Higgins v. Lewis

137 S.W.2d 308, 23 Tenn. App. 648, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 72
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 21, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 137 S.W.2d 308 (Higgins v. Lewis) 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
Higgins v. Lewis, 137 S.W.2d 308, 23 Tenn. App. 648, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 72 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

This case is before this Court on the appeal of Alton J. Lewis, a defendant below, from a decretal order, or judgment, of the Chancery Court of Davidson County, Part Two, committing him to jail until he shall comply with a decretal order theretofore made by said Court ordering and directing him to pay into the office of the Clerk and Master, within ten days from the entry of said order, the sum of $555.45, to be held by the Clerk and Master pending the further orders of the Court in this cause, or (in the alternative), to execute a bond, with sufficient surety to be approved by the Clerk and Master, in the sum of $555.45, conditioned to abide by and perform the orders and decrees of the Court in this cause.

A resume of the pleadings and proceedings in the case from its inception will, we think, be a material aid to an understanding of the issues presented to this Court upon the appeal from the aforesaid judgment.

*650 The original bill was filed in the Chancery Court of Davidson County, Part Two, on January 21, 1939, by Frank Higgins and Joe Frank, as complainants, against Alton J. Lewis and his wife, Mrs. Zetta I. Lewis, as defendants. All the parties are resident citizens of Davidson County, Tennessee.

It is alleged in complainants’ bill, and admitted in the answer of Alton J. Lewis, that, on March 7, 1938, complainants leased from E. J. Davidson, for a period of twelve months, a “pie-wagon,” with all fixtures and equipment, located at 204 Shelby Avenue, Nashville, Tennessee, and known as “Davidson’s Quick Lunch,” with the right or option to purchase said business, on or before the expiration of said lease contract, for the sum of twenty-eight hundred dollars; that, by reason of the fact that complainants were engaged in other business, and because the defendant, Alton J. Lewis, had been, and was at said time, employed by the said Davidson in said pie-wagon or lunchroom, complainants continued said employment, under a written contract whereby they agreed to pay said defendant a weekly salary of twenty dollars for a period of twelve months, and at the expiration of said employment contract to pay him fifteen per cent of the net profits derived from the operation of said business, which contract is in words and figures as follows:

“This agreement made by and between Frank Higgins and Joe Frank, of Nashville, Tennessee, hereinafter called Employer, and A. J. Lewis, hereinafter called employee.

“The Employer hereby offers to employ the employee for a period of one year and the Employee hereby accepts said offer and the parties have agreed that the compensation for said employment shall be Twenty ($20.00) dollars per week, payable on Monday of each week hereafter for period beginning on the 7th day of March, 1938, and ending on the 6th day of March, 1939, and on March 6th, 1939, the Employee is to receive an additional compensation from the Employer of 15% of the net profits derived from the business during the period of time for which this contract covers. The Employee is to devote his entire time to the business and not more than twelve hours any one day.

“Witness our hands on this the 7th day of March, 1938.

“Frank Higgins

“Joe Frank, Employer

“Alton J. Lewis, Employee.”

Complainants further allege that defendant Alton J. Lewis continued in their employment as aforesaid until December 24, 1938, “at which time he was discharged because of his manifest lack of interest in said business, as indicated by the fact that said business had been operated at a loss of $31.97 for the first twenty-four days of December, and its income had been reduced approximately 50% in comparison with October, but more especially because of the fact *651 that complainants had learned that said net profits or earnings from the operation of said business were not on deposit at said "Woodland Street Branch of the American National Bank, as reported by said defendant, as will be hereinafter shown.”

It is further alleged in complainants’ bill that, on the day that he was discharged, defendant (Alton J. Lewis) asserted that the sum of $576.37, constituting “gross earnings” of said pie-wagon business, was in the Woodland Street Branch of the American National Bank, at Nashville, to the credit of said business, but which said defendant declined to turn over to complainants; that, on investigation, it was ascertained that, although defendant had previously deposited the earnings of said business in said Bank, he had withdrawn said deposit from said Bank prior to his discharge, and that neither the “gross earnings” nor the “net profits or earnings” of said business were on deposit in said Bank, but were in the possession of said defendant Alton J. Lewis, or had been transferred by him to his wife and co-defendant, Zetta I. Lewis, and that they had refused to turn over same or any part thereof, to the complainants.

Complainants further allege in their bill, “that said defendants are wrongfully and illegally withholding from them, or have appropriated to their own use, said sum of $576.37, representing a part of the-assets and/or earnings of said “Davidson’s Quick Lunch;” that neither of said defendants has or had a lien on, or any interest of any nature in, said funds, but same is the absolute property of these complainants; that each of said defendants is insolvent and nothing can be made out of either of them by an execution at law; and that, unless they are required by fiat of your Honor to pay said sum forthwith into the registry of this court, said sum of money will be lost to complainants to their .irreparable injury and damage.”

Complainants prayed that subpoena issue requiring the defendants to answer the bill, and waived the oath of defendant Alton J. Lewis to his answer; that an injunction forthwith issue and be served upon the defendants, restraining and prohibiting them, and each of them, from withholding from complainants said sum of $576.37, or from spending, or otherwise disposing of said fund, or any part thereof, and that they be mandatorily required to forthwith pay said sum into the registry of the court to await the further orders of the court, and that upon the hearing of the cause said injunction be made perpetual; that the court, by decree, declare the complainants to be the absolute owners of said fund in the sum of $576.37, and that, if material, an accounting be had between complainants and defendants, and to this end that all necessary references to the Master be had.

Complainants then prayed for a discovery from Mrs. Zetta I. Lewis, to be made by response in her answer to a series of interrogatories propounded in the prayer of the bill; and, in conclusion, complainants prayed for.general relief.

*652 Upon a preliminary ex parte application made on the day the bill was filed, the Chancellor granted a fiat as follows:

“Upon the complainants executing an injunction bond in the sum of $250.00 conditioned as required by law, issue a Writ of Injunction restraining and prohibiting the defendants from disposing of said fund of $576.37 or any part thereof and notify the defendants that the application for the Mandatory Injunction prayed in the second paragraph of the prayer of the foregoing bill is set for hearing at twelve o’clock M. Friday, January 27, 1939.”

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Bluebook (online)
137 S.W.2d 308, 23 Tenn. App. 648, 1939 Tenn. App. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-lewis-tennctapp-1939.