Growers Warehousing Corp. v. W. E. Sawyer Tobacco Co.

5 Tenn. App. 619, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 101
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 2, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 Tenn. App. 619 (Growers Warehousing Corp. v. W. E. Sawyer Tobacco Co.) 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
Growers Warehousing Corp. v. W. E. Sawyer Tobacco Co., 5 Tenn. App. 619, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 101 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

PAW, P. J.

The bill in this case was filed in the chancery court of Montgomery county, 'on March 1, 1927, by the Growers Warehousing Corporation, a Tennessee corporation (hereinafter called the Warehousing Corporation) and the Dark Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association, a Kentucky corporation domesticated in Tennessee, (hereinafter called the Association), as complainants, against the W. E. Sawyer Tobacco Company, a nonresident corporation (hereinafter called defendant Tobacco Company), as defendant.

The subject-matter of this suit is the possession of certain real property in the City of Clarksville, Tennessee, commonly known in that community as the “Buckner Factory.”

Reduced to their substance, the averments of the bill are that the complainant Warehousing Corporation is the owner of the Buckner Factory, and has heretofore, and until defendant took possession in the manner hereinafter stated, been occupying and using same for the purpose of warehousing tobacco," which tobacco was bulked and prized in the buildings on said premises by the complainant Association under and by virtue of a contract between the two complainants; that defendant Tobacco Company, without authority from the complainants or either of them, and by fraudulent means, took possession of said Buckner Factory property and is refusing to yield possession of certain parts of said premises, as hereinafter specified, to the complainants or either of them; that defendant is a naked trespasser on said premises, and if permitted to continue in possession of said premises until November 1, 1927 (as it is declaring its purpose to do), the complainants will thereby suffer irreparable injury and damage; that on February 14, 1927, defendant filed a bill in the chancery court of Montgomery county *621 against one of the present complainants, to-wit: The Dark Tobacco Growers Co-operative Association, and (by fiat granted on a preliminary ex parte application) obtained an injunction inhibiting the Dark Tobacco Growers Co-operative Association and its agents from undertaking to interfere with its possession and use of certain parts of said Buckner Factory premises, to-wit: the entire basement of the factory proper, the boiler room, the first floor above the basement of the factory, the office on the first floor, the dry room on the second floor above the office, and any other portion of the plant that it (W, E. Sawyer Tobacco Company) might need for its business during the season; that the bill filed by defendant W. E. Sawyer Tobacco Company was not filed in good faith, but the institution of said suit was for the purpose of enjoining the said Association from molesting the said Sawyer Company in the occupancy of said premises and if the injunction should be dissolved then the W. E. Sawyer Tobacco Company would appeal to the Supreme Court of Tennessee, thus keeping said injunction in force, and before the Supreme Court could reach and hear said cause, the defendant would have had the use of said premises for the season, whether entitled to the same or not, thus wrongfully and unjustly and fraudulently depriving the complainants of the use of said premises to their irreparable loss, damage and injury; that there is no way to compensate complainants, or either of them, in dollars and cents, for the injury, loss and damage they would sustain, and no way to arrive at the amount of damage or injury that the complainants will sustain by the present and continued use and occupancy of said premises by the defendant.

The bill also contains allegations as follows:

“The defendant, which claims to be a corporation with its situs in Virginia set up business in Clarksville, Tenn., to buy, handle, prize and sell tobacco, buying the same from farmers in and around Clarksville, Tenn., and others to be delivered to. it there, and there by it classed, handled, prized and to be sold to whom and wherever defendant might find satisfactory buyers. It is not incorporated under the laws of the .State of Tennessee, and has never qualified to do business in Tennessee, and is a foreign corporation, and, therefore, has no right to do or transact any business in the State of Tenn., and any contract or contracts it has pretended to make in Tennessee are, therefore, void and unenforcible. ”

The prayer of the bill is that a mandatory injunction issue immediately requiring and commanding the defendant forthwith to remove all tobacco, aparatus and other property it has in or on said Buckner Factory premises from said premises, and to remove from said premises any and all obstructions to complainants’ full and free use and occupancy of said premises, and to desist from *622 further trespassing in or upon said premises or any part thereof; that .defendant be enjoined and prohibited from allowing or permitting said tobacco, aparatus, or other of its property, or any other obstruction caused or placed by it on or in said premises, to remain where the same now is, and enjoined and prohibited from in any way obstructing the full and free use and occupancy by complainants of said Buckner premises or any part thereof, and that on the hearing said injunction be made perpetual. It is further prayed that said suit of W. E. Sawyer Tobacco Company v. Dark Tobacco Growers Co-operative Association, in the chancery court of Montgomery county, Tennessee, be enjoined, and that defendant be enjoined from further prosecuting or taking any steps therein, and that said injunction be made perpetual.

The defendant Tobacco Company answered the bill, and incorporated a demurrer in its answer. There is no occasion to state the grounds of the demurrer at this time.

In'its answer, the defendant Tobacco Company admitted that the title to the property in controversy is vested in complainant Warehousing Corporation, but defendant averred that it (defendant Tobacco Company) is, and has been since January 12, 1927, lawfully and rightfully in possession of said property under and by virtue of a parol lease Which expires on, and not until, November 1, 1927, by the terms of which lease contract defendant is obligated to pay the complainant Association a monthly rental of thirty dollars for the use of said Buckner Factory premises.

Defendant also admitted that it is “ a • corporation under the laws of the State of Yirginia,” and practically admitted that it has not filed its charter in the office of the secretary of the State of Tennessee; but, in response to the averments of the bill with respect to this subject defendant says:

“The position that this mandatory injunction must be granted because defendant corporation has never domesticated under the statute of Tennessee, is in direct conflict with the holding of the Supreme Court of the State, and that is sufficient answer thereto.
“The defendant company and all other foreign corporations, can acquire real estate in fee, or for any less estate therein, by deed and contract, and the statute referred to has no effect whatever upon the validity of such deed or .contract.
‘ ‘‘The defendant company is not undertaking to enforce, or recover on a contract by it made with some individual, or other party. It is in the possession of real estate under contract and cannot be ousted by a mandatory writ of injunction by the State even, and certainly not by any citizen or corporation of the State.”

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Related

Kelton v. Vandervort
707 S.W.2d 517 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1985)
Slatten v. Mitchell
124 S.W.2d 310 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1938)
Gulf Refining Co. v. Frazier
15 Tenn. App. 662 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Tenn. App. 619, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/growers-warehousing-corp-v-w-e-sawyer-tobacco-co-tennctapp-1927.