Fidelity Trust Co. v. Norton

10 Tenn. App. 132, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 13
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 15, 1929
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Tenn. App. 132 (Fidelity Trust Co. v. Norton) 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. Norton, 10 Tenn. App. 132, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 13 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

J. A. Norton was formerly sheriff of Meigs county. The Fidelity Trust Company is a corporation at Knoxville, Tennessee. The Fidelity Trust Company entered a motion against J. A. Norton, former sheriff of Meigs county, Tennessee, and his official bondsmen, because of an. insufficient return on an execution issuing from the chancery court of Meigs county, Tennessee, on a judgment rendered in favor of said Fidelity Trust Company and against D. W. Selvidge and ivife Ellen Selvidge.

The Chancellor denied the motion, the petitioner, Trust Company excepted, perfected an appeal and has assigned four errors. The facts briefly state are as follows:

In a foreclosure suit in the chancery court of Meigs county, Tennessee, judgment was rendered on October 19, 1926 in favor of the Fidelity Trust Company and against D. W. Selvidge and wife Ellen Selvidge, in the sum of $1519.91, and the mortgaged property was ordered sold.

The property was purchased at the court sale by the Fidelity Trust Company and the purchaser "was required by the decree confirming sale, to pay in an amount sufficient to take care of court costs while the balance was credited on the judgment.

For the balance of this judgment, amounting to $1015.95, an execution was duly issued on June 6, 1927, to the sheriff of Meigs county, Tennessee, who held the same until October 15, 1927, when he made the following return thereon:

“Came to hand 6th day of June, 1927.
“J. A. Norton, Sheriff,
“By J. P. Martin, D. S.
‘ ‘ Executed levying on lands of Ellen Selvidge in First District of Meigs county, Tennessee. Enjoined from selling same by bill filed in chancery court at Decatur. This October 15, 1927.
“J. A. Norton, Sheriff,
“By J. P. Martin, D. S.”

On October 11, 1928 the Fidelity Trust Company served a notice on said J. A. Norton (whose tern! as sheriff had then expired) that on Tuesday, October 36, 1928, it Avould, in the chancery court of Meigs' county, move for judgment against him and his bondsmen for the amount due on said execution together with interest and *134 penalty, because of said insufficient return. Said motion was copied in full in said notice and the grounds thereof were fully set out therein.

After the service of said notice and before the convening of said court, to-wit; on October 13, 1928, J. P. Martin, former deputy sheriff under said J. A. Norton, filed in said court his affidavit and motion seeking leave to amend said return so as to set out certain facts stated in said affidavit.

Immediately upon the convening of said chancery court Meigs county at Decatur, to-wit, on October 16, 1928, said affidavit and motion on behalf of J. P. Martin, were presented in open court, and said motion was taken under advisement.

The complainant Trust Company introduced the following evidence in support of its motion:

1. The notice of said motion, served by him on J. A. Norton, on October 11, 1928.

2. A certified copy of the execution with the return complained of, thereon.

3. A certified copy of the official bond of J. A. Norton, as sheriff of Meigs county, Tennessee, for the two years term beginning September 1, 1926.

4. Proof that J. .A. Norton as sheriff and J. P. Martin as deputy sheriff went out of office on September 1, 1928.

Thereupon the defendant Norton offered in evidence the affidavit of J. P. Martin, former deputy sheriff under Norton seeking to amend the return and also the records in the cause are No’s 915 and 895, in the chancery court of Meigs county.

The Fidelity Trust Company objected to the admission of said affidavit and to said records in said causes No’s 915 and 895, upon the ground that such extraneous evidence is not admissible on the hearing, because said motion must be determined by the record of the execution and the return thereon. But the court admitted said evidence, to which action the Fidelity Trust Company excepted.

The Fidelity Trust Company also resisted said motion of J. P. Martin for leave to amend said return upon three distinct grounds:

1. The original return was fatally defective as to the description of lands and hence could not be amended.

2. The said former sheriff and his deputy being now out of office, will not under the law be permitted to amend.

3. Said amendment is insufficient, as a matter of law.

The said J. A. Norton resisted the motion of the Fidelity Trust Company for judgment against him, upon the ground that under the law and under the records in causes No’s 895 and 915, he was not liable for judgment under such motion.

The court having taken these matters under advisement, later delivered its opinion and decree as follows: t

*135 1. The motion of J. P. Martin, former deputy sheriff, for leave to amend his return was disallowed because said officer’s term had expired prior to the filing of said affidavit and motion.

2. The record in the cause styled R. J. Coulter v. Ellen Sel-vidge, et al., No. 915, being the cause in which the sale of the land claimed to have been levied upon was enjoined, was held to be competent evidence on the hearing of this motion for judgment against the sheriff for insufficient return.

3. The return complained of is insufficient, as a matter of law.

The court was of the opinion however, and so decreed by reason of. the Trust Company’s position, in the case of Coulter v. Selvidge wherein the Trust Company filed an answer and cross-bill and this being the same bill which enjoined the sale of the property attempted to be levied on, the return of which is now complained of in this motion.

It appears that in the answer of the Fidelity Trust Company, it admits in that proceeding the priority of the claims against the estate of Mrs. Smith over its judgment, and by consent of its counsel of record, without objection, let the property go to sale, and determine by decree the distribution of the proceeds. Therefore the court, over exception of the Fidelity Trust Company, admits the file in this later' case of Coulter v. Selvidge as evidence upon the hearing of this motion.

The court is further of the opinion that although the return upon the execution is insufficient, this fact was known to the Fidelity Trust Company, or to its counsel, at the time of the filing of its answer and cross-bill, and of the entry of the decree in that cause, and the sale of the land, etc. This being true, the court is of opinion that it was encumbent upon the Trust Company to have made its formal motion against the sheriff before final decree in that cause. Lutrell v. Fisher, 11 Heisk., page 101.

This being true, the court is of opinion that, although the return was insufficient and in a .proper case the Trust Company would be entitled to recover, whether or not the parties are solvent or insolvent, it is now estopped and bound by the action in the former case.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Tenn. App. 132, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-trust-co-v-norton-tennctapp-1929.