Cary-Lombard Lumber Co. v. Thomas

22 S.W. 743, 92 Tenn. 587
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 22 S.W. 743 (Cary-Lombard Lumber Co. v. Thomas) 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
Cary-Lombard Lumber Co. v. Thomas, 22 S.W. 743, 92 Tenn. 587 (Tenn. 1893).

Opinions

Wilkes, J.

Mrs. Blora L. Thomas, a feme covert, was the owner of a lo.t, holding a fee-simple title thereto as her general estate. Desiring to improve it as a home, she, through her husband as her agent, and personally, entered into a contract with one Marcus Miller to build her a dwelling upon the lot at a cost not exceeding $2,000.

[589]*589Miller put up the frame-work of the house, and did some other work upon it, but left it in an unfinished condition, after having drawn $500 of the contract price, and Mrs. Thomas and her husband were compelled to expend very much more than the price agreed upon in order to have the same completed.

The Cary-Lombard Lumber Company furnished material and lumber in the construction of the house, amounting to about $1,249.

The Bluff City Brick Manufacturing Company furnished brick for the house to the amount of about $80.50.

These bills for materials not having been paid, the Bluff City Manufacturing Company gave notice to Mrs. Thomas that it would claim a lien upon the building, and had the same registered. The Cary-Lombard Lumber Company gave notice to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas that it would claim the benefit of the second section of the Act of 1889, providing for the removal of lumber and other materials furnished for buildings upon property belonging to .a married woman, in the event they were not paid for.

Suit was thereafter brought to enforce the liens and remedies given by the Act, and also to hold E. R. Thomas, the husband, personally liable for the debts, upon the ground that Marcus Miller was simply his agent in the purchase of the materials.

On the hearing, the Chancellor was of opinion [590]*590that the proof did not warrant any personal judgment against the husband, and denied that relief, and dismissed the hill as to the husband. He also denied any relief whatever to the Bluff City' Manufacturing Company because of insufficiency of the notice given, hut gave judgment that the Cary-Lombard Lumber Company was entitled to remove from the premises of Mrs. Thomas such property and materials as it had furnished, and as had gone into the construction of the house and had not been paid for, and referred the matter to the Master to report what materials had been so furnished aud used and not paid for, and whether the same could be removed from the premises without serious damage and injury to the remainder of the house.

Pending this inference, the Cary-Lombard Lumber Company and the defendants each appealed, and,’ the bill being dismissed, as to the Bluff City Manufacturing Company, no appeal was prayed by it, so that the only contention and controversy in this Court is between the Cary-Lombard Lumber Company and the defendants.

The lumber companjr insists that the Chancellor erred in not giving judgment in its favor against the husband, E. K. Thomas, and the defendants insist that the Chancellor should not have decreed the removal of any of -the material from the lot or building, and should have granted no relief against the property of Mrs. Thomas.

We have carefully examined the record upon [591]*591the facts of the case. While the evidence is quite conflicting and contradictory, we are of opinion that the weight of the consistent, reliable testimony is very decidedly in favor of the Chancel-' lor’s finding, and we affirm the decree, so far as it declines to hold the husband, E. R. Thomas, individually liable for the debt sued on.

As to the relief sought against the property, it is insisted that there is no sufficient legal proof of the service of the notice required by the second section of the Act of 1889. The notice is copied in the record, together with the indorsements thereon, and it is conceded that it is sufficient in substance and form, but it is contended that there is no legal evidence of its service upon Mrs. Thomas. It is claimed that such a notice is not process, but simply a private paper, and that, in order to prove the service of such notice, the testimony of the party making the service must be taken as the testimony of any other' witness to prove any other fact material to the controversy. In this case the notice was served by a Deputy Sheriff, and his return of service is indorsed upon the notice, and his affidavit, made out of Court and before a Rotary Public, of -the fact of service is also indorsed upon the notice or a paper accompanying it. This, we think, is sufficient. While the affidavit was unnecessary, the ' return of the officer was, in itself, all that was necessary to make legal evidence of service, and has all the verity and effect of such an indorsement upon any [592]*592process. The return of the officer indorsed upon the notice is sufficient proof of service. There is nothing in the case of Bassett & Clapp v. Bertorelli, ante, p. 548, in conflict with this holding.

Again, it is insisted that complainant is not entitled to any relief because it is a foreign corporation, and, at the time the lumber was furnished and contracts entered into, it had not complied with the provisions of the Acts of 1891, Oh. 122, and of the Acts of 1877, Ch. 31, prescribing the terms upon which foreign corporations may transact business in Tennessee.

These Acts require that any foreign corporation, desiring to own property or carry on business in this State, of any kind or character, shall first file in the office of the Secretary of State a copy of its charter, and cause an abstract of the same to be recorded in the office of the Register in each county in which such corporation desires or proposes to carry on its business, or to acquire or own property, as required by Section 2 of Chapter 31 of the Acts of 1877; and it shall be unlawful for any foreign corporation to do or attempt to do any business, or to own or‘to acquire any property in this State, without having first complied with the provisions of the Act, under penalty of a fine of not less than $100 nor more than $500, at the discretion of the jury.

It appears from the record that the charter of the Cary-Lombard Lumber Company was registered in the office of the Secretary of State on the twenty-[593]*593fifth of July, 1891, and an abstract of the same was registered in Shelby County on the twenty-eighth of July, 1891, at 1:45 p.m. It does not appear that such registration was made at any prior dates.

This Act of 1891, Chapter 122, has, by this Court, been held to be a valid and constitutional law. State v. Phœnix Fire Insurance Co., ante, p. 420 (Mol. 21 S. W. Rep., page 893). After this Act went into effect, March 21, 1891, by its terms aud provisions ■ this foreign corporation was not authorized to do any business, or to own any property in Tennessee until the provisions of the Act were complied with. It could, therefore, after that Act was passed, own no property and make no legal contract in Shelby County, where this property was situated, until the abstract or memorandum was recorded in the Register’s office of that county, which, as before stated, was the twenty-eighth of July, 1891. All contracts made by it and all business transacted by it in Shelby County between these dates were illegal, and no rights of property or of action could arise out of the same.

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Bluebook (online)
22 S.W. 743, 92 Tenn. 587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cary-lombard-lumber-co-v-thomas-tenn-1893.