Boillin-Harrison Co. v. Keeble

14 Tenn. App. 347, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 46
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 21, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 Tenn. App. 347 (Boillin-Harrison Co. v. Keeble) 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
Boillin-Harrison Co. v. Keeble, 14 Tenn. App. 347, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 46 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

This is a contest between the mortgagee of a crop grown on mortgaged land and the mortgagee of the land, over the tobacco crop which had been severed from the soil by the mortgagor, in possession, after the date of the first advertisement of sale of the land and before the date on which the sale was advertised to be held under foreclosure proceedings.

John Roe, a farmer of Montgomery County, on July 16, 1923, executed a deed of trust to Andrew L. Todd, trustee for the New York Life Insurance Co., of New York City, conveying his farm of 197-J acres to secure the payment of a $14,000 loan, on the amortization plan, extending over a period of thirty-five years, an annual note being due on May 1st of each year in the sum of $’965.72.

■ The deed of trust expressly provided that upon default “the party of the third part (the trustee) is authorized and empowered to enter and take possession of said property and before or after entry to advertise the same. . . .” It also contained the following paragraph :

“Until default shall be made in the payment of any of the sums herein secured, or intended so to be, or in performance of the agreements or obligations herein contained, the said parties of the first part (the mortgagors) shall retain possession, use and enjoyment of said premises and property.”

*349 After the execution of the deed of trust Andrew L. Todd resigned as trustee for the Insurance Company and John Bell Keeble, Jr., was regularly appointed substitute trustee.

From May 1, 1927, to September 24, 1929, the loan was in default for failure to pay all or a part of the amounts due under the deed of trust.

John Roe was indebted to the Hurst-Boillin Co., now the Boillin-Harrison Co., to a considerable extent from 1927 on, and was also indebted to George Fort of Clarksville who held a second mortgage against the land.

In 1927 and 1928 an agreement was entered into between Roe, George Fort, Boillin-Harrison Co. and the New York Life Insurance Co., by which Roe borrowed sufficient money from the Boillin-Har-rison Co.,' securing the indebtedness by a mortgage on his tobacco crop, to make the crop, pay something on his indebtedness to the Boillin-Harrison Co. and pay something on the mortgage to the New York Life Insurance Co. By this arrangement something was paid each year to the New York Life Insurance Co. and the Boillin-Har-rison Co.

George Fort negotiated with the Insurance Company about this arrangement in 1927 and 1928, and the Insurance Company withheld foreclosure proceedings.

In 1929 Roe borrowed $800 from the Boillin-Harrison Co. and executed a mortgage to E. IT. Harrison, trustee for said Company, upon his individual crop of tobacco and his interest in all share crops of tobacco grown on his farm during 1929, to secure the payment of the note of $800, dated June 11, 1929, due January 1, 1930, and to also secure the balance owing complainant on his former indebtedness of $2038.45.

The Boillin-Harrison Co. loaned said $800 to Roe with the express understanding and agreement that it was to be used in raising a cron of tobacco upon said farm and in paying the delinquent portion of Roe’s mortgage indebtedness to the said insurance company. Out of this $800 loan it paid for Roe taxes on said land in the sum of $180 and paid to the Insurance Company $400. This check for $400 was delivered to George Fort to be paid to the Insurance Company.

The Boillin-Harrison Co. was under the impression that Fort would negotiate with the Insurance Company, as in '1927 and 1928, and thought that the acceptance of the $400 bv the Insurance Company indicated that it would not foreclose in 1929.

But some time in May, 1929, negotiations were had between the representative of the Insurance Company and Roe, in which the Company agreed not to foreclose the loan during the year 1929, provided Roe would promptly pay the balance due on the May 1, 1928 *350 installment, approximately $600, and pay tbe delinquent taxes. When the Company received the $400 it informed Roe that he would have to pay an additional $200 by the middle of July in order to avoid foreclosure.

The $200 was not paid. On July 20, 1929, the Trustee declared the whole debt due under the acceleration clause and advertised said land for sale on September 4, 1929, at 12:30, but did not take possession. The advertisements appeared August 5th., 12th., 19th. and 26th.,' 1929;

On September 3, 1929, the Boillin-Harrison Co. filed its original bill against the trustee and the Insurance Company, praying for an injunction to restrain the defendants from selling Roe’s land, and praying that upon a hearing the defendants be enjoined from selling the land under the deed of trust until complainant could enforce its lien upon the crop of tobacco. The bill recited that the Boillin-Harrison Co. had loaned Roe $800 and had taken a mortgage to secure the debt on his 1929 tobacco crop with the understanding that the New York Life Insurance Co. would not foreclose against the property during the year 1929 in order that the Boillin-Harrison Co. might'realize upon the security behind its loan, and further recited that the crop of tobacco was then standing on the land and had not matured sufficiently to be cut, and that it would not be severed prior to the sale, which was set for September 4, T929; and that if the defendant were permitted to proceed to sell said land complainant Would lose its entire debt against Roe. A restraining order was issued and executed upon the trustee. Accordingly the sale was not held on September 4, 1929.

The Insurance Company filed its answer and cross-bill, in which it alleged, among other things, that the chattel mortgage upon the tobacco grown upon the land was subject to all the terms and provisions of the real estate mortgage, etc.; denied that it had made any agreement with anyone not to foreclose the mortgage in 1929; and further alleged that Roe was insolvent, and. that the land would probably not bring at foreclosure sale an amount sufficient to pay the debt of 'the Insurance Company; and prayed that the injunction restraining the sale be dismissed; that an injunction issue to prevent complainants from cutting and disposing of the tobacco crop; that a receiver be appointed to take charge of said crop; that the money realized from the sale of said tobacco crop be awarded cross-complainant; and that cross-complainant be awarded damages for the wrongful issuance of the injunction. Injunction was issued commanding complainant not to cut or interfere with the tobacco crop.

On October 5, 1929, the complainant filed its amended bill, setting out practically the same allegations as the original hill.

*351 The Insurance Company and trustee filed their joint answer to the amended bill, relying upon the same defenses as set out in the original answer.

On October 5, 1929, the complainant filed its answer to the cross-bill, in which it alleged that prior to the filing of its original bill a large and-substantial portion of the tobacco crop had been cut and removed from the land.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Tenn. App. 347, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boillin-harrison-co-v-keeble-tennctapp-1931.