Boyce v. Stanton

83 Tenn. 346
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 83 Tenn. 346 (Boyce v. Stanton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyce v. Stanton, 83 Tenn. 346 (Tenn. 1885).

Opinions

Ing-ersoll, Sp. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court..

The separate cases, almost a hundred in number, in these consolidated causes present, in numerous transcripts, containing many thousands of pages, a manifold and complicated controversy between a vendor and other creditors of an insolvent vendee, and sub-purchasers under him, and the holders of their purchase-money notes, over the titles to and proceeds of the sale of numerous lots in the city of Chattanooga, worth now fully a half million dollars, and all embraced in the boundaries of an original purchase by Stanton from Boyce in the year 1870. Various portions of this so-called Stanton litigation have been before this court, and been adjudicated, during the past twelve years; and in 1880 all the consolidated causes were here on appeal for decision.

The general determination of the court, then, is thus stated:

While we are satisfied the decree of the chancellor is not based upon correct principles, and is not sustained by the record, yet we see enough to satisfy us the merits of the case cannot be attained upon the record as it is at present, and that further inquiry [349]*349must be made; and to that end additional pleadings .and proof thereunder are necessary”: 5 Lea, 432.

The chancellor’s decree, which had declared Boyce’s vendor’s lien satisfied, and also held him to account to attaching creditors for funds of Stanton declared to be in his hands, was therefore, on Boyce’s appeal, reversed, and the causes remanded, to the end that by proper pleadings, amended and supplemental, all the equities of the various parties in interest might be regularly presented for adjudication, and all necessary parties brought before the court, to the end that -complete justice might be done in the premises.

Accordingly, after the remand, various bills, original, amended and supplemental, were filed by numerous parties, creditors, sub-purchasers and holders of their notes. Numerous petitions were also filed by sub-purchasers, .and orders were made thereon. Many mechanics and furnishers, with decreed liens, are also permitted to become parties complainant to the creditors’ bill filed by Crutchfield and others, and to set out in the order, on the minutes of court, as amendment to said bill, their several decrees for recoveries and liens; and the master was ordered to issue, and send out a copy of the same, with the subpoena to answer, as though the same had been embraced in an amended bill regularly filed. Many of these proceedings, and especially the last named, are here earnestly objected to •because of their informality and irregularity; and the objections, if properly made in limine, would probably have been fatal. But where, as is the case in most instances, the defect is formal merely, and the parties [350]*350treated the matters as though they were before the chancellor for adjudication, we have ignored the irregularities and treated the matters' here just as the parties themselves treated them in the court below.

The facts of the case are set forth at length in the opinion of Judge Turney, reported in 5 Lea, 423,. under the style of Alabama v. Stanton, and it is not therefore deemed necessary to repeat them in detail-here. A brief outline must suffice:

In January, 1870, Dr. J. P. Boyce, as executor of Ker Boyce, deceased, sold and gave bond for title to J. C. Stanton for about sixty-nine and a half acres of land, then in the immediate suburbs of Chattanooga at the price of $2,000 per acre, mostly in deferred payments. Stanton immediately proceeded to lay it off into city lots, with streets and alleys, as a part of the city, setting apart about twenty-four acres for the use of the Alabama & Chattanooga Railroad Company, then in process of construction, on which he erected engine-house, depot, shops, etc. He also retained some five or six acres more, on which he erected the Stanton hotel, a livery stable, a post-office, and perhaps other buildings. The most of the remainder he sold in lots to various purchasers, to some giving deeds, to others title bonds; from some receiving cash and others notes, which he negotiated to divers parties. Many purchasers built houses upon their lots, and otherwise improved them.

In 1871, creditors of Stanton began filing bills to attach his interest in the entire purchase. These were soon followed by the bills of mechanics and furnish-[351]*351ers, asserting their statutory liens specifically upo» the hotel property, livery stable, post-office, etc., wherever they had done work or furnished materials. Then came the bill of Boyce, as vendor, to assert his lien upon the whole premises sold to Stanton. In 1873 and 1874, after consolidation, decrees were pronounced declaring the rights, equities and priorities of the various parties, and directing sales for the satisfaction of the prior lien of the vendor, and the subsequent liens of the mechanics and general creditors, but suspending the execution of the order till the decision of a controversy between Boyce, Whitesides and Crutchfield over the purchase-money of the property. Then ensued a long delay, even after the decision of that case, during which Stanton was endeavoring to raise the money to pay off all the debts. To accomplish this, he sold the twenty-four acre railroad lot, once to the receivers of the Alabama & Chattanooga Railroad Company in 1873. But this sale was never completed, nor does it appear ever to have been entirely abandoned or rescinded. Afterward, in 1877, Stanton bought the railroad, and then negotiated both the railroad and lot to one John Swann. To secure the necessary delay he had promised the creditors that the proceeds of this lot should be applied to the payment of debts that were liens on his property. He received most of the purchase-money, and made payments on the vendor’s lien, bought up some of the debts at half-price, and assigned a considerable balance to Boyce, not however as credit on the purchase-money debt, but for Boyce’s own [352]*352personal benefit. Tax-sales and encumbrances also appear to increase the confusion and complications of this case, in which Stanton is the chief actor, and the proceeds of the sale of the twenty-four acre lot is the bone of contention. The common ground occupied by all the pleadings filed since the remand in behalf of sub-purchasers, assignees and creditors of Stanton, is that Boyce’s purchase-money Las been fully paid and his vendor’s lien discharged, and this is the point in the ease first in importance and in difficulty.

The sale was at $2,000 per acre, and it is insisted that, though the tract sold was supposed to contain sixty-nine and a half acres, it was agreed that the exact quantity should be ascertained by survey; and that a survey by Stanton several years after the purchase showed it to contain only about sixty-seven acres, and that the purchase-money should be therefore abated pro tanto. It appears, however, that a survey made about the time of the sale showed sixty-nine and a half acres, and for aught that appears it was as accurate as the later one. Besides the decree of May, 1874, based upon the purchase-money notes of Stanton, fixes the balance due at $122,501.90, and adjudges a recovery for that sum, and a sale of the property to enforce the vendor’s lien. Stanton submitted to this adjudication ; and in all subsequent proceedings it seems to have been acquiesced in and recognized by all parties as correct. We, therefore, regard it as conclusive of the amount of purchase-money then due.

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

Related

Jeff Druek v. Hydrogen Engine Center, Inc.
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2020
Doyle S. Silliman v. City of Memphis
449 S.W.3d 440 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2014)
Neal Lovlace v. Timothy Kevin Copley
418 S.W.3d 1 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2013)
Kimberly M. Henderson v. Gary N. Wilson
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2011
In Re: Estate of James H. Williams
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2003
Bringhurst v. Tual
598 S.W.2d 620 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1980)
Smelcer v. Broyles
465 S.W.2d 355 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1971)
City of Shelbyville v. State Ex Rel. Bedford County
415 S.W.2d 139 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1967)
Kittrelle v. Philsar Development Co.
359 S.W.2d 837 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1962)
Kelly v. Walker
346 S.W.2d 253 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1961)
Clinchfield Stone Co. v. Stone
254 S.W.2d 8 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1952)
Barretville Bank & Trust Co. v. Bolton
187 S.W.2d 306 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Tenn. 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyce-v-stanton-tenn-1885.