Haverty Furniture Co. v. Foust

124 S.W.2d 694, 174 Tenn. 203, 10 Beeler 203, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 81
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 124 S.W.2d 694 (Haverty Furniture Co. v. Foust) 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
Haverty Furniture Co. v. Foust, 124 S.W.2d 694, 174 Tenn. 203, 10 Beeler 203, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 81 (Tenn. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Chambliss

delivered* the opinion of the Court.

This is a replevin suit brought before a magistrate, where a judgment went for the plaintiff. On appeal to the Circuit Court, where the case was tried before the Judge without a jury on a stipulation of facts, the suit was dismissed on the ground that the writ of replevin issued in the Magistrate’s Court in commencement of the action had been prepared by one not duly licensed and qualified to practice law, and was, therefore, null, void *206 and of no effect. The plaintiff, Haverty Furniture Company, has appealed and assigns errors on substantially the following’ grounds:

(1) That the mere filling in of a blank form procured from the office of the magistrate, in common use in such cases, did not constitute practicing law or doing law business in the sense of the Tennessee statute; (2) that the statute applies (Code, section 9982) which provides that, “Any person may conduct and manage his own case in any court of this state,” it being insisted that plaintiff, although incorporated, is a “person” as defined in Code, section 14, which provides that, “the word ‘person’ includes a corporation, firm or association;” (3) that neither the plaintiff corporation nor its agent-employee, who acted for it in the particular above mentioned, was engaged in the practice of law or the doing of law business as defined in section 1 of chapter 30' of the Pub. Acts of 1935; brought into Michie’s Annotated Code of 1938 as section 9983(1), it being contended that representation of a party in litigation by the party himself is not within the purview or prohibition of the laws of Tennessee regulating the practice of law, or the doing of law business; and that this exception applies to a corporation acting or appearing in its own interest or behalf through one of its regular employees, agents or representatives; and finally (4) that in any event the trial Court erred in holding the judgment of the magistrate’s court void.

The pertinent facts are thus set forth in the stipulation filed in the trial Court:

“It is hereby stipulated and agreed, That in March and July, 1935, plaintiff, Haverty Furniture Company of Chattanooga, sold to defendant, Mrs. Bertha Foust, under Conditional Sales Contracts, the persona! prop *207 erty described in the writ of replevin in this case, for $66.40', payable in monthly installments; th^at the defendant, npon the date of the issuance of the writ of re-plevin, bad defaulted in her monthly payments, and was indebted to plaintiff in an unpaid balance of $19.40', and that plaintiff is entitled to judgment for possession, if properly in Court in this cause.
“That on July 20, 1937, the day the writ of replevin in this ease was issued, Reid Hartman, Credit Manager of the Haverty Furniture Company of Chattanooga, a Tennessee corporation, who is not a licensed lawyer, obtained a skeleton writ of replevin from Mack Fryar, a Justice of the Peace, as he had done on other like occasions, and filled in the printed form of affidavit, bond, and writ of replevin; signed and swore to the affidavit; signed the bond, and delivered the completed form of affidavit, bond and summons- — the affidavit, bond and summons being on the same piece of paper — to Mack Fryar, Justice of the Peace of Hamilton County, Tennessee, who issued the writ of replevin, and delivered it to a deputy sheriff for execution; that said writ was issued for the purpose of recovering said personal property; that said writ was executed by the officer, and the case set for hearing July 29, 1937, at 4:00 P. M.; that plaintiff’s agent, Reid Hartman, after the case was set for trial, for the first time called C. W. K. Meacham, a licensed attorney at the Chattanooga Bar and the regular legal representative of plaintiff, Haverty Furniture Company, notified him the case had been assigned for trial, and requested him to appear and try the case. Said attorney appeared and conducted the trial of the ease in Court. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff, and the defendant appealed to the Circuit Court.”

*208 Re-stating the propositions presented by the assignment of errors, it will be seen that it is insisted, first, that the foregoing facts do not make ont a case of practicing law or doing law business, because (1) the filling in of the blank forms described, without more, was the performance of a merely clerical or ministerial act, calling for the exercise of none of the intellectual, moral or professional qualifications required in and for the practice of the law — an act which any layman, who could read and write, might properly perform; and (2) because the definitions adopted by the Legislature in the Act of 1936' expressly so limit the meaning of the terms, the “practice of law” and “law business,” as to exclude the parties and conduct presented by the facts of this case.

Elaborate briefs have been filed on behalf of the defendant below, not only by counsel for the defendant, but by a committee of the State Bar Association as Amicus Curiae. The argument advanced is, first, that the incipient act, however simple, of filling in these blanks, was practicing law or doing law business. It is conceded that if the plaintiff had not been a corporation then the questions here made could not arise, because of the express provision of our statute reserving to every person the right to represent himself. So that, if this Court should hold that “the word ‘person’ includes a corporation,” etc. Code, section 14, when considered in connection with the provision that “any person may conduct and manage his own case,” etc., Code, section 9982, this holding would be determinative.

It thus appears that the consideration of this case may well be confined to one of several propositions. We have chosen to dispose of it upon a construction of our Tennessee statute which is full and explicit and which must *209 control in this State and Court, without regard to the rulings in other jurisdictions, many of which are cited on the briefs, and which turn largely on local laws.

Prior to the passage of Chapter 30, Pub. Acts of 1935, we had no statute defining the “practice of law” and the “doing of law business.” By the Pub. Acts of 1919, Chapter 42, the Legislature had undertaken to control and regulate the conduct of those engaged in the practice of law, and the Code has carried for many years various provisions requiring lawyers to be licensed, providing for examination and admission to the bar, excluding certain office holders from practicing law, etc., but in 1935 for the first time, in order to settle disputes which were frequently arising, the Legislature passed this carefully and explicitly worded act defining the “practice of law” and “law business.” In our opinion the controversy now presented is determined by the express terms of section 1, Chapter 30’, Pub. Acts of 1935, which we quote, italicizing language which we regard as particularly pertinent :

“The ‘practice of law’ is hereby defined to be and is the appearance as an advocate in a representative capacity or the drawing of papers, pleadings or documents or the performance of any act in such capacity

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W.2d 694, 174 Tenn. 203, 10 Beeler 203, 1938 Tenn. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haverty-furniture-co-v-foust-tenn-1939.