Dobbins v. Carroll

137 Tenn. 133
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 Tenn. 133 (Dobbins v. Carroll) 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
Dobbins v. Carroll, 137 Tenn. 133 (Tenn. 1916).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This suit was brought by certain sureties on the official bond of Carroll, executed by him as clerk and master of the chancery court of Lewis county, at Hohenwald, to recover from the Phoenix National [135]*135Bank, of Columbia, the amount of a note that had been executed to Carroll, clerk and master, to represent the last installment of the deferred purchase money for land, a sale of which had been made by that official under a decretal order of the chancery court in the case of Brown v. Robinett.

It appears that the earlier installment notes had been paid by their makers, but the clerk and master was behind in the payment of the proceeds to the beneficiaries of the fund, and these persons were pressing him for payment.

About a month before the last note matured, Carroll took it to Columbia, in the adjoining county of Maury, to make a disposition of it. He was introduced to Mr. Pulton, the cashier of the Phcenix National Bank, by a reputable member of the Columbia bar, and he proposed a discount of the note to the bank, explaining that the bank at Hohenwald was a small one and not at the time in condition to discount paper. He further stated that the court had ordered a settlement of the estate to which this note belonged, that the parties who were to receive the proceeds had requested him to discount the note, and that they would stand the discount. He further assured Pulton “that everything was regular as to the court. ’ ’

In-fact, no such request had been made by the beneficiaries of the fund, and the court had made no order authorizing or directing any transfer or disposition of the note or for any settlement other than one in ordinary course.

[136]*136The cashier discounted the note, not knowing of Carroll’s real purpose; and as the latter returned to Hohenwald he stopped and paid a part of the proceeds of the note to some of the beneficiaries, evidently with a view to quieting them. The balance was misappropriated by him. Later he became ¿ defaulter.

The sureties on Carroll’s bond- were adjudged liable to his successor in office for the use of those interested in the fund; and each of the sureties has paid his pro rata of the liability sum, save one.

The bill of complaint prays that the sureties be subrogated to the rights of the beneficiaries and be allowed to recover of the bank, which was paid the amount due on the note by its makers who had purchased the land at the clerk and master’s sale.

The note was in the form customarily in use in chancery proceedings, as follows:

“Twelve months after date- we promise to pay J. P. Carroll, clerk and master, twelve hundred and forty-six and 88/100 dollars ($1246.88), second deferred payment on the Jones Land, sold by decree of the chancery court of Lewis county, Tenn., with interest from date. This July 5th, 1914.
Gr. W. Staley,
Will. Robinett.”

On the back of the note appears this transfer:

“For value received I hereby transfer the within note, with all its liens and equities, to H. 0. Pulton, cashier. June 3, 1914.
J. P. Caeeoll, C. & M.”

[137]*137The chancellor decreed in favor of the sureties, but his decree on appeal to the court of civil appeals was reversed.

Formerly under the law merchant, and now under the Negotiable Instruments Law, a note in order to be negotiable must be payable to order or bearer. The code provision to the contrary (Shannon section 3506) was impliedly repealed by the uniform act. Gilley v. Harrell, 118 Tenn., 115, 101 S. W. 424. The note set out above is not so payable, and it cannot be considered negotiable. Acts 1899, chapter 94, section 1 (4).

Ordinarily, a nonnegotiable note is assignable, but the instrument here involved was not one that was capable of being assigned by any act of him who is named as payee. The instrument was in the custody of the law as a part of the court file in the case of Brown v. Robinett, pending in the chancery court, and as such was not the subject-matter of a delivery which is an element of an assignment or transfer of such an instrument.

If such note be assignable at all, it must be by reason of some order of the court directing its delivery from the court’s files thus terminating its own custody, and authorizing a disposition.

It has never been considered in this State that a note executed to a clerk and master is subject to be assigned, and we think a chancellor would be loath, to say the least, to pass an order for the assignment or discount of notes executed for the purchase money [138]*138of lands sold under his decrees, thus making the registry of his court a broker’s office, and leading to complications, temptations, and abuses. Such notes have peculiar qualities, in that the makers and sureties signing them become quasi parties to the cause, subject to the adverse and protective decrees of the court.

The note in this case on its faSe carried notice and warning, that it was a part of the record of the chancery court of Lewis county, and of its trust character. ‘ When, therefore, it was purchased by the cashier, the bank aided in a diversion, and could have been held to respond directly, in order to the protection of the beneficiaries of the purchase-money funds represented by the note, in a suit against the bank for* their benefit.

In Bunting v. Ricks, 2 Dev. & B. (22 N. C.), 130, 32 Am. Dec., 699, it was held that a breach of trust occasioned by the misapplication by the clerk of a court of a note held by him in trust is sufficient to charge one (Ricks) who took it, even though in ignorance of the character in which it was held by the officer, but who was cognizant that it had been given to a court commissioner in payment, at a sale made under his direction, in obedience to a decree of court. The note indorsed by the commissioner to the clerk did not on its face, as here, disclose its trust character. Chief Justice Rupi'in said:

“This defendant is obliged to admit that he was aware of that character (of the official who delivered [139]*139the note to him) and of the interest in the sale of the parties to the suit hy petition. Then Melton’s indorsement eonld satisfy Ricks of nothing in respect of his authority from the court or those' parties, to change the security for the debt by giving to Whitfield this note for his own. . . . One who knew, that, in its inception, the note belonged beneficially to the parties to the suit, could not justifiably rely on any indorsement, even of him to whom the' note was payable, without first ascertaining that those beneficial owners had parted from their interest, or that they or the court had given authority to the person thus disposing of what — at least at one time — was not in fact his, although it so appeared to be.”

For stronger reasons the bank in the pending case must be held to be liable as an accessory to the diversion and loss of the trust fund, since the bank knew that the note was payable to Carroll in his official capacity.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Tenn. 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobbins-v-carroll-tenn-1916.