Douglas v. Bank

36 S.W. 874, 97 Tenn. 133
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 874 (Douglas v. Bank) 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
Douglas v. Bank, 36 S.W. 874, 97 Tenn. 133 (Tenn. 1896).

Opinions

Geo. Gillham, Sp. J.

On July 3, 1893, John Streight, a resident of Hamilton County, State of Ohio, made a general assignment of all his property situated in that State and elsewhere, to the complainant, Howard Douglas, as assignee, for benefit of all his creditors, without preference, which was on that day executed and registered in that county. The conveyance, in form and execution,, was in compliance with the laws of that State, as was its registration. Streight was a lumber dealer and mill man, and then owned and operated, at Memphis, Tennessee, an extensive sawmill plant, and carried on a lumber business. To this assignment there ivere no schedules attached, as is required by our general assignment law of 1881, nor was it verified by the oath required by that Act, nor was it ever registered in this State.

Shortly after the assignment was made (the earliest being on the same day, July 3, 1893), various of his creditors, some of whom were residents of this State, others nonresidents, sued out attachments against him, as a nonresident of the State, and had the same levied on his property in Shelby County.

On the day the assignment was made, the [136]*136assignee, Douglas, accepted, the trust, and duly qualified under the laws of Ohio, and by wire directed his agent at Memphis to take possession of all the property there, which he did on that day, and before the attachments were levied. The attachments so ■ levied are upon claims against John Streight, aggregating about $39,000. And the claims ■ involved herein against him, upon which no attachments were issued, amount to about. $36,000.

On the ninth day of August, 1893, Howard Douglas, as assignee of John Streight, filed in the .Chancery Court of Shelby County, his bill against all the attaching creditors, the officers who had made the levies, and others, claiming that, by the assignment to him in Ohio, he was vested with the title to all the property so attached; that he was in possession of the same when attached, and was entitled to be restored to its possession; that the conveyance was good and valid under the law of Ohio, where made, and where the grantor was domiciled, and that, being valid there, it was likewise valid everywhere. The prosecution of the attachment suits were enjoined, and the whole litigation brought into this cause. Later, a receiver was appointed by the Court, who sold the property so attached, and has realized a fund, now on hand, of about $36,000.

The Chancellor, on demurrer to the bill of Douglas, assignee, held the Ohio assignment invalid, as against the attaching creditor, because not registered in this State, and, on final hearing, directed the [137]*137fund to be distributed to the attaching creditors so far as necessary to satisfy the same, and, in the order of the levies of their respective attachments, the balance to the general creditors. From this decree, the assignee and some of the creditors have appealed, and assigned appropriate errors. Conflicts also arose between the assignee and various of the attaching creditors, and between the creditors, over the validity of their claims and . attachments.

The matter here in controversy, raised by the appeals and assingments of error, are:

1. The validity of the Ohio assignment.

2. The sufficiency of the levies of the attachments.

3. The right of the Vicksburg Bank (a nonresident of Tennessee) to raise the question of the invalidity of the Ohio assignment.

4. Validity of the claim of the American National Bank upon the Wells acceptance for $2,360.35.

5. Validity of the attachment of the Bank of Commerce on the draft for' $820, as not being due when the attachment was issued.

6. Validity of the claim of the Bank of Commerce on the VosNaac, Lee & Co. note for $1,160, for alleged want of proper demand for payment, and for evidence of presentment for payment.

7. Validity of the attachments of the Cold water Logging Co. on the drafts claimed not to have been due when the attachment issued, aggregating $4,872.55.

8. Validity of the claim and attachment of the Coldwater Logging Co. on the Herron-Taylor draft [138]*138for $3,557.95, less $1,225, for alleged want of notice of dishonor to John Streight.

9. Validity of the attachments of E. C. Atkins & Co. on bills not due when attachment was sued out, amounting to $1,003.15..

10. Validity of the attachment of John Oberly on bills not due when his attachment was issued, amounting to $752.07.

11. Right of solicitors for Howard Douglas, as-signee, to a fee out of the fund for services to him as assignee herein, as against the successful attaching creditors.

The first assignment involves the validity of a foreign general assignment of personalty, situated in this jurisdiction, when there had been no registration of the conveyance in this State, as -against attaching creditors of the assignor. For the complainant it is, with great • force' and earnestness, urged upon us that, under the comity existing between the Courts of the several States and of the States of this Government, it is our duty to uphold a conveyance of personalty, made in conformity with the law of the domicile of the owner, although the property be actually situated in this State.

The .defendants, whilst admitting generally the doctrine founded upon comity contended for, insist that the law of the domicile of the owner cannot overcome such registration and other positive laws- of the State where the property is situated, and are distinctively politic and coercive.

[139]*139Sec. 2809, M. & V. Code, provides: ‘‘All mortgages and trusts of personalty shall be in writing, and proven and registered as hereinafter provided, to be valid against the creditors of the bargainor, or purchasers under him for value, and without notice.”

Sec. 2837, M. & Y. Code, under title, “What Shall be Registered,” says, Subsec. 5: “All instruments of writing for the absolute conveyance of personal property.” Subsec. 8: “All mortgages and deeds of trust of either real or personal property.” Subsec. 12: “All other deeds of every description.”

Under title of “Place of Registration,” §2844, M. & Y. Code, provides: “All deeds, bills of sale, agreements, and other instruments for the conveyance or mortgage of personal property, shall be registered in the county where the vendor or person executing the same resides, and, in case of his non-residence, where the property is. And, under the title, “Effect of Registration,” § 2890, M. & Y. Code, says: “Any of said instruments, not so proven or acknowledged and registered or noted for registration, shall be null and void as to existing or subsequent creditors of, or bona fide purchasers from, the makers without notice.”

Do these statutes apply to such foreign assignments, and require registration to make them valid against attaching creditors in this forum, is the question; for, if to be valid they must be registered, the complainants must fail, but if not, then, under the principle of comity established by general law, the [140]*140Ohio assignment must be upheld. This Court has decided, that to be effectual against creditors, a general assignment made in this State, under Act of 1881, must be registered. Lookout Bank v. Noe, 2 Pick., 29.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 874, 97 Tenn. 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglas-v-bank-tenn-1896.