Grange Warehouse Ass'n v. Owen

86 Tenn. 355
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 86 Tenn. 355 (Grange Warehouse Ass'n v. Owen) 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
Grange Warehouse Ass'n v. Owen, 86 Tenn. 355 (Tenn. 1888).

Opinion

Folkes, J.

The complainant, in its corporate capacity, brought this bill to recover possession of certain tobacco in the barn or factory of John F. Owen, deceased, claiming title thereto under a cei’-tain contract made with said Owen, which is thus stated by Iierndon, the superintendent of the com-plainantj who was examined as a witness:

. “ The plaintiff agreed to furnish money to John F. Owen to pay for tobacco, which he was to prize and deliver to the plaintiff; and to secure the plaintiff against loss by the said transaction, the title to all of said tobacco so bought should vest in plaintiff, and as further security the said Owen was to put up collateral security as might be demanded by plaintiff’ to cover losses or shrinkage in value. The plaintiff was to sell said tobacco at best possible advantage, and after deducting money furnished with interest, at- what it cost plaintiff’, with all legitimate expenses, all the profits were to belong to Owen.”

The proof shows that such a contract had been made and performed for the' tobacco season of 1881, reneAved for 1882, and the complainant had advanced OAven for the season of .1883, beginning November 1st, 1882, the sum of $34,848.27, and the latter had shipped to complainant 218 hogsheads of tobacco. The proceeds of the sale of [357]*357these 218 hogsheads, after deducting interest, storage, freights, commissions, etc., were credited to Owen’s account, leaving a balance of $9,464.35 due complainant at the death of Owen, which occurred in July, 1883.

Under the bill in this cause the complainant obtained possession of fifty-one hogsheads of tobacco, and after selling same, and deducting the usual charges, the net proceeds thereof amounted to $5,-784.85, which, being credited to the account, left a balance of $3,679.50 still due complainant, for which, on final hearing, decree was rendered in favor of complainant against the administrator of said Owen, with interest, the Court adjudging that complainant was entitled to maintain replevin for the fifty-one hogsheads, and that the proceeds were properly applied.

Defendant has appealed, and assigned as error, first, the action of the Chancellor in overruling the demurrer to the bill, and in permitting complainant to amend its bill; second, the decree final in favor of complainant as to the fifty-one hogsheads; third, the action of the Court in overruling objections to testimony of the witness Herndon— each of which will be considered in the order stated. • „

Briefly stated, the demurrer was to the effect that the contract, as stated in the bill, presented merely the case of debtor and creditor between the complainant and deceased, and gave no lien or .title to the tobacco then in the barn or factory of the [358]*358deceased that would authorize the complainant to maintain replevin for the same, and that the only relief to which complainant was entitled was its action for money had and received, or for debt, or for the breach of the contract to ship the tobacco as agreed.

There was no error in overruling the demurrer, nor in allowing the bill to be amended. The bill set up the contract and agreement that the “property and title in said tobacco belonged to complainant,” and the amendment was before answer and in no manner objectionable, although it seems to have been unnecessary, as it does not appear to strengthen the case made in the bill. The allowance of such amendment at that stage of the proceedings was clearly within the discretion of the Chancellor, and its proper exercise will not be disturbed.

The defendant answered the bill, original and amended, denied the contract as charged in the bill, insisted that it was an .ordinary advance or loan of money, with expectation that the tobacco which Owen was to purchase therewith would be consigned to complainant for sale, so that complainant might obtain the profit of handling, storing, and selling 'same; that the. tobacco found in the barn at the death of Owen, out of which the complainant had replevied the fifty-one hogsheads, were general assets of the estate of defendant’s intestate, and that he was entitled, as such, to administer the same for the benefit of all creditors of said estate.

[359]*359There was proof taken "by both sides, from which it satisfactorily appears that the contract, though oral, was substantially as stated in the bill; that tinder this contract the money was furnished to and invested by Owen in the purchase of tobacco from sundry parties; the tobacco was then carried to Owen’s barn and packed in hogsheads, it being purchased loose; and as pressed the hogsheads wore shipped to complainant with Owen’s name stamped thereon; and as the tobacco .was sold, account sales of same were rendered from time to time to Owen, in the usual form of sales by warehousemen or commission merchants, and the net proceeds credited on the account current periodically rendered Owen.

The proof further establishes that it was the intention and wish of the deceased that the tobacco on hand in the barn at the time of his death should be pressed, and shipped from the home of deceased, in Robertson County, to the* complainant, at its place of business in Clarksville, Montgomery County, under the contract; and that the deceased gave such instruction to his brother, who was attending to the business for him; and that the brother, after he became administrator, undertook to carry out the contract and instructions of intestate, and did accordingly press into hogsheads a portion of the tobacco on hand, and mark the same consigned to complainant in the same manner as deceased had been in the habit of doing, intending and promising to ship same accordingly, [360]*360wlien he was notified by other creditors that they would insist that the tobacco was assets of the estate, and, as such, should be held by the administrator. He thereupon refused to ship any of the tobacco, and this suit was brought.

"While there is some proof tending to show that the deceased had some little money and credit, with which it is contended he bought tobacco independently of his arrangement with complainant, it is manifest, from the great preponderance of the evidence, that the deceased was without money or credit, although he had a small farm, and that the tobacco replevied by complainant was purchased and paid for by deceased with the money furnished by complainant, under the contract as already stated. The insolvency of Owen’s estate is proven to have been suggested in the County Court, where it is being administered as such.

The question, therefore, is squarely presented, whether a parol contract, such as is above herein stated, whereby a warehouseman or commission merchant furnishes money to a customer, to he by the customer invested in the purchase of personal property that passes temporarily into the custody of the party making the purchase, to be handled and then shipped to the party so furnishing the money, to be sold on the account of the purchaser, with the agreement that the title to the property so purchased is to pass to and remain in the party furnishing the money, as security therefor, until he is reimbursed the amount advanced for that pur[361]*361pose,-is a valid contract, that -can he enforced as against creditors of the party to whom the money is advanced, or, as in this case, against the administrator of an insolvent estate, hy a replevin of the goods so purchased where they are identified.

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Bluebook (online)
86 Tenn. 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grange-warehouse-assn-v-owen-tenn-1888.