General Securities Co. v. Sunday School Pub. Board, Inc.

125 S.W.2d 160, 22 Tenn. App. 590, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 60
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 10, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 160 (General Securities Co. v. Sunday School Pub. Board, Inc.) 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
General Securities Co. v. Sunday School Pub. Board, Inc., 125 S.W.2d 160, 22 Tenn. App. 590, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 60 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

FELTS, J.

These three suits were brought by the General Securities Company against the Sunday School Publishing Board, Inc., in the Court of General Sessions to recover on three notes for $500 each. That court rendered judgments for plaintiff. Upon appeal to the Circuit Court the eases by consent were tried together. There the verdicts and judgments were in favor of defendant, and plaintiff appealed in error.

The issue was whether plaintiff had notice of defendant’s equities or defenses against the notes at the time plaintiff purchased them; and each of the seven assignments of error present certain phases of this controversy.

The defendant Sunday School Publishing Board, Inc., is a corporation, engaged in publishing Sunday School periodicals and literature for the Negro Baptists in the United States. Its publishing' house is a large five-story building, located on the corner of Fourth Avenue and Cedar Street in Nashville. On July 8, 1985, defendant made a contract with J. E. Penn, doing business as the Penn Electrical Company, to do certain repair work on the elevators in this building. The contract was in writing, and particularly described the work to be done, fixing a time limit of sixty days within which the work was to be finished. The price for the work was $5,000. At the time the contract was made defendant made one note of $1,000 and eight notes of $500 each, payable to the order of Penn Electrical Company, and delivered them to J. E. Penn. These notes were negotiable in form and contained no reference to the contract. At the’ time they were delivered to Penn it seems to have been the understanding between him and Dr. A. M. Townsend, Secretary of the Board, who handled the matter for it, that Penn would discount the *592 notes, or some of them, to enable him to raise the money with which to obtain the materials and labor required for the work.

Penn discounted three of the $500 notes to the Nashville Savings & Loan Corporation, one on July 10, 1935, another July 17, and the third July 20. Two of these matured October 6, 1935, and the third October 16, 1935. These three notes were paid and are not now involved.

The other six notes Penn discounted to the plaintiff, the General Securities Company. One of these was the $1,000 note and the other five were for $500 each. This $1,000 note and two of these $500 notes were purchased by plaintiff on September 9, 1935. This $1,000 note matured October 6, 1935, one of these $500 notes purchased September 9, 1935, matured October 16, 1935, and the other January 4, 1936. These three notes have been paid and are not now involved.

The notes which are involved are the three last maturing, their maturity dates being January 4, January 24, and February 4, 1936, and all being for $500 each. Plaintiff purchased these notes on September 27, November 16, and December 24, 1935, all of them being properly endorsed by the payee, the Penn Electrical Company by J. E. Penn. Plaintiff paid Penn $470 each for two of them and $450 for the other one.

Before plaintiff had purchased any of the notes, Penn had breached his contract, which formed the consideration for the notes. On September 8, 1935, the time limit of sixty days for completing the work had expired and the work had not been completed; and it had begun to appear that Penn was not going to finish the work at all. He did abandon it about February 6, 1936, leaving much of it unperformed and leaving unpaid bills for labor and materials. H. G. Ballou, who was employed on the work by Penn, has a labor claim for $710, on which he has brought suit in the Chancery Court to enforce his lien against defendant’s building; and it is shown that the reasonable costs of completing the work as called for in the contract would be $1,378 for materials and $600 for labor, making defendant’s claim against Penn much more than the amount of the three notes in suit; so that defendant would have a g'ood defense against the notes in his hands or in the hands of plaintiff, if it is not a holder in due course. Code, sec. 7382; Hight v. McCulloch, 150 Tenn., 117, 126, 263 S. W., 794; Frazier v. Galbraith, 3 Tenn. App., 302; Davis v. Union Planters N. B. & Tr. Co., 171 Tenn., 383, 385, 103 S. W. (2d), 579. And plaintiff is not a holder in due course if, before purchasing the notes, it had actual knowledge of defendant’s equities or defenses against them. Code, secs. 7376; 7380.

Whether it had such knowledge was the issue below. On the trial plaintiff put the three notes in evidence and rested. Thereupon defendant introduced its witness, Dr. A. M. Townsend, the Secretary *593 of the Sunday School Publishing* Board, who testified that on the 8th or 9th of September, 1935, he was called on the telephone at his office by some one who said that he was Mr. "Wood of the General Securities Company, and that the company had purchased from Penn two of the Board’s notes, the $1,000 note and one of the $500 notes, and he desired to know from the witness whether the notes would be paid at maturity. Townsend told him those two would be paid, but explained to him that those notes and the others given Penn had been given according to a contract by which Penn was to do the work on the elevators and that Penn “was not carrying out the contract according to the specifications” and the Board had “certain equities in the Penn contract that would have to be satisfied” before the Board would pay any more of the notes; and Townsend advised Wood not to purchase any more of the notes until he had his “okey” for the purchase, and he stated that Wood said he was “going to call me before he would buy any more of the notes. ’ ’

This testimony of Townsend was objected to by plaintiff upon the ground that he had not identified Wood’s voice and. there was not sufficient identification of the person calling him. The trial judge overruled this objection, admitted the evidence conditionally, but stated he would later exclude it if it was not “connected up.”

Witness Townsend then introduced certain correspondence between plaintiff and defendant, which consisted of (1) a letter from plaintiff to defendant, dated October 21, 1935, signed by “L. M. Wood, Manager,” requesting payment of the $1,000 note due on October 6, and of the $500 note due October 16; (2) a letter from plaintiff to defendant, dated October 28, 1935, signed by L. M. Wood, Manager, requesting payment of another $500 note due October 26; (3) a letter from plaintiff to defendant dated October 31, 1935, written by L. M. Wood, Manager, requesting defendant to disregard the letter of October 28, because plaintiff had made a mistake as to the maturity of the note; (4) a notice post-marked December 24, 1935, that defendant had purchased two more of the $500 notes; and (5) defendant’s reply to this notice, the reply being written by Dr. Townsend, Secretary, dated December 26, 1935, and being as follows:

“General Securities Company, a thousand and one, Nashville Trust Building, Nashville, Tennessee. Gentlemen: We have your notice postmarked December 24, that you have purchased and are now the owner of one note of $500 made payable to the order of Penn Electric Co., and due January 27, 1936.
“We hope you recall that we advised that you would not accept or purchase this note without my okey.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

California Bank v. Diamond
301 P.2d 60 (California Court of Appeal, 1956)
Gutowsky v. Halliburton Oil Well Cementing Co.
1955 OK 219 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1955)
Kimbrough v. Wright
50 So. 2d 909 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1951)
Pickard v. Berryman
142 S.W.2d 764 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 160, 22 Tenn. App. 590, 1938 Tenn. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-securities-co-v-sunday-school-pub-board-inc-tennctapp-1938.