Fidelity Trust Co. v. Galbraith

10 Tenn. App. 73, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 5
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 15, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Tenn. App. 73 (Fidelity Trust Co. v. Galbraith) 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
Fidelity Trust Co. v. Galbraith, 10 Tenn. App. 73, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 5 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The complainant has appealed from a decree dismissing its bill and denying any relief. The complainant is the receiver of the Knoxville Trust Company. The bill in the instant case seeks to recover on a check drawn by the defendant for $330.50 dated August 20, 1924, and a note for $2500 dated July 1, 1924, which check and note came into complainant’s possession as' receiver for the Knoxville Trust Company. The Knoxville Trust Company, a Tennessee Banking Corporation, doing business in Knoxville, Tennessee, became insolvent the later part of the year, 1924, and complainant was appointed receiver of said Knoxville Trust Company, November 26, 1924.

The defendant insists in his answer .that he is not liable on either of these two instruments for want of consideration. He insists that he signed both the note and the check at the request of J. Albert Robbins, who was the president and manager of the Knoxville Trust Company, under representations Robbins made to the defendant that H. H. Galbraith, a brother of the defendant, was indebted to the Knoxville Trust Company. Defendant’s brother was out of the City of Knoxville at the time the check and note were both executed. Robbins agreed to hold defendant’s check until H. H. Galbraith should return to Knoxville. The defendant insisted that the note sued on was executed for the benefit of J. Albert Robbins and because Robbins insisted that auditors or examiners were making an *74 audit of tbe Knoxville Trust Company and Robbins wanted a new note. It was insisted that J. Albert Robbins was the beneficiary of the loan represented by the $2500 note and that the defendant and his brother owed no part of it. It appears th.at about the time the Knoxville Trust Company failed, J. Albert Robbins left Knoxville, his deposition was not taken in the instant ease. The defendant testified that his brother, TI. H. Galbraith, had returned to Knoxville and was in Knoxville when the defendant gave his deposition but H. H. Galbraith did not testify in the instant case. As to the $2500 note, it appears that Robbins, J. J. Galbraith' and H. H. Galbraith had numerous transactions with each other, they endorsed for one another and the three, Robbins, the defendant and H. H. Galbraith, in 1922, became indebted to J. F. Baker, an attorney of Huntsville, Tennessee, and now deceased, to the extent of $2500’. The $2500 note sued on in the instant case was executed to take up the Baker indebtedness. ' This Biaker note, after the death of Mr. Baker, was placed in the hands of Mr. John Ayres, attorney of Knoxville, for collection. Mr. Ayres found with the Baker note the following agreement:

“September 19, 1922. James F. Baker. We, the undersigned, as endorsers of a note for $2500 signed by J. Albert Robbins, secured by real estate notes of J. J. Connor, duly agree as endorsers to an extension of said note for sixty days from September 17, 1922, and guarantee payment of same or any renewals thereof.”
Signed J. J. Galbraith, H. H. Galbraith.

Mr. Ayres testified as follows:

‘ ‘ The only transaction I had in connection with in this, other than with Mr. Robbins, was — Joe Galbraith came to the office’ shortly after I had written Albert Robbins, demanding payment, and asked me if I would be willing to let Robbins pay the note off at the rate 'of $500’ a month, and hold the notes of H. M. and Flora Layman and Georgia Smith, which were real estate notes and were made payable to the order of J. J. Con-nor. On account of the experience I had had on another loan with Albert Robbins, I refused this request, and the next day or several days afterwards I met Mr. Robbins on the street and advised him that this matter would have to be adjusted or I would add the attorneys’ fees.”

It appears from the evidence of the bookkeeper, of the Knoxville Trust Company, and from the record of said company that the note sued on was executed July 1, 1924, for $2,500 payable six months after date. On that date the Knoxville Trust Company gave Mr. John Ayi’es, attorney, a check for $2,531.25. J. J. Galbraith, on that date, gave the Knoxville Trust Company a check for $31.25. It appears that when Galbraith paid $31.25, the Knoxville Trust Company took care of the balance due on the Baker note, $2500, with *75 the $2500, J. J. Galbraith note of July 1, 1924, payable to the Knoxville Trust Company. Galbraith, on July 3, 1924, had a transaction with the Knoxville Trust Company for which they receipted him for $358.85, this receipt covered the following items as shown by the evidence of Mrs. Hendrix, the bookkeeper, and we quote from her testimony as follows:

“Q. I will ask you to state the items that went to make up the Galbraith check of $358.85? A. Receipt book shows that commission account was credited with $30.50, being commission on $1300 loan to August 13th. Commission on $1000 loan to July 10th; commission on $1500 loan to July 5th, $750; commission on B. M. Gaston loan to March 24th, $112 53, and cash exchange or amount paid to Ayres, $31.25.
(MR. WORD: It is agreed that the foregoing answer is read into the deposition by the witness from the receipt book of the Knoxville Trust Company, and that same may be used as evidence in lieu of the book).
“Q. Have you also the deposit slip showing the deposit of the Galbraith check above referred to? A. Yes. On July 3, 1924, Knoxville Trust Company deposited with the City National Bank check of J. J. Galbraith for $449.10.
“Q. Were the items which you have read into the record including the $31.25, taken out of this check? A. Yes.
“Q. I will ask you to file said deposit slip as Exhibit No. 2 to your deposition? A. I so file.
“Q. Mrs. Hendrix, I will ask you if J. J. Galbraith had executed any other note to the Knoxville Trust Company at that time; that is, in July, 1924, — a $2500 note? A. No.
“Q. The $2500 note sued on here, then, is the only $2500 note owed by Galbraith to the Knoxville Trust Company during July, 1924? A. Yes.
“Q. I will ask you to state if your records show that John Ayres had a note for collection that belonged to the Baker estate? A. Yes-.
“Q. Was the $2531.25 check to Ayres to take up the note held by the Baker estate, which ivas executed either by Mr. Robbins or Galbraith, and endorsed by Harry Galbraith and J. J. Galbraith? A. Yes.
“Q. I will ask you just what your records show with reference to the note held by Ayres, attorney for the Baker estate? A. The $2500 loan 'on the books of the-Knoxville Trust Company now, was entered on October 8, 1924, which note was dated July 1, 1924, and is the note sued on in this cause. This note took up the note dated March 17, 1922, which was entered on the Knoxville Trust Company’s books on July 1, 1924, in the name of J. J. Galbraith.
“Q. Mrs. Hendrix, have you a copy of your ledger sheet showing the entry of the note dated March 17, 1922, which wias entered *76 on the Knoxville Trust Company’s books on July 1, 1924, setting up the $2500 note referred to? A. Yes.
‘ ‘ Q.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Tenn. App. 73, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-trust-co-v-galbraith-tennctapp-1929.