Hayes v. Ginocchio

6 Tenn. App. 677, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 20, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Tenn. App. 677 (Hayes v. Ginocchio) 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
Hayes v. Ginocchio, 6 Tenn. App. 677, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 180 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

HEISKELL, J.

Hayes and Wilson became endorsers on two notes executed by the Tennessee Temple Board Mosaic Templars of America, to the Solvent Savings Bank; one for twelve hundred, twenty-five ($1225) dollars, of date September 29, 1919; and the other for twenty-six hundred ($2600) dollars. The twelve hundred', twenty-five ($1225) dollar note was reduced by partial payments to six hundred, seventy-five ($675) dollars; and the notes sued on are renewals of these two original notes.

Contemporaneously with the endorsement of these original notes, the Tennessee Temple Board executed a written agreement to Hayes and Wilson, in which it was recited that Hayes and Wilson had agreed' to endorse these notes; that the proceeds of the notes were to be used to pay on the unpaid purchase on two lots on Beale avenue, describing them; and that the Tennessee Temple Board would execute a trust deed on said property at any time upon request, to secure them as such endorsers.

*679 The suit was originally brought by Hayes and Wilson, as endorsers on said notes, for the use and benefit of the Solvent Savings Bank, the holder thereof; since the suit was brought, the bank has required Hayes, as endorser on the notes, to pay them; so Hayes, now prosecutes this suit for his own benefit.

The Tennessee Temple Board Mosiac Templars of America, is a Tennessee Corporation, organized as a corporation for general welfare and not for profit, and according to its charter, organized for these purposes:

“To erect a hall or lodge building, lodge rooms for a meeting place for the various local lodges of said order; and for office room to be rented, the proceeds of which are to be used for the maintenance and upkeep of said building and the promotion of said order.”

The order referred to in this charter, is the Mosiac Templars of America (referred to in this record as the National Order), an Arkansas Corporation, with its headquarters in Little Rock, and having many lodges throughout the United States. The local lodges in the different States also have a central organization in Grand Lodges of* the different States, but the local and State organizations are not incorporated.

The Tennessee Temple Board, to carry out the purposes for which it was incorporated on April 30, 1919, purchased from Prank McLaughlin, two adjoining lots of thirty-five foot and thirty-six and one-half frontage, respectively, on the north side of Beale avenue. The consideration for the property was $11,440, of which $2367, was paid in cash, and notes executed with lien retained for balance. r

These notes became delinquent and were taken up by the Solvent Savings Bank and a trust deed, executed on March 17, 1921, by the Tennessee Temple Board, Mosaic Templars of America,, to secure said bank in the sum of $7861.20. This trust deed recites, that it was given to pay off the lien for purchase money on the McLaughlin deed, but described only one of the lots conveyed by said deed — the thirty-six and one-half-foot lot.

The Miosaie Templars of America, the Arkansas corporation, filed an answer and then by leave of court amended answer and cross-bill. In this answer and cross-bill, it denied that said notes were executed' by authority of the Tennessee Temple Board, or for its benefit, or to pay off any indebtedness it owed, or to release a lien on its property, described in the bill; but, that said notes were executed in its name, in fraud, and for the personal benefit of J. B. Woods, its president. It pleaded non est factum on said notes; the history of the title of said property is set out at length, alleging the purchase by it in good faith, of the two notes of thirty-nine hundred, thirty and sixty/100 ($3930.60) dollars from the Solvent Savings Bank, and the assignment of said trust deed to it. It is alleged, that *680 Bert M. Roddy, cashier of the Solvent Savings Bank, represented that said trust deed constituted a first lien on said property, and made no reference to the two notes of twenty-six hundred dollars ($2600) and six hundred, seventy-five dollars ($675) which are sued on herein, and which were then held by said bank.

It is then set out, that said trust deed described' only one of said lots, and that it was really intended that both of said lots should be included.

The prayer of the cross-bill is for a decree on the notes against the Tennessee Temple Board; that a first lien be declared to exist in its favor on both of said lots; and for a sale of the lots to satisfy its said lien.

On the same day, and by the same solicitors, one J. W. Reddick, whof signed as Grand’ Master, undertook to file an answer in the name of the Tennessee Temple Board, Mosaic Templars of America, in which he pleaded non est factum on said notes; that they were executed fraudulently, and that no part of the proceeds thereof, was used in the purchase of said property; that J. B. Woods was not a member of the Mosaic Templars of America, at the time of the filing of the bill; and that Booth sued Woods and others, who were the trustees of the Tennessee Temple Board, a corporation, were not members of said order when they filed their answer on September 5, 1923; and that Wood's had not been a member since the expiration of his office of State Grand Master, in August, 1922; that the McLaughlin property, except the seventy-eight hundred, twenty-one dollars ($7821) borrowed from the Solvent Savings Bank had been paid for out of funds belonging to this respondent; and denies that complainant had any lien on said property, and avers, that this suit “was brought mala fides, is a pure frame-up, and is an attempt to defraud your respondent.”

Hayes and Wilson filed an answer to this cross-bill, in which they admitted the purchase of the property and the execution of the trust deed to the Solvent Savings Bank, securing the seventy-eight hundred, sixty-one and' 20/100 dollars ($7861.20’), but they deny that it was intended to embrace both of said lots in said trust deed; they deny that Roddy was authorized to bind the Tennessee Temple Board’ by any representations he may have made to the Arkansas Corporation in negotiating the sale of said notes to that corporation, and alleged, that he was cashier of the bank which owned the notes; and any statement he may have made was not binding upon tbe complainants, or said Tennessee Temple Board.

Complainants Hayes and Wilson, also filed an ameuded bill in which they correct the description of the notes sued on, insisting that it was understood they should' have a lien on the .property; that the money was used to pay for it, and contending that the Arkansas *681 Corporation bad. a trust deed only on tbe thirty-six and one-balf-foot lot, and none on the thirty-five-foot lot.

Thereafter, J. W. Reddick and others, who sued for the use for themselves and all other members of the Mosaic Templars of America, Tennessee jurisdiction, filed their original bill against Hayes and Wilson, and the Tennessee Temple Board, in which they insist that the Temple Board had only the legal title to the property purchased from McLaughlin; that same was purchased for the benefit of the incorporated society represented by the complainants. They deny the validity of the notes sued on by Hayes and Wilson, and plead non est factum.

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Related

Jones v. Mabry
225 S.W.2d 561 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Tenn. App. 677, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-ginocchio-tennctapp-1927.