Henry King & Co. v. Arnett Bros.

7 Tenn. App. 410, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 60
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 11, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Tenn. App. 410 (Henry King & Co. v. Arnett Bros.) 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
Henry King & Co. v. Arnett Bros., 7 Tenn. App. 410, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 60 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

The appellee has made a motion to strike the appellants’ assignment of. error because they have not made appropriate references to the pages of transcript, and have not cited the law in accordance with the rules of this court. After an examination of the assignment of errors, we are of the opinion that the assignment is sufficient. While the citation to the record could have been a little more specific, and the citation of more authorities would have helped the court, still we think that our rules should receive a reasonable construction, and we think that appellants have reasonably complied with the rules; hence the motion to strike the assignment for these reasons will be overruled.

This suit was brought by Henry King & Company, a corporation, to recover for the value of certain merchandise and store fixtures sold by O. B. Harrell to the defendants Arnett Brothers in violation of the Sales in Bulk Statute. The complainant alleged in its bill that 0. B. Harrell had sold certain merchandise and fixtures in December, 1924, to the defendants Arnett Brothers in violation of the Sales in Bulk Statute, and that Harrell owed the complainants $716.-65 at the time of said sale.

The defendants answered and denied all liability, for the reasons that the portion of the stock of merchandise purchased by them from Harrell, amounting to $135, was purchased by the piece in the ordinary course of trade and was not a sale in bulk in violation of the statute; that the complainant being advised of the sale of said merchandise to the defendants waited for several months thereafter and then accepted Harrell’s note, secured by his wife, for the amount of its account, and thereby waived all rights that it might have against the defendants; and that shortly after the defendants purchased said merchandise they had the treasurer of the complainant corpo *412 ration to release a mortgage of reeord against Harrell, and at that time .said treasurer told him, before they had settled with Harrell for said merchandise, that the complainant had nothing’ further against Harrell; hence the complainant was estopped to recover .from the defendants.

Many depositions were taken and the case was tried before Chancellor T. L. Stewart sitting by interchange with the regular Chancellor. The Chancellor held that the defendants were not liable for any goods that they purchased at the auction sale, nor were they liable for the value of the fixtures purchased from Harrell; but the Chancellor did hold that the defendants were liable to the complainant for the $135 worth of goods purchased by them from Harrell w^ich sale was in bulk and not in the ordinary course of trade, and was therefore in violation of the Sales in Bulk Statute. The defendants excepted, appealed to this court, and have assigned three errors, the substance of which is that the Chancellor erred in rendering a decree for $135 against them, (1) because their purchase of the portion of the remnant of the stock of goods for $.135 was in the ordinary course of trade and not in bulk. (2) Because the complainant waived its claim against these defendants, if such it had, because it accepted Harrell’s note, secured by his wife after it was advised of the sale of said goods to the defendants; and (3) because the treasurer of the complainant told the defendants after he had been advised of the sale to the defendants and before they had settled with Harrell, that the complainant had nothing further against Harrell, and complainant is therefore now estopped to recover of the defendants.

The facts necessary to be stated are that complainant is a corporation operating a wholesale grocery store at' Murfreesboro, and 0. B. Harrell had for several years operated a retail mercantile business at Dilton, several miles out on the pike from Murfreesboro. Iri December, 1924, Harrell decided to have an auction sale of his stock of merchandise, and after advertising in the local papers and by hand-bills, he had an auction sale for one week, which was attended by a large crowd of customers, and most of his stock of goods was sold during this auction sale. The defendants, Arnett Brothers purchased about $50 worth of merchandise by the piece at the auction sale. Some two or three days after the auction sale had ceased, the defendants purchased merchandise by the piece to the amount of from $135 to $150, and also purchased the fixtures in the store house for $200, and'thereafter Harrell removed to a nearby town and took the remainder of his goods with him.

The defendants purchased Harrell’s house and lot, and it appears that they sold a portion of the land to another person, but when they had a settlement the purchaser refused to pay for the land, claiming that there was a registered mortgage of $1300 in favor of Henry *413 King- & Company against the house and lot. Two oí the Arnett Brothers upon learning this fact went to Murfreesboro and interviewed Mr. Henderson, treasurer of the Henry King & Company, who informed them that the mortgage had been settled but by oversight had not been released of record. So at the request of Arnett Brothers he went with them to the court house and released the mortgage. They say that they informed him that they had purchased the house and lot and some merchandise from Harrell and asked him whether the complainant held anything else against Harrell, to which he replied that there was nothing.

However, it appears that the complainant had sold merchandise in considerable quantities to Harrell at different times, and that the mortgage of $1300 on the house and lot had been executed to secure a past grocery account, and at the tiiiie Harrell sold the merchandise and the property to Arnett Brothers he owed the complainant more than $800 on account for merchandise.

No attempt was made by Arnett Brothers and Harrell to comply with the Sales in Bulk Statute by taking an inventory of the stock and by giving notice as provided by the statute. Sometime after this sale to Arnett Brothers, Harrell made a small payment on his account to the complainant, which left $716.65 balance due, and he requested the complainant not to attempt to collect this account from the defendants as it might complicate his deal with them, so the account was let run until sometime in August, 1925, when Harrell executed a note, secured by his wife, for the amount of the account and this note was afterwards renewed by Harrell, and about sixteen months after the deal with Arnett Brothers, complainant took up the matter with Arnett Brothers and insisted on payment of the account, which they refused • and this suit resulted.

We are of the opinion that the first assignment of error is not well taken as we think that the sale of the $135 worth of goods was in violation of the Sales in Bulk Statute, and was a sale of a portion of the stock-of merchandise otherwise than in the ordinary course of trade in the regular and usual transaction of the seller’s business. Harrell had been running an auction sale for a week and had disposed of most of his goods, and some three or four days thereafter Arnett Brothers purchased the $135 worth of goods, which consisted of plow points, plows, etc., “remnants” as they say, by the piece at a discount, and Harrell removed the remainder of his goods to a neighboring town, hence this assignment of error is overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Tenn. App. 410, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-king-co-v-arnett-bros-tennctapp-1928.