Crosby v. Farose Trading Corp.
This text of 27 So. 2d 367 (Crosby v. Farose Trading Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellant is executor of the estate of V. B. Martin, deceased. Dr. Martin entered into an agreement with J. E. Blevins for the sale of warehouse receipts covering one hundred barrels of whiskey in storage in the State of Kentucky. The consideration for such sale was 75 shares of stock of Morrison Cafeteria. The stock was never delivered, and the pleadings, interpreted by the briefs filed by appellant, sustain the conclusion that, in lieu of delivery of the cafeteria stock, Dr. Martin was later delivered the note of Farose Trading Corporation in the sum of $4,363.94, secured by its mortgage upon certain real and personal property in the City of Biloxi.
Subsequent to execution of the mortgage, Farose Trading Corporation sold this property to one Frank Blevins and wife. This action was brought by Dr. Martin’s executor to foreclose the mortgage as security for the note and decree for any deficiency. Frank Blevins and wife were made parties defendant, unquestionably because of their purchase of the mortgaged property. J. E. Blevins is not a party to this suit.
Complainant, to sustain his case, introduced the mortgage and note and the minutes of the corporation author *374 izing their execution. Thereupon defendants moved for decree and same was awarded dismissing the hill.
We do not adjudge the sufficiency of the mortgage as recordable, nor whether Frank Blevins and wife had actual notice of its execution. Nor do we examine the authority of the corporation to execute the note and mortgage in lieu of the obligation of J. E. Blevins to deliver the cafeteria stock.
We are of the opinion that Section 2612,. Code 1942, precludes maintenance of the action in this State. This section is as follows: “If any person shall trust or give credit to another for intoxicating liquors, he shall lose the debt, and be forever disabled from recovering the same or any part thereof; and all notes or securities given therefor, under whatever pretense, shall be void.” (Italics supplied.)
There is no allowable debate of the proposition that the sale of standard negotiable warehouse receipts covering whiskey is a sale of the whiskey. J. E. Blevins, for reasons best known to him, did not pay for same and converted the receipts- into cash without carrying out his agreement or offering so to do.
We are not concerned with the validity vel non of the agreement to buy the whiskey, or the extent of the legal obligation to pay therefor. Our decision is not intended to affect the legal status of this obligation if pursued in courts other than our own. We are dealing solely with a procedural matter affecting the' remedy. Therefore, whether the sale or contract with Dr. Martin was effected in this State or elsewhere is not now relevant.
Had the contract in question been for a money consideration, or evidenced by a note or other evidence of debt, few would question the application of Section 2612. Certainly, Dr. Martin falls in the category of those who ‘shall trust or give credit to another for intoxicating liquors. ’ It is only by tracing the assumed obligation of the corporation only so far as the failure of J.. E. *375 Blevins to deliver the cafeteria stock, that the identity of the original obligation can be obscured.
To acknowledge that the corporation executed its note and mortgage in lieu of J. E. Blevins obligation, is to haul into plain view the nature of the latter. Running through all the subsequent manipulations is the persisting and persistent debt owing to Dr. Martin for his whiskey. It would not be self-serving for the appellant to insist that this obligation did not persist lest he undermine his case by revealing a total absence of considertion moving to the corporation. There is no showing of any obligation resting upon the corporation to make good the promise to deliver the cafeteria stock. The relationship, personal and commercial, between the Frank Blevins, managing head of the corporation, and J. E. Blevins, is not made certain by testimony, but an assumption that they are personal and business strangers would invoke a coincidence defiant of reasonable and obvious deduction.
To sustain any obligation on the part of the corporation, we must follow it down to its foundation, the cornerstone of which is the sale of whiskey. We are minded to reassert the possibility of a continuing legal obligation upon the part of J. E. Blevins, whose relationship to the grantee of the mortgaged property has been made the subject of interesting but legally irrelevant comment by appellant.
Appellant yields to a normal impulse in inveighing against the deliberate defiance of an obligation to pay the estate of Dr. Martin the not inconsiderable sum of $4,363.94. We can follow only as far as the statute his contentions, made with a vehemence and logic which are seldom inspired by any but a just cause. Purely ethical considerations we are not competent to discuss nor decide.
The obligation of the corporation cannot be seen in its full stature without revealing and invoking a credit extended for a debt whose enforcement in this State the statute forbids. The learned chancellor was compelled *376 to leave the parties where he found them. We are equally hound. Goodman v. Swett, 108 Miss. 224, 66 So. 535; Elkin Henson Grain Company v. White, 134 Miss. 203, 98 So. 531. See also Lemonius v. Mayer, 71 Miss. 514, 14 So. 33; Virden v. Murphy, 78 Miss. 515, 28 So. 851; Skinner Mfg. Co. v. Deposit Guaranty Bank, 160 Miss. 815, 133 So. 660; and Capps v. Postal Telegraph, etc., Company, 197 Miss. 118, 19 So. (2d) 491.
Affirmed.
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27 So. 2d 367, 200 Miss. 369, 1946 Miss. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crosby-v-farose-trading-corp-miss-1946.