Dunn v. Moore

123 S.W.2d 1095, 22 Tenn. App. 412, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 16, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 123 S.W.2d 1095 (Dunn v. Moore) 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
Dunn v. Moore, 123 S.W.2d 1095, 22 Tenn. App. 412, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 41 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

Tbis is a suit by Mrs. Dunn on a note for $1,200 witb interest at tbe rate of 8% and attorneys’ fees, tbe same having been instituted on May 16, 1936.

Tbe defendant pleaded nil debet, bis real defense being payment.

Tbe case was tried by tbe judge and a jury. At tbe close of all tbe evidence tbe plaintiff made a motion for a directed verdict, wbicb was overruled. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the defendant, Moore, and a judgment was entered dismissing' tbe action.

Tbe plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was overruled, and she then made a motion for a verdict non obstante veredicto, which motion was *414 also overruled, to all of which, she excepted, and appealed in error, on the pauper’s oath, to this court and has assigned nine errors, which raise one determinative proposition:

The court erred in submitting to the jury the proposition whether said note was submitted to arbitration and paid, without submitting to the jury the question whether her agent for collection had authority to submit it to arbitration and to accept land in payment.

To be more specific, the assignments raise the incidental propositions that the court erred in overruling' the plaintiff’s motion for peremptory instructions because he submitted to the jury only one issue, which is, whether the plaintiff’s said note was submitted by her agent for collection, John W. Sullivan, to arbitration and taken into an account in said arbitration of the matters between defendant Moore and Sullivan and settled and paid by the conveyance of his equity in one hundred acres of land made by Moore to Sullivan and his wife, and in failing to submit an issue to the jury whether her said agent for collection had authority to submit said note to said arbitration and to accept payment by the conveyance of the equity in the land; therefore there was no’ evidence to support the verdict.

The facts necessary to be stated are that the defendant, Moore, and John W. Sullivan went into the dairy business in Lincoln County, Tenn., and became involved in debts in 1930, and on March 28, 1930, they went to Huntsville, Alabama, and sought a loan of $1,200 from the plaintiff, Mrs. Dunn, said Sullivan being a nephew of Mrs. Dunn, and upon his recommendation Mrs. Dunn loaned the $1,200 to defendant Moore, for which he executed to her his note payable Jan-nary 1, 1931, providing for 8% interest and reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs of collection. Sullivan did not sign the note and it was not known by Mrs. Dunn that he was interested in the transaction. This money was used in the dairy business. Later the defendant Moore and Sullivan became worse involved in debts and had a disagreement, which it appears they could not settle, and in the latter part of 1931 they orally agreed to submit their differences to three arbitrators, R. W. Gaunt, John Scott, and Robert Wilson.

About this time Sullivan went to Huntsville and told his aunt, Mrs. Dunn, that Moore was about to convey all of his property to his wife and intended to take the bankrupt law, and he feared that she would lose her money. He asked her to give him the note for collection. She delivered the note to him without her indorsement for collection or for better security. He returned to Fayetteville and his matters were submitted to the arbitrators who met and went over all of their affairs, and on the night the arbitrators were to settle the matters he produced the note and stated that it must be settled. It appears that he and Moore had some disagreement about the matter and he became angry and they almost had an altercation. The arbitrators interfered and the note was given to them to be sub *415 mitted to arbitration and settlement. All tbe three arbitrators testified that this note was taken into1 consideration and counted in tbe settlement and was paid by tbe defendant Moore conveying bis equity in one hundred acres of land to John W. Sullivan and bis wife, which deed was executed and delivered by Moore to Sullivan, who placed the same of record. The consideration was stated to be $1,409.88, paid in cash or its equivalent, but it does not refer to Mrs. Dunn’s note or mention her name.

The said note, together with other notes, was put into an envelope and left at the hotel to be delivered to Moore when he executed the deed. After the deed was executed the notes were delivered to Moore and he retained said note after tearing his name off of the bottom of the note.

It appears that Sullivan later sold said tract of land but did nlot account to his aunt, Mrs. Dunn, for the proceeds of her note. She testifies that she did not know anything about the arbitration but delivered the note to him for collection or for better security and did not in any manner authorize him to submit it to arbitration or to-accept payment in land.

Mrs. Dunn testified that sometime later she asked Sullivan about the collection of the note, but received no definite information, and thought he was still trying to collect it. ¡She later consulted a lawyer who wrote to Gaunt in Bast Tennessee and tried in other ways to ascertain the facts, but he gave up the matter and advised her to employ some other lawyer. She said that she tried to interview Moore but he evaded her and she couldn’t get any information about the matter, and in the latter part of 1935 she came back to Lincoln County and sought an interview with the defendant, Moore, on the public square in Fayetteville. He told her that the note had been settled and that he had possession of the note. She says this was the first information she had, and after consulting some lawyers she instituted this suit upon the theory that Sullivan was her agent only for collection or for the purpose of obtaining better security on the note and that she did not. authorize him to submit it to arbitration or to take land in payment.

Sullivan testified, but he is indefinite as to the submission to arbitration, stating that he wasn’t present and did not know what was done about the note or whether it was taken into account. His testimony is rather evasive and unsatisfactory.

All the arbitrators testified that the note was delivered to- them and was counted in the settlement and that they directed the deed to be executed to Sullivan and his wife in settlement of the matter.

It appears that the trial judge took the view that as the note had been delivered to Sullivan for collection and accounted for in the arbitration and paid by the conveyance of the land, Sullivan had authority to submit it to arbitration and to accept land in payment; *416 and be therefore refused to submit the issue of Sullivan's authority to the jury.

1. The appellee has filed a motion in this court to dispauperize the plaintiff in error, it being insisted that she has property subject to execution and is not entitled to take the pauper’s oath on appeal.

This motion must be overruled, as the question is raised on appeal for the first time. No question of the right to appeal on the pauper’s oath was raised in the lower court. The power to inquire into the truthfulness of the pauper’s oath unquestionably belongs to the trial court and it must be invoked therein or the appeal will be treated as having* been regularly taken.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W.2d 1095, 22 Tenn. App. 412, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-moore-tennctapp-1938.