Cherokee Insurance Company v. L. A. Koenenn, Jr., and Holton D. Turnbough v. William E. Seaton and Gladys M. Seaton

536 F.2d 585, 22 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 194, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 7720
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 4, 1976
Docket75-1038
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 536 F.2d 585 (Cherokee Insurance Company v. L. A. Koenenn, Jr., and Holton D. Turnbough v. William E. Seaton and Gladys M. Seaton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherokee Insurance Company v. L. A. Koenenn, Jr., and Holton D. Turnbough v. William E. Seaton and Gladys M. Seaton, 536 F.2d 585, 22 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 194, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 7720 (5th Cir. 1976).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge.

On October 6, 1973, fire completely destroyed the Captain’s Table restaurant of Gulfport, Mississippi. Three insurance companies — Cherokee Insurance Company, Federal Insurance Company, and Fidelity & Casualty Insurance Company — had issued a total of $30,000 in policies covering potential fire losses at Captain’s Table. Asserting that L. A. Koenenn, Jr., Holton D. Turnbough, William E. Seaton, Gladys M. Seaton, Captain’s Table, Inc., and Hemenway Contract Furnishers had all made claims against the insurance proceeds, the three companies filed an interpleader action naming these claimants as defendants, and deposited the $30,000 into the registry of the district court. The defendants filed answers and other pleadings, and the case was tried to the court. The judge ordered (1) the payment of $19,025.67 to Hemenway Contract Furnishers, (2) an equal division of the remaining proceeds 1 between L. A. Koenenn, Jr. and Holton Turnbough on the *587 one hand and Gladys M. Seaton on the other hand, and (3) the cancellation of a promissory note issued by Gladys and William Seaton and made payable to Koenenn and Turnbough. No one has appealed the disposition of the trial court’s order with respect to Hemenway, and Hemenway is not a party to this appeal. Koenenn and Turnbough, however, contest the division of the proceeds and the cancellation of the note. After carefully reviewing the record and the law, we have decided that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to cancel the note. With regard to the division of the remaining insurance funds, we find that the district court’s conclusion is based at least in part on an erroneous factual determination and, in addition, that the legal analysis supporting the court’s conclusion requires further clarification. Therefore we vacate the district court’s order extinguishing liability on the note and remand the remaining issues for consideration in the light of this opinion.

I. Background

Until November 17, 1972, L. A. Koenenn and Holton Turnbough owned 100% of the stock of Captain’s Table, Inc. On that date, they entered into a contract with Gladys M. Seaton and William E. Seaton in which Koenenn and Turnbough agreed to sell their stock to the Seatons for $27,000 — $12,-000.00 to be paid to the sellers upon execution of the agreement, with the balance of the purchase price to be evidenced by a promissory note for $15,000 due November 17, 1975. The agreement provided that the sellers would retain the actual stock certificates until they had received the full purchase price. According to the seller’s brief on appeal, “[o]n November 17, 1972, the Seatons took possession of the business of Captain’s Table, Inc. and the management thereof.”

Six months after the consummation of the purchase and sale agreement discussed above, Koenenn and Turnbough had the local insurance agent issue in their names a standard form loss payable clause on the Captain’s Table’s insurance policies. The clause simply provided that “any loss ascertained and proven to be due to the insured [Captain’s Table, Inc.] under this policy shall be held payable to L. A. Koenenn and Holton B. Turnbough ... as interest may appear.” Koenenn and Turn-bough obtained this clause without first informing the Seatons. On October 6,1973, the building rented by Captain’s Table burned, destroying the restaurant’s furniture and equipment. The insurance companies, admitting liability but not certain of the proper beneficiary under the policies, brought this interpleader action.

After ordering the $19,025.67 payment to Hemenway not objected to here, the trial judge issued two opinions. The first opinion, finding that Turnbough and Koenenn “simply acted personally and individually and exclusively for their own interest and protection in securing these three loss payable clauses. . . . ” and that they “accomplished nothing thereby” ordered the remaining registry funds paid pro rata to the creditors of Captain’s Table, Inc. In a supplemental opinion issued two weeks later, the trial court noted that because “the parties are in irreconcilable conflict as to a proper disbursement of the proceeds . it now becomes the unpleasant duty of the Court to divide this insurance money equitably and fairly . . . .” The judge then ordered the payment of one-half the funds to Mrs. Seaton and the other half to Koenenn and Turnbough. In addition, stating that the stock of the corporation had become worthless, the trial court cancelled the not yet matured $15,000 note from the Seatons to Koenenn and Turnbough. From these orders, Koenenn and Turnbough have appealed.

II. The Note

The trial court erred in relieving the Captain’s Table purchasers of their $15,000 obli *588 gation because that court lacked jurisdiction over the issue of whether or not the note was still binding. The question of the Seatons’ promissory duties initially arose from their somewhat jumbled answer to the interpleader complaint. In their response, the Seatons seemingly asserted that the corporate sellers’ failure to fulfill a purported contractual obligation to transfer to the Seatons certain alcoholic permits required cancellation of the note.

We observe preliminarily that the buyers introduced no evidence to support their claim. 2 Moreover, the district court’s decision to abrogate the buyers’ remaining liability was not premised on the Seatons’ claim that the sellers did not fulfill their obligation to transfer liquor licenses but rather on the court’s own determination that “the stock of this corporation is now worthless.” The basis of this finding of worthlessness is not clear from the trial court’s opinion, and even if the stock of Captain’s Table, Inc. was “worthless” at the time of trial we are skeptical of the conclusion that the buyers would, for that reason alone, be relieved of their prior duties to the sellers. We need not decide these issues, however, since we conclude that jurisdiction to consider the issues relating to the promissory note did not exist.

Viewing the buyers’ theory most favorably, we treat their contentions as stating a cross-claim against their fellow inter-pleader defendants, Koenenn and Turn-bough. There is, however, no jurisdictional basis for the trial court’s consideration of such a cross-claim. First, no Federal question or diversity 3 jurisdiction appears with respect to the cross-claim.

Second, the absence of a “common nucleus of operative fact,” United Mineworkers of America v. Gibbs, 383 U.S. 715, 725, 86 S.Ct. 1130, 1138, 16 L.Ed.2d 218, 228 (1966), defeats any argument that pendent jurisdiction exists over the cross-claim. See generally, 13 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure: Civil § 3567 (1975). The facts which might support the assertion that Koenenn and Turnbough failed to transfer a liquor license at best would relate only tangentially to the facts underlying the interpleader question of the validity of the loss payable clause and consequently the proper distribution of the insurance funds.

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536 F.2d 585, 22 Fed. R. Serv. 2d 194, 1976 U.S. App. LEXIS 7720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherokee-insurance-company-v-l-a-koenenn-jr-and-holton-d-turnbough-ca5-1976.