D. M. Rose & Co. v. Dysart

8 Tenn. App. 325, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 147
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 23, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 Tenn. App. 325 (D. M. Rose & Co. v. Dysart) 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
D. M. Rose & Co. v. Dysart, 8 Tenn. App. 325, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 147 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

R. S. Dysart, a building contractor at Knoxville, under a contract with AY. H. Sterchi, built for him an apartment house on his (Sterchi’s) lot in Knoxville. He failed to pay the bill of D. M. Rose & Company, amounting to $455.53, for materials furnished and used in the building, .and said D. M. Rose & Company instituted this suit against Dysart and Sterchi to enforce its lien.

*327 Sterchi filed a cross-bill against Dysart and the New York Indemnity .Companj'', alleging that the former had executed an indemnity or contractor’s bond with the latter as surety obligating Dysart to pay for all materials, etc. The cross-bill prayed for a judgment or decree against Dysart and said Indemnity Company for any amount which Sterchi or his property might be held liable for to Rose :& Company, and for the costs of the cause. Dysart filed a plea of bankruptcy, and the Indemnity Company filed an answer denying that it executed the bond.

The Chancellor d,ecreed in favor- of Rose & Company — the total amount of the decree being $476.77, and costs — and then rendered judgment over on the cross-bill in favor of Sterchi and against said New York Indemnity Company for said sum of $476.77, and the cbsts of the cause. The New York Indemnity Company has appealed to this court and has assigned error making the question that W. H. Wilson who signed its name and fixed its seal to the bond did not have authority, either real or apparent, to bind it and, therefore, that the Chancellor was in error in decreeing against it.

The finding of the Chancellor on the question was as follows:

“First, That the cross-defendant, New York Indemnity Company executed a bond as surety for R. S. Dysart indemnifying the said W. H. Sterchi in the sum of $9,000 against any loss sustained by reason of said Dysart not paying for the labor and materials used in the erection of the building in question, and that the seal of the said New York Indemnity Company was attached to the said bond.
“Second, That W. II. Wilson, the agent who executed said bond, for ,and on behalf of the said New York Indemnity Company, was the one who actively solicited the sale of bonds for th,e New York Indemnity Company in Knoxville, Tennessee, and who maintained an office therefor, and who received, or should have received, the commissions for the sale of any. such bonds. That the said New York Indemnity Company placed its agent, W. ,H. Wilson, in such a situation that ,a person of ordinary prudence was justified in assuming that such agent was authorized to execute said bond on behalf of the principal, and that the premium for said bond was paid to W. II. Wilson, agent. That the said W. II. Sterchi or any one representing him had no notice of any limitations of the powers of the said W. H. Wilson relative to the execution of said, bond.
“The court is, therefore, of the opinion that the cross-complainant W. II. Sterchi is entitled to recover from the cross-defendant New York Indemnity Company,” etc.

There are one or two preliminary questions which should be dealt with before coming to the merits of the controversy. The Indemnity Company insists that the decree in favor of Rose ’& *328 Company against Sterehi was only in the sum of $455.53, plus the statutory costs of 75^ for recording the lien claim, and therefore that the action of the Chancellor in awarding Sterehi a recovery against it for $476.77 was erroneous. The amount of the claim of Rose & Company was $455.53, but the original bill also prayed for interest, and the decree of the Chancellor is that: “Complainant D. M. Rose & Company is therefore awarded a lien against the property of the defendant W. H. Sterehi in the sum of its original debt of $455.53, and statutory cost for recording its lien in the register’s office amounting to 75^, total $476.77, and all costs of the cause as between complainant and said W. II. Sterehi.” We think it clear that the court intended to allow the complainant interest in the sum of $20.49, and that the words stating the allowance thereof were inadvertently left out of the decree. They were probably in the decree itself but were omitted by mistake in copying. At any rate the complainant was .entitled to interest, and the amount, $20.49. is about correct. The insistence of the Indemnity Company will, therefore, be overruled.

The next insistence of the Indemnity Company is that there were not sufficient allegations in the pleadings upon which to base a finding or holding against it upon the doctrine of apparent authority of the agent, Wilson.

The ¡allegation of the cross-bill was that:

“The said Roy S. Dysart furnished the said W. H. Sterehi a bond in the sum of $9,000, with the New York Indemnity Company, surety thereon, said bond or obligation being to the effect that the said Dysart would perform and would pay for all materials, labor, etc., used on said building. A copy of said bond is herewith filed as exhibit No. 1, to his ianswer and cross-bill, and the original will be produced at any time upon the order of your Honor.”

The ansAver of the Indemnity Company was: “That it knows nothing of a contract entered into between R. S. Dysart and W. H. Sterehi. Cross-defendant denies that it executed, or that any one for it with proper authority executed, a bond for $9,000 as alleged, covering the faithful performance on the part of Roy S. Dysart of any contract with said Sterehi.” The Indemnity Company later amended its answer by adding thereto the following:

“That W. H. Wilson had no authority whatsoever to execute for and on behalf of the cross-defendant the bond in question dated March 15, 1926, ,and signed by R. S. Dysart and New York Indemnity Company by W. H. Wilson, attorneys-in-fact.
“That W. II. Wilson had no authority to execute any such bond for and on behalf of the cross-defendant, except in compliance with the written, signed and sealed power of attorney dated the 27th *329 day of August, 1925, and when acting for and on behalf of the cross-defendant by virtue of said power of attorney the said W. H. Wilson had no authority to bind the cross-defendant, except when said bond or bonds were signed by W. H. Wilson, together with Robert S. Young or Sam E. Young.
“That it, the said New York Indemnity Company, did not receive the premium or premiums paid for the execution of said bond in question, or any part of said premium or premiums, and that it did not' profit or benefit in any manner whatsoever as a result of the execution of said bond.
“It did not at any time ratify the execution of said bond or have any knowledge of its execution until at or about the time suit was instituted against it in the chancery court of Knox county for the collection of said bond and process was served on it as a defendant.”

By agreement the foregoing amendment was treated as having been traversed by Sterchi.

Still later, Sterchi amended his cross-bill by adding thereto the following: “That the cross-defendant, New York Indemnity Company, having placed its agent, W. H.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Tenn. App. 325, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-m-rose-co-v-dysart-tennctapp-1928.