Greenlaw v. Pettit

11 S.W. 357, 87 Tenn. 467, 3 Pickle 467, 1889 Tenn. LEXIS 2
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 11 S.W. 357 (Greenlaw v. Pettit) 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
Greenlaw v. Pettit, 11 S.W. 357, 87 Tenn. 467, 3 Pickle 467, 1889 Tenn. LEXIS 2 (Tenn. 1889).

Opinion

Lurton, J.

On October 21, 1872, W. B. Greenlaw and M. J. Wicks were indebted, by open account, to the defendants, R. T. Wilson & Co., in the sum of $47,014.50. The debt, having been contracted [469]*469and payable in Sew York, bore, by agreement, interest at the rate of ten per cent.

On the 12th of February, 1873, Wicks paid $6,400 on this debt, leaving due March 31, 1873, $42,633.56. On the latter date W. B. Greenlaw delivered to R. T. Wilson & Co. the live notes of himself and II. L. Brinkley, each for $4,947.01, due respectively on the 4th days of November, December, January, February, aud March thereafter. These notes aggregated $24,735.06, and were secured by a mortgage upon Brinkley’s property. These notes, amounting to one-half of the original debt and interest due from Greenlaw & Wicks, were accepted as payment pro tanto of the joint account, and duly credited as a payment and ex-tinguishment of that amount of the joint debt. This left a balance which, with interest,' amounted, on the 31st of March, 1874, to $19,688.55. On the 30th of March, 1874, Wicks paid on this balance $11,'384.68; and on May 4, 1874, Greenlaw paid the further sum of $1,700, leaving a balance May 31, 1874, of $6,728.45, and this was the sum due on this joint debt at the date of Greenlaw's death in August, 1875. On the 24th of November, 1875, his executor — the complainant — paid, out of a policy of life insurance, the further sum of $5,000, and on the same day Wilson & Go., from the individual deposit account of W. B. Greenlaw, transferred the sum of $2,748.19 to the joint account of Wiclcs & Greenlaw, thus completing the payment of this joint debt. The proof shows that the notes of Greenlaw [470]*470& Brinkley, amounting to $24,735.06, were, as between Greenlaw and Wicks, regarded as a full payment by Greenlaw of his one-half of the joint debt to K. T. Wilson & Co., and hence Greenlaw alone, as between himself and Wicks, undertook to pay off these notes. Before Greenlaw’s death he had paid off' in full one of these notes and upon another the further sum of $1,166.64, and after his death Wilson & Co., out of his individual deposit account with them, applied the further sum of $6, 576.51, in equal sums upon the notes still outstanding.

The application of the individual account of Greenlaw to the payment of the balance of. the account due from Wicks & Greenlaw and upon the unpaid notes of Brinkley & Greenlaw, was by virtue of an agreement between W. B. Greenlaw and R,. T. Wilson & Co., and was assented to by the executor of the former. In addition to the sums paid directly to Wilson & Co. by Greenlaw, he paid the further sum of $833.33, on account of expenses incurred by them in a litigation resulting from an effort to collect a collateral held by them as a security and belonging jointly to Wicks & Greenlaw. Thus • the sums paid out by W. B. Greenlaw or his executor, on account of the joint liability of Wicks & Greenlaw, were as follows:

March 31, 1873 .$24,735 06

May 4, 1874.1. 1,700 00

November 30, 1874. 833 33

November 24, 1875. 5,000 00

November 24, 1875. 2,748 19 — $35,0}6 58

[471]*471The sums paid by Wicks were:

February 12, 1878 .$ 6,400 00

March 30, 1874. 11,384 68 — $17,784 68

Excess of payments made by Greenlaw.$17,231 90

Rot including interest, the balance due from Wicks to Greenlaw on account of these overpay-ments on this joint debt would be $8,615.95, being one-half of this excess.

Wicks & Greenlaw, in order to secure their joint indebtedness to R. T. Wilson & Co., assigned and transferred to .them, in 1872, one-third interest in a claim for $150,000 against the North and South" Railroad Company, being a claim for commissions for sale of bonds issued by that corporation. They also undertook to give a lien on a lot in the city of Memphis at the corner of Union and Second Streets, in which they were at that time jointly interested, hut which ultimately become the exclusive property of Greenlaw. In 1882, seven years after the death of Greenlaw, some $48,000 was collected by R. T. Wilson & Co., on account of the interest of Wicks & Greenlaw in the claim against R. & S. R. R. Co. After paying out of this sum the balance, with interest, still due to them upon the notes of Brinkley & Greenlaw, there remained a balance of some $22,000. This balance was claimed to be the interest of M. J. Wicks in this asset, and, as such, it was paid over to a receiver, appointed in a proceeding in the Chancery Court at Memphis, who has paid out the same to assignees of Wicks who held and claimed upon a transfer [472]*472made subsequent to that made by Wicks & Green-law to R. T. Wilson & Co. These assignees are not innocent purchasers for a valuable consideration, but are creditors of M. J. Wicks, and as such are entitled to hold only the interest of Wicks, whatever that may turn out to be, under the facts showing his relation to this joint debt, and as affected by the general balance as between Wicks & Greenlaw on that and other accounts.

Complainant’s contention is, that he is entitled to be subrogated to the lien of ft. T. Wilson & Co., on the interest of Wicks in the collateral held by them to secure the joint debt of Wicks & Greenlaw, and that this lien exists against the fund arising from collection of that collateral, and may be enforced against the assignees of the fund, they not being innocent purchasers, and therefore only entitled to Wicks’ interest, 'subject to the lien claimed by him. That the fund must be treated as if in court, and complainant reimbursed- out of it, for one-half of the excess of payments made by Greenlaw over those made by Wicks, upon the joint debt. Upon the facts so far stated complainant would seem clearly entitled to the relief he asks, but the situation is rendered much more complicated by certain defenses arising upon other facts now necessary to be stated.

In 1881 there was pending in the Chancery Court at Memphis a general insolvent bill for the administration in that court of the estate of W. B. Greenlaw. This bill had been filed by one Wallace, [473]*473claiming to be a creditor. R. T. Wilson & Co. bad filed and proved their claim upon the unpaid notes of Brinkley & G-reenlaw. On March 3, 1881, they filed a petition in the same case, suggesting that they were willing to compromise their claim against Greenlaw (assuming it to be half of the amount due on the Brinkley k Green-law notes) by accepting in satisfaction thereof Green-law’s half of the claim for commissions against the North & South Railroad Company, being the claim held as collateral security upon the debt of Wicks and Greenlaw, as heretofore explained; and also the interest of Greenlaw in the Memphis lot heretofore mentioned. On this petition a reference was ordered, and the Master directed to report upon the advisability of the proposed compromise. The master, upon proof, reported that such a settlement was advisable, and on December 17, 1881, the court confirmed this report, and decreed to R. T. Wilson & Co. the one-half of the joint claim of Wicks & Greenlaw in the collateral held by the former firm,’ and Greenlaw’s interest in the Memphis lot, in full satisfaction of all liability of Greenlaw’s estate to Wilson & Co. About the same time an order was made appointing Mr. T. B. Turley receiver of the interest of M. J.

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

Related

Joshua Cooper v. Logistics Insight Corp.
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2011
Estate of Ladd v. Marks
247 S.W.3d 628 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2007)
In Re Ellis
822 S.W.2d 602 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1991)
Breedlove v. Niagara Cold Drawn South
813 S.W.2d 467 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1991)
Castleman Construction Company v. Pennington
432 S.W.2d 669 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1968)
Lindsay v. Allen
112 Tenn. 637 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1904)
Bryan v. Henderson
88 Tenn. 23 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 S.W. 357, 87 Tenn. 467, 3 Pickle 467, 1889 Tenn. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenlaw-v-pettit-tenn-1889.