Doane v. Knoxville Investment Corp.

16 S.W.2d 186, 159 Tenn. 76, 6 Smith & H. 76, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 64
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 186 (Doane v. Knoxville Investment Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doane v. Knoxville Investment Corp., 16 S.W.2d 186, 159 Tenn. 76, 6 Smith & H. 76, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 64 (Tenn. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cook

delivered the opinion of the Court.

■ This cause arose out of a transaction involving1 real estate alleged to have been sold through the agency of the defendant. The bill was filed by Bales, vendor, and Doane, the vendee, under a warranty deed to charge the defendant with a loss resulting from its failure to discharge a lien on the land with funds intrusted by them, or by Bales to its care.

The chancellor sustained defendant’s demurrer to the bill, holding (1) that under the facts presented. the defendant was acting for itself and not as agent for complainants, and is not liable; (2) that complainants admitted the sufficiency of the demurrer by failing to set it down for hearing at the first term.

The complainants appealed and here insist that the bill states a cause of action and under the circumstances it was error to dismiss it for their failure to set the demurrer down for hearing.

The bill, as amended, states a good cause of action. It shows that defendant, acting as agent for Bales, sold the land to Doane and represented that the property, incumbered by a deed of trust to secure a note of $917 *79 to S. E. Eambo, was unencumbered, and agreed with Bales to remove the encumbrance simultaneously with the transfer to Doane; and that defendant received from Bales $917 of Doane’s purchase money under an express agreement with Bales to apply it to the satisfaction of the mortgage debt and have the lien released. It is charged that defendant wrongfully or negligently paid the money to Eambo without requiring him to produce the note, and without obtaining a valid release of the lien from the holder of the lien note. It appears from the bill that subsequently John A. Wray, who held the note by indorsement from Eambo, reduced it to a judgment for $1122.96 and was about to sell the land to satisfy the judgment when complainants were compelled to pay it to protect the title.

If the defendant, as agent for Bales, represented to Doane that the property was unencumbered and thus induced the sale and accepted from Bales a sufficiency of the proceeds of the sale to remove the encumbrance under a promise to devote the money to that use, and to relieve Bales from liability on the eovenance of his deed to Doane, it (the defendant) would be required to put the money to the use intended and in the discharge of the duty assumed by it would be held to the exercise of ordinary care. For any loss sustained by complainants as a result of defendant’s failure to do what it assumed to do under the circumstances shown in the bill, the defendant would be liable. 2 C. J. Agency, 717-722.

Beyond the question whether the bill states a cause of action, the chancellor held that complainants admitted the sufficiency of the demurrer by their delay in setting it down for hearing, and for that additional reason dismissed the bill. This presents the inquiry of *80 whether a demurrer, regardless of its sufficiency, must be sustained by the chancellor because of the inference that complainant admits its sufficiency through failure to set it down for hearing at a given time, and if so when the complainant must move to avoid the inference. Existing statutes and rules that control the course of practice and procedure in courts of chancery do not aid the inquiry by any express provision, though we have decisions holding that the chancellor cannot peremptorily dismiss a bill, for failure to prosecute it, without preliminary rule or notice affording the complainant an opportunity to explain the delay. Park v. Meek, 1 Lea, 78; Ford v. Bartlett, 3 Baxt., 22.

After its inception, the course of English equity jurisprudence was directed by rules of'practice and procedure, and among them the rule that a demurrer should be filed within a given time after the bill, and upon the filing either party might set it down for argument immediately. In addition, the time was fixed within which complainant was required to move for the disposition of a demurrer, else labor under the inference of having admitted its sufficiency. But that rule was not inflexible. Failure to strictly adhere to it would not deprive the complainant of the opportunity of showing the reason for non-compliance and of being relieved, for good cause, of the consequence of delay. 1 Daniels Chy. Pr. (6 Ed.), 594. Intended to expedite trials, the rule was enforced to that end, having regard for substantive rights.

This system of equity jurisprudence followed migration to North Carolina and later became an institution of Tennessee. In 1801 chapter 6, an Act to regulate proceedings in courts of equity, was passed and its practice provisions presented questions for determination. In *81 Marsh v. Crawford, 1 Swan, 117, the court, referring to the provisions of this Act and rules of practice in courts of chancery, said:

“We are not to understand that these rules made to expedite and facilitate the preparation of suits are so imperative and inflexible in their nature that upon sufficient cause shown it shall not be in the power of1 the chancellor to relax them.”

In Lowe v. Morris, 4 Sneed, 69, the court speaking of chapter 365', Acts of 1855, another practice Act, said, in substance, that it could not be supposed that the Legislature intended, by implication, to deprive the court of the exercise of a sound discretion.

In Graham v. Cook, 6 Yerg., 404, decided in 1834, the question arose under section 29 of the Act of 1801 which provided that “if the complainant shall not . . . set for hearing either the plea ... or demurrer . . . on or before the second court after filing, . . . the bill may be dismissed, of course with costs during the second 'term. ’ ’

The court held it error to dismiss the bill at the second term after the demurrer was filed when an amended bill filed by leave of the court presented new matter requiring an answer by the defendants.

This section 29 was not brought forward in the Code of 1858, but the substance of it has been read into our practice statutes, hence the interpretation of the omitted section becomes material as reflecting upon the rule applied in McGee v. Bank, 153 Tenn., 357. That opinion seems to have been construed, no doubt because of discussion preceding the conclusion, as laying down an inflexible rule that the sufficiency of a demurrer is admitted by complainant’s failure to set it down for argument at *82 the first term. In that case the question was whether the obligation to move for the disposition of a dilatory plea or demurrer was upon the complainant or upon the defendant under the statute.

The court having in view the statutes hereafter discussed, held it to be upon the complainant, and that cause having stood on demurrer without action for sis years it was held that the chancellor did not abuse his discretion in holding the sufficiency of the demurrer admitted and in dismissing the bill on motion of the defendant. In the opinion, the court referred to statutes and to Chancellor’s CoopeR’s decision in

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 186, 159 Tenn. 76, 6 Smith & H. 76, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doane-v-knoxville-investment-corp-tenn-1929.