Commerce Union Bank of Nashville v. Alexander

312 S.W.2d 611, 44 Tenn. App. 104, 1957 Tenn. App. LEXIS 153
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 20, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 312 S.W.2d 611 (Commerce Union Bank of Nashville v. Alexander) 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
Commerce Union Bank of Nashville v. Alexander, 312 S.W.2d 611, 44 Tenn. App. 104, 1957 Tenn. App. LEXIS 153 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

FELTS, J.

The insolvent estate of D. A. Templeton, deceased, is being wound up in the court below. The part of it now before us is an appeal by the Administrator de bonis non from a decree of the court allowing the Commerce Union Bank priority on its claim for the value of the proceeds of certain motor vehicles on which the Bank held trust receipts and which had been disposed of and not accounted for by decedent.

I). A. Templeton was an automobile dealer doing business as Templeton Pontiac Company in Fayetteville. The Bank was lending him money to purchase automobiles through the familiar method of trust receipt financing, each loan being evidenced by his note secured by a trust receipt under which the Bank held title to the vehicle. The Bank had filed in the office of the Secretary *107 of State statements of this trust receipt financing and otherwise complied with the Uniform Trust Receipts Law, which has been enacted in this State without material change (T. C. A. secs. 47-1001 to 47-1019).

Templeton died June 3, 1955, owing the Bank a total of $36,306.49, evidenced by notes secured by trust receipts on 32 motor vehicles. On that day, shortly before his death, the Bank’s agent came to his place, demanded an accounting for the cars entrusted to him, and found he had disposed of 18 of them, on which the Bank held trust receipts totaling $29,010.68. To cover this sum, he issued to the Bank three checks on the Lincoln County Bank, which reached the drawee after his death and were returned unpaid.

After investigation of his affairs, the Administrator and the Bank traced and identified, as part of the assets of the estate, trust proceeds in the sum of $18,517.03 of vehicles on which the Bank held trust receipts and which had been disposed of and not accounted for by decedent. They also found that he had disposed of other vehicles covered by trust receipts in the sum of $17,789.46, and received proceeds in excess of that amount, which he had deposited to his accounts in his banks but which could not be further traced or identified in the assets.

On July 5,1955, the Bank filed its bill in the Chancery Court at Fayetteville to reclaim these identifiable trust funds in the sum of $18,517.03. The Chancellor granted this relief, and that sum was paid the Bank by the Administrator. The Chancellor’s decree expressly reserved any adjudication of the question of the Bank’s right to a lien on the general assets for the value of these unidentifiable trust funds. Thereafter, the Bank filed in this *108 cause in the court below its present claim for such lien in the sum of $17,789.46.

The court allowed this claim for a lien in the sum of $13,870.98, with interest and attorney’s fees as provided in the notes, but denied priority to two items-— one for $2,963.67, the proceeds of two cars which deced'ent had sold and received such proceeds more than 10 days prior to the Bank’s demand on him for an accounting, and the other for $954.81, being the excess balance due on certain notes after applying’ the proceeds of the sales of cars securing them. These two items, totaling $3,-918.48, were allowed as a common claim.

The Bank acquiesced in that decree. The Administrator de bonis non appealed from it and insists that the court should have denied this claim for priority or a lien on the general assets for the value of these unidentifiable trust proceeds, because none of such proceeds came into the hands of himself or of the Administrator, but were deposited by decedent in his bank accounts, part of them spent by him, and the rest applied by the banks on his notes to them; and because no statute or rule of law gives the Bank any right to such lien on the assets of this insolvent estate.

Thus the question is whether the Bank, the en~ truster, is entitled to a charge or lien on the general assets of this insolvent estate for the value of these unidentifiable trust proceeds. This depends on section 10 of our Uniform Trust Receipts Law (T. C. A. sec. 47-1011), which is to be construed in the light of the preexisting general principle of equity for following trust proceeds. That principle has been well stated as follows:

*109 “[A]s between cestui que trust and trustee, and all parties claiming under the trustee, otherwise than by purchase for valuable consideration without notice, all property belonging to a trust, however much it may be changed or altered in its nature or character, and all the fruit of such property, whether in its original or in its altered state, continues to be subject to or affected by the trust” (Turner, L. J., in Pennell v. Deffell, 4 De G., M. & G. 372, 388, 43 English Rep. (Chancery) 551, 558).

The majority rule, and the rule in this State, is that the cestui, in order to follow trust funds into the hands of such a party, must be able not only to trace them to him but to show he has specific, identifiable property into which such funds went; although some courts hold that if his general estate has been swelled by such funds, the cestui may have a charge on the estate for their value. McDowell v. McDowell, 144 Tenn. 452, 458, 234 S. W. 319, 18 A. L. R. 623; Bragg v. Osborn, 147 Term. 381, 248 S. W. 19. To the same effect: 4 Scott on Trusts (2nd Ed.) secs. 507, 514.1, 521; 4 Bogert on Trusts and Trustees (194.8) sec. 921.

Section 10 of our Uniform Trust Receipts Law (T. C. A. sec. 47-1011) is in these words:

“ Entruster’s Right to Proceeds. — -Where, under the terms of the trust receipt transaction, the trustee has no liberty of sale or other disposition, or, having liberty of sale or other disposition, is to account to the entruster for the proceeds of any disposition of the goods, documents or instruments, the entruster shall be entitled, to the extent to which and as against all classes of persons as to whom his security inter *110 est was valid at the time of disposition by the trustee, as follows:
£<(a) to the debts described in Section 9(3) [T. C.A. sec. 47-1010(3)]; and also
“(b) to any proceeds or the valne of any proceeds (whether snch proceeds are identifiable or not) of the goods, documents or instruments, if said proceeds were received by the trustee within ten days prior to either application for appointment of a receiver of the trustee, or the filing of a petition in bankruptcy or judicial insolvency proceedings by or against the trustee, or demand made by the entruster for prompt accounting, and to a priority to the amount of such proceeds or value; and also
“(g) to any other proceeds of the goods, documents or instruments which are identifiable, unless the provision for accounting has been waived by the entruster by words or conduct; and knowledge by the entruster of the existence of proceeds, without demand for accounting made within ten days from such knowledge, shall be deemed such a waiver” (9A Uniform Laws Annotated, pp. 308-309; T. C. A. see. 47-1011).

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312 S.W.2d 611, 44 Tenn. App. 104, 1957 Tenn. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commerce-union-bank-of-nashville-v-alexander-tennctapp-1957.