to the mill company, and to be entitled to priority of payment, as against appellants' claims, out of the proceeds of a sale of said lumber made by the receiver after he took charge of the property of said mill company. As found by the trial court, the facts were: Prior to October 16, 1908, the mill company owned a sawmill plant, situated near Atlanta, but owned no timber accessible to its mill. It wished to remove its plant to a site near Queen City, where it owned timber. It was indebted to appellants and appellee in sums it was unable to pay, but was not indebted to any one else. On said October 16, 1908, said mill company and appellants and appellee entered into an agreement as follows: "It is agreed: First. That each and all of the above-named creditors of said Alamo Mills agree to extend the time of payment of their respective debts against the said Alamo Mills for a period of four months from this date, so as to enable said Alamo Mills to move its mill and put same in proper condition for operation. Second. Now if at the expiration of said four *Page 1136 months said Alamo Mills, from any providential or unavoidable hindrance, is unable to begin the liquidation of its said indebtedness, then and in that event we agree to extend the payment of said indebtedness for such reasonable additional time as may be necessary to enable said Alamo Mills to meet and pay off its said indebtedness to said creditors. Third. It is further agreed and understood that said Alamo Mills shall not give to any creditor any kind of collateral security for debt without the consent of each and all of the creditors mentioned in this agreement. Fourth. It is further agreed and understood that all money arising from the manufacture and sale of the products of the said Alamo Mills, after deducting all necessary current expenses of operation, shall be prorated between the creditors mentioned in this agreement, in accordance with the amount of their respective debts. Fifth. It is further agreed that, in case the price or demand for lumber should fall off so as to make it apparent that said Alamo Mills could not be successfully operated so as to pay off its said indebtedness, then, in that event, the creditors mentioned in this agreement shall have the right to stop the operation of said Alamo Mills until some further agreement is made for the payment of the indebtedness of said Alamo Mills to the said creditors. The Alamo Mills shall make monthly statements of its affairs and financial condition to said creditors or either one of them." The mill company removed its plant as was contemplated by the parties at the time the agreement was entered into, but for lack of means necessary to pay the expenses thereof was unable to operate the mill. It applied to certain of its said creditors for an advance of funds necessary to pay such expenses, but was refused such an accommodation. Afterward, between the latter part of December, 1908, and the 5th of January, 1909, it applied to appellee for assistance, representing to appellee that it could use goods, wares, and merchandise in paying the expenses of operating the mill. Appellee thereupon proposed to furnish it goods, wares, and merchandise to be so used, if it would secure the payment of the price thereof by a lien on the lumber to be cut by the mill, and agree that the sum to become due it for such goods should be a preference claim, to be first paid by the mill company out of the proceeds of the lumber to be cut by it, This proposition was accepted by the mill company. Thereafterwards appellee, on the faith of the mill company's undertaking, as evidenced by its acceptance of said proposition, furnished it goods, wares, and merchandise aggregating in value the sum of $3,519.77, which were used by said mill company in paying the expenses it incurred in operating said mill, enabling it, when it otherwise could not have done so, to cut 600,000 feet of lumber, which the receiver took possession of and sold, as he was authorized to do by the order appointing him. The proceeds of such sale by the receiver were greatly in excess of the sum due appellee on said account, and were in the possession of the receiver at the time of the trial. The court concluded that appellee had a lien on said lumber for the payment of said account and was entitled to have same paid out of the proceeds of the sale of the lumber before anything was paid on the claims of appellants.

The principal contention made by appellants is that the finding of the trial court that appellee had a lien on the lumber cut by the mill was without evidence to support it. Cavin, appellee's manager, testified: "We agreed to furnish them (the Alamo Mills) goods, provided that we could collect our money before any of the past indebtedness commenced. We were to come in like the balance of the creditors for our notes. But the goods we furnished them were to be paid for first, out of the proceeds of the lumber." Willis, the cashier of the Atlanta National Bank, testified: "I understood an agreement to this effect: Tom Johnston, manager of the Alamo Mills, said, if he could just get some groceries for the men to live on, they were willing to work without any money until after he got started and began shipping lumber so that he could pay and liquidate his labor account first. The Russ Daniel Grocer Company (which afterwards became the Four States Grocer Company by an amendment of its charter, it seems) were also creditors, and he owed them between $4,000 and $5,000, perhaps, at the time. That was on the old score before they moved, at the Piney Grove Church. They owed Daniel, and the Four States Grocer Company, the successor to the Daniel Grocer Company, then said that they would furnish him some groceries and feed for the men, if the other creditors would be willing to let them pay them this current account; that is, after they moved and got started, before they paid anything else. On the old score the Daniel Grocer Company would come in like the balance of us, when they did get the money and prorate it like the other. Well, the creditors, as I understood it, agreed to this proposition. In other words, that the Russ Daniel Grocer Company will, again, now, furnish them some groceries to operate this mill on, and you can pay them this current account for the stuff they furnish you now, until it is all paid, before you pay the balance of the creditors any money; then on the old score, what they owed prior to this, they would come in like the balance of us and be prorated. * * * The First National Bank and the Atlanta National Bank aid the Russ Daniel Grocer Company and the Atlanta Lumber Company were the main creditors. The way I remember it, these creditors were either there or represented there. They agreed to this arrangement; that is, if the *Page 1137 Russ Daniel Grocer Company would take the risk and furnish them they would be paid first. Now that payment was to come from the operation of the mill.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.W. 1135, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlanta-nat-bank-v-four-states-grocer-co-texapp-1911.