Erwin Nat. Bank v. Riddle

79 S.W.2d 1032, 18 Tenn. App. 561, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 58
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 3, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 79 S.W.2d 1032 (Erwin Nat. Bank v. Riddle) 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
Erwin Nat. Bank v. Riddle, 79 S.W.2d 1032, 18 Tenn. App. 561, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 58 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

The original bill in this case was filed in the chancery court of Unicoi county, on August 25, 1932, by Erwin National Bank against N. D. Riddle, Gertrude Riddle, N. D. Riddle, Jr., Arthur C. Riddle, Frank E. Riddle, Charley H. Riddle, Mrs. Mamie Simmons, and Mrs. Bessie Mosteller. The complainant sued on behalf of itself and all other creditors of defendant N. D. Riddle.

Defendant Gertrude Riddle is the wife of defendant N. D. Riddle, and the other defendants named are children of said N. D. Riddle and Gertrude Riddle.

The main purposes of the bill were (1) to obtain judgments against defendants N. D. Riddle, Gertrude Riddle, and N. D. Riddle, Jr., for certain debts specified in the bill and alleged to be due and owing to the complainant bank by said three defendants; and (2) to obtain a decree of the court declaring a certain deed made by defendants N. D. Riddle and Gertrude Riddle, on May 1, 1931, to be voluntary, fraudulent, and void as against complainant bank and other creditors of N. D. Riddle and Gertrude Riddle, which deed purported to convey three certain described parcels of real estate in the town of Erwin, Unicoi county, Tenn., to N. D. Riddle, Jr., for the benefit of himself and the other children of N. D. Riddle and Gertrude Riddle, and to subject said real estate to the satisfaction of the aforesaid debts owing by said three defendants to complainant and all debts owing by said defendants to other creditors who might intervene by petition in this cause.

The bill contained a prayer appropriate to a general 'creditor’s bill and a prayer for a receiver to take into his possession the property described in the bill. Complainant also prayed for general relief. Arthur C. Riddle, Frank E. Riddle, and Charley H. Riddle made no defense to the bill, and a judgment pro confesso was taken and entered against them.

N. D. Riddle, Gertrude Riddle, N. D. Riddle, Jr., Mrs. Mamie Simmons and Mrs. Bessie Mosteller filed a “joint answer” to the bill, in which answer they substantially admitted the indebtedness to complainant bank as alleged in the bill, and admitted the execution of the aforesaid deed by N. D. Riddle and Gertrude Riddle to their *564 codefendants on May 1, 1931, bnt they denied that said deed was executed for the purpose of delaying, hindering, and defeating their creditors, and particularly the complainant hank, in the collection of their debts, and denying all the material allegations of the bill to the effect that said deed was fraudulent in fact or in law.

Thereafter, a decretal order was made and entered in the cause as follows:

'‘This cause came on to be heard before Chancellor S. E'. Miller, at his Chambers in Johnson City, Tennessee, on the 23rd day of September, 1932, upon the motion of complainant to'have the bill sustained as a general creditors’ bill and for the appointment of a receiver.
“The bill and answer thereto, together with certain exhibits proposed by the complainant, were read. Counsel were heard in favor of and in opposition to the motions, all of which, along with the pleadings were duly considered.
“It developed during the hearing that the defendant, N. D. Riddle, was willing, during the pendency of this cause, to secure the complainant on its debt by giving a deed of trust on a certain vacant lot which he claimed to be worth about $500, and also to hypothecate with complainant, as further security for the debt, a series of title retained notes against certain shoe-making' or shoe-repairing machinery, the aggregate of said notes calling for about $500, and the Court being of opinion that this proposition, if carried out, would protect the complainant until the further hearing of this cause and render it unnecessary either to sustain the bill as a creditors’ bill or to appoint a receiver, and the Court being of the opinion that a receiver was not necessary in any event, it is, therefore,
“Ordered that the motion for the appointment of a receiver be and the same is hereby denied; and further, that if the defendants carry out their proposal to secure the complainant with the lot and notes hereinabove referred to then this order may likewise be treated as an order overruling the motion to sustain the bill as a general creditors’ bill. Pending the execution of proper trust deed to cover the land in question and the delivery of the notes to the complainant to secure its debt, the Court reserves the question as to sustaining the bill as a creditors’ bill, but the complainant is allowed, without further notice to defendants, to renew its motion for sustaining the bill at any time after 10 days.”

The defendants did not “carry out their proposal to secure the complainant,” as recited in the foregoing order of the court, but it does not appear that the complainant thereafter renewed its motion to sustain the bill as a general creditors ’ bill, and the cause proceeded as a suit on behalf of the original complainant, Erwin National Bank, and an intervening petitioner presently to be mentioned.

On October 7, 1932; the State-Planters’ Bank & Trust Company, a *565 Virginia corporation, filed, by leave of the court, its intervening petition alleging that it is a bona fide creditor of defendants N. D. Riddle and Gertrude Riddle; that on August 1, 1927, N. D. Riddle and wife, Gertrude Riddle, borrowed the sum of $4,000, evidenced by their joint negotiable promissory note of that date, payable to bearer, on August 1, 1932, along with which they executed certain coupons representing semiannual interest installments, and for value received, and before maturity of said note, petitioner purchased the same, and is now the owner of said note and a coupon note for $1201 representing the interest due on said principal note on August 1, 1932, for six months immediately preceding said maturity date; that after giving credit for all payments made on said note, there was due thereon, as of April 15, 1932, a balance of $2,425.72, which amount is now due, owing, and unpaid, together with interest on said sum from April 15, 1932, and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees as provided for in the face of said note; and that, in addition to the above, there is also due petitioner the sum of $120 on account of semiannual interest due on August 1, 1932.

The said intervening petitioner joined in and adopted the aver-ments of complainant’s original bill that said Riddles are insolvent, and have no property of sufficient monetary value with which to meet their just obligations, and also all the averments of the original bill with respect to the alleged voluntary conveyance made by N. D. Riddle and wife to their children, and the petitioner alleged that when said deed was executed, said grantors, to all practical purposes, thereby denuded themselves of all or virtually all of their property and left nothing, or certainly nothing of substantial value, out of which to make good their just obligations to their creditors.

Defendants N. D. Riddle and Gertrude Riddle demurred to the aforesaid petition of the State-PÍanters ’ Bank & Trust Company, but the chancellor overruled the demurrer, and the five defendants who had answered the original bill, as before stated, also filed an answer to said intervening petition, in which answer they denied that N. D. Riddle and Gertrude Riddle, or any of the respondents, owed the petitioner anything.

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Bluebook (online)
79 S.W.2d 1032, 18 Tenn. App. 561, 1934 Tenn. App. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erwin-nat-bank-v-riddle-tennctapp-1934.