Groveland Banking Co. v. City Nat. Bank

144 Tenn. 520
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 144 Tenn. 520 (Groveland Banking Co. v. City Nat. Bank) 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
Groveland Banking Co. v. City Nat. Bank, 144 Tenn. 520 (Tenn. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. L. D. Smith, Special Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Groveland Banking Company, located at Grove-land Station, N. Y., on the 26th of November, 1918, forwarded to the City National Bank of Knoxville, for collection, a draft for $800, which had been drawn in their favor by one of their customers, Ewart & Lake, merchants of Groveland Station, N. Y., on H. C. Bondur-ant Company of Knoxville. This draft was received by the City National Bank in due course, and by it collected from the drawee on January 7, 1919. The City National Bank refused to remit the proceeds of the draft, and thereupon the Groveland Banking Company filed the original hill in this cause against the City National Bank to collect the same.

[524]*524Iii addition to the facts above stated the bill alleges that the draft had attached thereto a bill of lading covering a shipment of beans made by Ewart & Lake to the Bondurant Company at Knoxville, and that the draft with the bill of lading attached was for a valuable consideration and in the usual course of business purchased by the complainant from the said Ewart & Lake.

The defendant City National Bank undertakes to justify its refusal to remit the proceeds of this draft which it collected, and defends, by way of answer, upon the following facts alleged to exist:

On December 24, 1918, Chastain, Smith & Co., merchants at Knoxville, Tenn., filed an original bill in the chancery court at Knoxville against Ewart & Lake, the drawers of this draft, in which it was alleged that Ewart & Lake were indebted to Chastain, Smith & Co. in the sum of $555.14, growing out of the purchase of some beans which proved to be of less value than they had been compelled to pay for them. An attachment was sued out by the bill, and it was attempted to have the attachment levied upon the carload of beans, which had been shipped by Ewart and Lake to H. C. Bondurant Company. On January 7, 1919, Chastain, Smith & Co. filed an amended and supplemental bill in the same cause, making the defendant City National Bank a party thereto. In this amended and supplemental bill it was alleged that the railway company had refused to deliver the beans unless the bill of lading was.taken up and the freight paid, and in order to avoid this complication an agreement had been made between Chastain, Smith & [525]*525Co. and H. C. Bondnrant Company by which the latter was to pay the $800 draft and the freight and thns procure the bill of lading’.

Under this agreement the proceeds of the draft in the hands of the City National Bank was sought to be reached, under a prayer that the City National Bank be directed and ordered to pay the funds into the hands of the receiver in that case, a receiver having previously thereto been appointed.

The City National Bank answered this amended and supplemental bill, admitting that Ewart & Lake had drawn a draft on H. C. Bondnrant & Co. for the sum of $800, payable through the City National Bank, and that this draft, was sent for collection through the Groveland Banking Company, and the same was paid on the 7th day of January 1919. The defendant City National Bank expressed its readiness to pay the money to the party or parties entitled to it, or to abide by the orders of the court made in the case. On January 30, 1919, the chancery court in that cause made an order, directing the City National Bank to pay the money which had been collected from the draft to the receiver, and in this order it was provided:

“That on the payment of the same to said receiver it be released from liability and the receiver will retain said funds subject to the orders of the court to be made in this cause.”

Subsequently, and on February 14, 1919, a judgment pro confesso was taken against Ewart & Lake, and a final decree entered thereon, granting to Chastain, Smith & Co. a judgment against Ewart & Lake for $559.30, and [526]*526directing the, funds which had be.en paid into the hands of the receiver hy the City National Bank to be applied on the judgment. There was a surplus of the money paid into court which the receiver was directed to pay over to the City National Bank as the agent of Ewart & Lake.

Upon this state of facts it is contended for the defendant :

(1) That the judgment of the chancery court in the cause of Chastain, Smith & Co. v. Ewart & Lake affords complete protection against any claim to the funds which they collected in favor of the complainant, Groveland Banking Company.

(2) That the Groveland ^Banking Company did not in fact purchase, and was not the owner of the draft and bill of lading, but that it was the property of Ewart & Lake.

(3) That the Groveland Banking Company had actual notice of the attachment proceedings aforesaid, and failed to take any steps to intervene therein until after the money had been paid into court under order pronounced in the proceedings aforesaid, and that therefore the complainant is now estopped to compel the defendant to pay the money again to it.

(4) That the beans for the purchase price of which this draft was drawn had been attached as the property of Ewart & Lake, and by virtue thereof the beans became the property of the sheriff, and therefore that the defendant was not a garnishee in the usual legal sense, except as an agent under orders of the court in handling-said funds.

[527]*527The decree of the chancellor merely shows that: “Prom the consideration of all which the conrt holds and decrees that the complainants have failed to make ont their case, and are not entitled to the relief sought in their hill. ’ ’

From that decree the complainant appealed to the court of civil appeals, which latter court affirmed the decree of the chancellor, in effect sustaining all of the contentions made hy the defendant bank.

The defendant City National Bank having admitted the collection of this draft, and that it was payable on its face to the complainant, must, in order to escape responsibility, carry the burden of establishing the defenses made.

The first inquiry is whether the complainant was in reality and in good faith the actual owner of this draft and bill of lading. If the complainant did not own it, then Ewart & Lake did, and the defendant bank can successfully defend upon the ground that it had paid the money into court under a proceeding to which the owiiers of the draft were parties. The only evidence as to the ownership of the draft and bill of lading is that found in the testimony of Mr. Brown, the cashier of the Q-rove-land Banking Company. Prom his testimony we learn that Ewart. & Lake were customers of theirs, and had shipped a lot of beans to H. C. Bondurant Company at Knoxville, Tenn., had made a draft of $800 therefor oh the consignee, and attached thereto the bill of lading-issued by the carrier. This draft was made payable to the Gfroveland Banking Company, who indorsed it- and transmitted it to the defendant bank for collection. Mr. [528]*528Brown says that his hanking company purchased this draft and hill of lading, and that it immediately became the absolute owner thereof.

. If it be conceded'that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
144 Tenn. 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/groveland-banking-co-v-city-nat-bank-tenn-1921.