Hamilton v. Kennedy

62 Tenn. 476
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 62 Tenn. 476 (Hamilton v. Kennedy) 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
Hamilton v. Kennedy, 62 Tenn. 476 (Tenn. 1874).

Opinion

McFarland, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In the year 1862, Alexander Kennedy and Wm. White, citizens of East Tennessee, purchased cotton in Alabama, and being unable to have it transported to their homes, they stored the same with Charles A. King,# a citizen of Decatur, Alabama, White having 32 bales, and Kennedy 25. It was stored in King’s warehouse, at Decatur, with other cotton belonging to King himself. At the time the Confederate military were in possession of the town of Decatur, but the town was afterwards occupied by the Federal military. The' cotton was used by both armies for the purposes of fortifications, but was afterwards returned by King to his warehouse. After the occupation of Decatur by the Federal military, Charles A. King was, by the com- [478]*478' manding General, ordered to the rear of his lines. The order was obeyed, King removing with his family to Tennessee. He was allowed to remove with him ten bales of his cotton, but the balance was left. About April, 1861, Gen. Veatch, commanding the United States forces at Decatur, notified Charles A. Fuller, special agent of the Treasury Department, that he had seized, or captured as abandoned, the cotton at Decatur, and requiring him to take possession of it. Fuller did so, and between that time and September, 1864, removed sixty bales and four bags to Nashville, and stored the same with the complainants, Hamilton & Co., commission merchants and warehousemen. It does not clearly appear what became of the balance of the cotton. White, Kennedy and King, by their agents, as well as in person, soon after appeared and demanded the cotton to be returned to them, These demands were several- times repeated, but refused, Hamilton & Co. declining to surrender the cotton except upon the order of Fuller. This order Fuller declined to give. Application was also made to another agent of the Treasury Department, at Cincinnati, who appears to have been superior in authority to Fuller. He also declined to order the cotton surrendered, upon the ground, that, if it had been lawfully seized, it was the duty of the agent to transport it to a loyal State and sell it, and pay the proceeds into the United States Treasury, and leave the owners to prosecute their claims for the money in accordance with the Act of Congress of 12th of March, 1863. It appears, [479]*479also, that the complainants applied to the Treasury Department for pay for the cotton, which was refused. This refusal might well have been placed upon the ground that the proceeds of the cotton had never been paid into the Treasury.

It appears that the cotton, before its’ removal from Decatur, had been so badly used as to destroy the marks by which it could be identified, and, as to part, had to be rebaled or put in bags. It sufficiently appears that the sixty bales and four bags belonged to Kennedy, King and White, but what bales, or what part to each, does not appear, nor did they know at the time ,their demands were made. It appears, however, that in some of their interviews, they proposed to settle this among themselves, if the cotton was surrendered to them. The claimants of the cotton were shown to be loyal to the United States Government. About the 7th of November, 1864, King brought an action of replevin, in the Circuit Court of Nashville, for thirty-eight bales of the cotton. The process was l’eturned executed, but, in fact, the cotton was not taken out of the possession of Hamilton & Co., and we do not understand that Hamilton & Co. held these thirty-eight bales for King, from this time, for they still refused to surrender it to him. Fuller, thereupon, filed a petition or bill in the Circuit Court of the United States at Nashville. This petition or bill is not in this record, but it is agreed that it .alleged in substance, that he had lawfully seized the cotton as special agent of the Treasury Department, but had [480]*480failed to forward, because it was claimed not to be abandoned property,” stated the conflicting claims of White, King and Kennedy, who were made parties, and called upon to interplead as to its ownership. White, Kennedy and King, or his administrator, answered the petition, claiming the cotton, but differed among themselves as to its ownership. About the 3rd of May, 1866, White, Kennedy, and the administrator of King, who had in the meantime died, agreed, in writing, upon a division of the cotton.

This was submitted to Fuller, and he was requested to dismiss the suit and surrender the cotton. This was again refused, except upon conditions that said claimants declined to accept. These conditions were, that they should pay all the costs, the claims of Hamilton & Co., and release Fuller from all further liability on account of the seizure. A decree was afterwards made by consent, under which the cotton was sold by the Clerk of the Court, the proceeds, amounting to $5,730, to be held subject to further order. The price had, in the meantime, declined very greatly. This decree for the sale of the cotton, contains, in addition, the following: “And because it is suggested by the claimants of said lot of cotton, that A. Hamilton & Co. have charges for storage and insurance upon said lot of cotton, which are believed to be unjust, it is ordered by the Court, that A. Hamilton & Co. file their account, etc., giving to each party the right to take proof, and the Clerk to report upon it.”

On the 13th of December, 1866, the Clerk reported [481]*481in favor of the claim of Hamilton & Co. for $3,525.31. This report was excepted to. The cause was heard on the 7 th of April, 1867. The substance of the decree was, that the Court had no jurisdiction to remove or take cognizance of the action of replevin, or to take cognizance of the case as t; bill of interpleader. The petition was thereupon dismissed, the replevin suit remanded to the Circuit Court of Davidson county, and Fuller adjudged to pay the costs up to the filing of defendant’s answer; the balance of. the costs to be paid out of the sale of the cotton. The decree then contains the following: “And because it was admitted by the counsel in the cause, that neither the United States nor the said C. A. Fuller, have any interest in the cotton sold by the order heretofore made in the cause, except so far as they may be interested in having said account of A. Hamilton & Co. paid, and the said White, King and Kennedy having agreed among themselves upon a division,” etc., the money was ordered to be paid to them, but the order was not intended to affect any lien acquired upon the cotton previous thereto.

The claim of Hamilton not having been acted upon in this decree, they immediately thereafter filed this bill and impounded the fund, or a sufficient part of it to pay their claim. There was judgment pro oon-fesso against King, but White and Kennedy resisted the claim, and have appealed from the decree against them. The facts upon which the claim rests have been substantially stated.

The Act of Congress of the 12th of March, 1863, [482]*482provides for the appointment of special agents of the Treasury Department to collect all abandoned or captured property in the States in insurrection. These agents were invested with the power to sell the property in a loyal State, pay the'' proceeds into the United States Treasury, and the owner was allowed, if loyal, to prosecute his claim for the money before the Court of Claims at any time within two years from the termination of the rebellion. It was under this law that Fuller was appointed and acting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 Tenn. 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-kennedy-tenn-1874.