Figuers v. Fly

137 Tenn. 358
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 137 Tenn. 358 (Figuers v. Fly) 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
Figuers v. Fly, 137 Tenn. 358 (Tenn. 1916).

Opinion

Me Justice 'Williams

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The hill of complaint was filed to hold liable the several defendants for the amount of a check, $1,000, drawn in favor of W. D. Bryant and delivered by complainant Figuers in a loan by him of funds purportedly made to one W. D. Bryant and secured by ■ a deed of trust on the lands of the latter.

W. D. Bryant is an ex-Confederate soldier, aged seventy-six years, who resides in Maury county, about eighteen miles from Columbia, the county seat. He owns a farm of about sixty-four acres, of- value from $2,500 to $3,000. Two sons, J. G-. Bryant and E. M. Bryant, both young men of legal age, were members of his family, and the sons and the father stood high in the regard of their community.

J. G. Bryant became involved in sawmilling transactions, and fell into devious practices. There is more than an intimation 'in the record that another person who was in his employ at the time, one Morris, since deceased, was used as an aid in his schemes which involved frauds and forgeries, which schemes proved easier of consummation because of the family’s reputation for probity and because of J. G. Bryant’s own apparent unsophistication. With[365]*365out being a practiced deceiver he, in the transaction here involved, wove a web so tangled as that a four-cornered litigation has resulted, involving a lawyer, a notary public, and two banks, as parties to this contest.

Hardin P. Figuers, of Columbia, is one of the leading lawyers of the Middle Tennessee bar, and the author of Figuers’ Chancery Manual. As a part of his practice he loans, to an unusual extent, the moneys of clients. Knowing this fact, J. Gr. Bryant approached Figuers, avowedly in behalf of his father, for • a loan of $1,000 on the farm as security. He was introduced by Embry, a real estate agent of Columbia, and made application for the loan. Fig-uers asked for time within which to investigate tne proposed lender and the title of the land, improvements, etc. His investigation along all lines proving satisfactory, he informed Embry that he could lend the money, and the latter informed J. Gr. Bryant, who returned to the city to close the deal.

Figuers took notes for use in the drafting of the deed of trust, and asked J. Gr. Bryant for the name of his mother. The reply, falsely given, was that she was dead. Bryant then informed Figuers that he had an interest in the land by purchase from his father, hut that no deed had been executed to him for it, and that perhaps he (J. G. Bryant) ought to join in the execution of the deed of trust, and it was so drawn. However, the loan, as first proposed and as finally closed, was made to W. D. Bryant as record owner of and on the security of the farm.

[366]*366J. Gr. Bryant, referring to the facts that his father was an aged man and lived so far in the country, asked whether the matter of signing and acknowledging could not be attended to without his father coming to town, and Piguers replied that it could if the two Bryants would go before a notary public in their neighborhood. J. Gr. Bryant left, taking the draft of the deed of trust and a note for $1,000 filled out by Piguers for their signatures. He returned in a few days bringing both instruments, apparently signed by the father and son, the trust deed having attached to it the certificate of defendant Ply, as notary public, which recited according to the prescribed statutory formula, that W. D. Bryant and J. Gr. Bryant, “the within named bargainors, with whom I am personally acquainted,” had personally appeared before Ply and acknowledged its execution. In point of fact W. D. Bryant had not signed or acknowledged either of the documents.

When these were delivered to Piguers and he had seen to the registration of the trust deed, he delivered to J. G. Bryant his check on the Maury National Bank, of Columbia, for $1,000. A short time thereafter Embry called Piguers on the telephone and was out of humor because his commission of $14 had not been retained by Piguers out of the loan sum. Later, Embry and Bryant went to the office of Piguers, and the latter at Bryant’s request filled out a check of $14 for Bryant to'sign, drawing it on the Phoenix National Bank in favor of Embry as payee. Piguers [367]*367understood that Bryant had at that time deposited the $1,000 check in that bank to his father’s account, influenced to do so by Embry, who was - the stepbrother of its cashier, Fulton.

Such a deposit of that check to the account of the father either had been made or was about to be made by J. G. Bryant, who assumed the authority to indorse the name of W. D. Bryant. In fact W. D,. Bryant had no knowledge of or participation in any of these transactions. J. G. Bryant merely used his name and credit as 'means of imposing on the notary, the attorney, and the bank.

The Phoenix Bank accepted such indorsement in the name of W. D. Bryant, the cashier having “very slight acquaintance” with the son, but knowing him to be one of the Bryant boys. J. G. Bryant after signing his father’s name as indorser, affixed his own, “J. G. Bryant.”

The Phoenix Bank indorsed the check, setting forth “indorsements guaranteed,” and collected the fund from the Maury Bank thereon.

J. G. Bryant for years saw to it that the interest on the $1,000 note was paid annually, but finally allowed default and departed the state. When the truth as to his forgery developed, Figuers filed the bill of complaint against the notary for negligence in the taking of the acknowledgment, and also against the two banks.

The Maury Bank filed a cross-bill, seeking to hold liable the Phoenix Bank on the latter’s guaranty of [368]*368the indorsement, in event the former bank should be held liable on account of honoring and paying its depositor’s check on an unauthorized and forged in-dorsement of the payee’s name.

Other facts will- be recited in the body of the opinion in the discussion of the questions of liability and defense.

I. As to the liability of the defendant notary public to complainant because of the false certificate:

A lengthy discussion by counsel is entered into in regard to the nature of an act performed by a notary public in taking a single person’s acknowledgment — whether ministerial or quasi judicial. That may be here treated as a thing quite aside, as we think that the taking of the acknowledgment in this case was clearly so far ministerial as that the notary may be held to respond under his bond for negligence, if any there be.

By the provisions of Code (Shannon), section 3769, if a clerk who takes the acknowledgment of a deed fails to discharge the duties required of him, he shall be liable to the party injured for all damages he may sustain; and a notary public is likewise liable since by Act 1870, chapter 71, they are empowered to take acknowledgments “in the same manner and under the same rules and regulations as govern county court clerks” under existing laws. Code (Shannon), section 3714.

Counsel for complainant have undertaken to assimilate completely the notary to such clerk and to [369]

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Bluebook (online)
137 Tenn. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/figuers-v-fly-tenn-1916.