Cooper v. Little

201 S.W.2d 210, 29 Tenn. App. 685, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 29, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 201 S.W.2d 210 (Cooper v. Little) 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
Cooper v. Little, 201 S.W.2d 210, 29 Tenn. App. 685, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 103 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

KETCHUM, J.

This is an ejectment suit brought by Cooper to recover a tract of 26 acres of land which was sold in a proceeding filed in the chancery court of Obion County to enforce the lien of drainage assessments due the Rutherford Fork Drainage District No. 4, and which was purchased at said sale by the defendant, C. H. Little. The contention of the complainant is that the suit to enforce the payment of the delinquent assessments was prosecuted by C. H. Little & Co. who held the drainage district bonds, and not by Obion County for the use of the Drainage District, and that the court was without *688 jurisdiction to order a sale of tlie property in a suit brought by the bondholder, and that such a suit could be maintained only by a receiver appointed for the purpose. The chancellor sustained this contention, held that the decree vesting the title in Little was void, and awarded a writ of possession to Cooper; and from this decree Little has appealed.

It is admitted that the Rutherford Fork Drainage District 4 was legally organized in 1914, that the assessments were levied regularly over a period of 20 years to provide funds for the payment of the bonds which were issued and sold to pay the cost of the construction and maintenance of the project. The assessments for the years 1929 to 1934, inclusive, were not paid and to enforce the payment thereof a bill was filed in the chancery court of Obion County (in which county said drainage district was created), to enforce the payment thereof, the style of the case being “Obion County for the Use and Benefit of Rutherford Fork Drainage District No. 4, and for the Use and Benefit of C. H. Little & Company, and all other bond owners, v. Carl Bradbury et al.”

The complainant herein was made a party defendant in said suit, was personally served with process and suffered a pro confesso to be taken against him; his property was designated as Tract No. 16 in that proceeding and the amount of the assessments levied against it for the years 1929 to 1934, inclusive, which were delinquent, was duly certified by the county trustee; and by decree entered at the April term, 1936, the amount of delinquent assessments owing by the complainant was adjuged to be $207.57 and a sale of said tract was ordered unless said amount was paid within 30 days. In due course the clerk and master filed his report of sale, from which it ap- *689 pearecl that lie liad sold said tract. No. 16 at public outcry to the highest bidder pursuant to said order of sale, and that C. H. Little, the defendant herein, had become the purchaser thereof at the sum of $225, which amount had been paid in cash; this report was confirmed by the court and the title to said tract was divested out of complainant herein and vested in C. H. Little; and the proceeds of the sale were ordered to be applied as provided in the drainage assessment; (1) to the payment of the pro rata share of the costs chargeable against said tract No. 16; (2) to the payment of state and county taxes on said tract then unpaid; (3) to the payment of attorney’s fee as adjudged; and (4') the balance to the trustee of Obion County to be applied on the delinquent assessments on said tract No. 16.

This decree vesting the title to said tract in defendant Little was entered on April 3, 1940; and the present suit seeking to set aside said sale as void was filed on August 17, 1945.

The grounds upon which complainant relies to set aside said sale are (1) that D. J. Caldwell, Esq., the solicitor who filed the bill to enforce the payment of the delinquent drainage assessments was not authorized by the directors of the drainage district to file said suit; and (2) that the order pro confesso entered against the complainant herein in said suit, and the decree divesting the title to said tract 16 out ofi him and vesting it in the defendant Little, was void, “because Obion County had no authority to file the suit in the cause of Obion County for the use and benefit of Eutherford Fork Drainage District No. 4 of Obion County, and for the use and benefit of C. H. Little, bondholder, and the other bondholders.”

*690 Tlie first of these contentions is apparently abandoned as it is not relied upon in the brief. At any rate the point is raised too late in a collateral proceeding after the solicitor filing the suit has prosecuted it to a successful conclusion as in the present case.

The authority of an attorney to appear for Ms client can be challenged only in the suit in which he appears, and then the question must be raised in limine by a rule upon the attorney to show his authority. The defense comes too late after demurrer or answer filed. Gibson’s Chancery, sec. 233; 7 C. J. S., Attorney and Client, sec. 74, pp. 882-885; 5 Am. Jur. 306-309. The question cannot be raised in a subsequent suit in a collateral attack upon a decree recovered by the attorney in the former litigation. The principle was applied in the case of Lawhorn v. Wellford, 179 Tenn. 625, 630, 168 S. W. (2d) 790, 792, 799.

In that case John Lawhorn who sued as agent for the First National Bank as executor of the will of Leonard Lawhorn, deceased, recovered a judgment by default against the defendant W.ellford. In a subsequent suit in equity brought to subject Wellford’s equitable interest in real estate to the satisfaction of said judgment, the defense was made that the First National Bank as such executor was without legal authority to appoint an agent to sue for, and take judgment in his name, as such agent, and that therefore the judgment sued on was void. The court held that the defense came too late and that it could have been raised only by preliminary rule promptly made. It was said: “The right to make the question would have been waived by answer filed. Certainly the right to make such question must be regarded as waived when no defense whatever was interposed, *691 filial judgment permitted, and the question is sought to be raised in a collateral attack on that judgment.”

Nor do we think that the court was without jurisdiction to enforce the payment of delinquent assessments in the suit brought by Obion County for the use and benefit of the drainage district as was done in the Bradbury case. It is true that t'he bill in its caption is styled as above set out, and in the body of the bill it is averred that C. H. Little & Company were the owners of certain bonds; that the suit was brought for their use and benefit as well as for the use of the drainage district; and there was a prayer that the purchaser at the sale be allowed to surrender to the clerk and master past due bonds and coupons of the district in payment of the purchase price of the lands sold; but the fact remains that the bill was filed and prosecuted to a conclusion as a suit for the benefit of the drainage district in the manner provided by sec. 4355 et seq. of the code, and not as a suit for the benefit of the bondholders in the manner provided by secs. 4369, 4370. The procedure in the two classes of cases is entirely different.

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Bluebook (online)
201 S.W.2d 210, 29 Tenn. App. 685, 1946 Tenn. App. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooper-v-little-tennctapp-1946.