Commerce Union Bank v. Sharber

100 S.W.2d 243, 20 Tenn. App. 451, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 23, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 S.W.2d 243 (Commerce Union Bank v. Sharber) 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 v. Sharber, 100 S.W.2d 243, 20 Tenn. App. 451, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 36 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

On the final hearing of this case below, the chancellor dismissed the bill filed by the complainants, discharged the attachment which had been sued out and levied upon certain real property in Maury county at the time the bill was filed, and adjudged the costs against the complainants. The complainants obtained and perfected an appeal to this court and have assigned errors here.

As this is an equity case, the parties will be designated herein as complainants and defendants, respectively, as they appeared on the record below. Pigg v. Houston, & Liggett, 8 Tenn. App., 613, 619.

The complainants are Commerce Union Bank and J. A. Sloan Company. Each of the complainants is a Tennessee corporation with its legal situs and principal place of business at Columbia, in Maury county, where complainant Commerce Union Bank is, and has been since January, 1933, engaged in the banking business, and where complainant J. A. Sloan Company is, and has been for a number of years past, engaged in the wholesale grocery business. Prior to January 1, 1933, the banking house and principal place of business of complainant Commerce Union- Bank were at Springhill in Maury county, Tenn.

The parties named in the bill as defendants thereto are J. W. Sharber and his wife, Mrs. Caledonia Sharber, Mrs. Anne S. Amick, and her husband, Elton Amick, Mrs. Louise S. Yaughn, and her husband, Alton Yaughn, and Southern Trust Company.

J. W. Sharber and his wife, Caledonia, are described in the bill as nonresidents of the state of Tennessee and residents of the state of Texas; and publication.was made for them as such nonresidents pursuant to the prayer of the bill. They were not personally served *453 with process and did not enter their appearance in the canse by pleading or otherwise.

The remaining parties named as defendants were before the court by personal service of process, and they filed answers to the hill. Mrs. Amick and husband and Mrs. Yaughn and husband are all resident citizens of Maury county, Tenn., and Southern Trust Company is a Tennessee corporation with its principal place of business at Clarksville, Tenn.

It is alleged in the bill, appears from proof, and the chancellor was of opinion (as stated in his decree) that defendant J. W. Sharber is indebted to the Commerce Union Bank in the principal sum of $1,200, with accrued interest thereon of $162 and attorney’s fee of $150, making a total of $1,512; and that said J. W. Sharber is indebted to J. A. Sloan Company in the sum of $519.45 with accrued interest amounting to $77.02, making a total of $597.17; but the chancellor held and adjudged that, inasmuch as it appeared that said J. W. Sharber is a nonresident of the state of Tennessee, and is in court in this cause by publication and pro confesso thereon, no (personal)' judgment could be rendered against him in this cause.

The ruling of the chancellor just stated is the basis of the first assignment of error in this court. This assignment of error is overruled. “When a proceeding is strictly in personam, brought to determine the personal rights and obligations of the parties, personal service within the State or a voluntary appearance in the cause is essential to the acquisition of jurisdiction. The same rule obtains in a proceeding quasi in rem as to the validity of a personal judgment attempting to determine the obligations of the defendant except as to the disposition of the res.” McGehee on Due Process of Law, p. 89.

“In no ease of proceedings in rem or quasi in rem does the court by seizure and constructive service gain authority to pronounce a judgment binding the 'owner of the res personally; it can control only the disposition of the property seized. Even though the proceeding is one, as in a suit begun by attachment where the judgment is personal in form, it is without effect as to non-residents not personally served, except to dispose of the property attached. No personal execution can issue against the non-resident, neither can any personal liability for costs attach on such a judgment.” Id., pp. Ill, 112.

The established rule in Tennessee is well stated in the above quotations. Fitzsimmons v. Johnson, 90 Tenn., 416, 424, 17 S. W., 100; Paper Co. v. Shyer, 108 Tenn., 444, 465, 67 S. W., 856, 58 L. R. A. 173; Purnell v. Morton Live Stock Company, 156 Tenn., 383, *454 387, 1 S. W. (2d), 1013; Lawson v. Laundry Machine Co., 165 Tenn., 180, 185, 54 S. W. (2d), 712.

Defendants Mrs. Amick and Mrs. Vaughn are daughters of said J. W. Sharber and his wife, Caledonia. By a warranty deed dated July 15, 1931, acknowledged for registration on March 21, 1932, and registered in the register’s office of Maury county, Tenn., on December 24, 1932, said J. W. Sharber and wife, Caledonia, conveyed to the defendants Mrs. Vaughn and Mrs. Amick a certain town lot with a business house thereon, situated in the city of Columbia, Maury county, Tenn., and fully described in said deed and in the pleadings in this cause. The consideration for said conveyance as recited in the deed, was the sum of $6,500, to wit, $500 paid in cash (receipt of which is acknowledged in the deed); “the assumption of a mortgage to the- Southern Trust Company of Clarksville, Tennessee, of $2500;” and “$3,500 to be paid in five promissory notes of $700 each, of even date, bearing 6% interest per annum, payable annually, to Mrs. Caledonia Sharber, due in twelve, twenty-four, thirty-sis, forty-eight and sixty months, respectively, with lien' retained” on the property conveyed, to secure the payment thereof.

The deed contained the usual covenants of seizin, right to convey, and against encumbrances, except as against the aforesaid encumbrance of the mortgage to the defendant Southern Trust Company “which the said Louise Sharber Vaughn and Anne Shar-ber Amick assumed.”

The bill seems to have been drawn uppn the theory in the mind of the draftsman that the aforesaid real estate was the property of J. W. Sharber, but the record shows that, prior to the aforesaid conveyance to Mrs. Amick and Mrs. Vaughn said property was, and had been since December 18, 1915, owned by said J. W. Sharber and his wife, Caledonia, as tenants in common.

With reference to the aforesaid deed of Sharber and wife to Mrs. Amick and Mrs. Vaughn, the complainants’ bill contains allegations as follows:

“The said real estate mentioned in the said deed was all of the real estate owned by the said J. W. Sharber at the time the said deed was recorded and he had no other assets except a few book accounts which were placed in the hands of his daughters for collection and on which they made collection and paid other creditors their accounts in full so these complainants are advised and your complainants were paid nothing upon their accounts from the proceeds of the said book accounts, not even the accrued interest.

■ “Your complainants would further state and charge as will be seen from the said deed, that J. W. Sharber and his wife, Mrs. *455

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W.2d 243, 20 Tenn. App. 451, 1936 Tenn. App. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commerce-union-bank-v-sharber-tennctapp-1936.