Homer v. Duncan

7 Tenn. App. 674, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 7 Tenn. App. 674 (Homer v. Duncan) 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
Homer v. Duncan, 7 Tenn. App. 674, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 25 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

HEISKELL, J.

This is a suit by ITom'er to enjoin the defendants, B. H. Duncan and Worley Harr .from enforcing- the collection'of a judgment against complainant by garnishment.

The defendant, Duncan, was an- insurance agent, soliciting life insurance for a corporation known as. Harr, Collins & Anderson; and in the conduct of said business, solicited, and issued to the complainant, a life insurance policy, the first premium for which was paid by complainant by the execution of his promissory note to said Harr, Collins & Anderson, the exact amount of said note not *675 being shown either in the pleadings, or in the proof. The note representing payment of this premium was made payable to Harr, Collins & Anderson, as before stated, and was delivered to it by the defendant Duncan, said note maturing six months after date. Harr, Collins & Anderson was succeeded in business by a corporation known as Harr, Storchi & Anderson, and the latter named corporation purchased all of the assets of the first named corporation, including the note in controversy in this case.

Said note was not paid at maturity, and about seven months thereafter, to-wit, on the 4th day of April, 1921, Harr, Storchi & Anderson brought suit on said note before J. JR. Ailor, Justice of the Peace for Knox county, and on the 6th day of April, 1921, judgment was rendered thereon in favor of said Harr, Storchi & Anderson, for the sum of $32.71 and costs.

The insurance agency finally failed and went into voluntary bankruptcy, and its affairs were wound up by that court. The trustee in bankruptcy sold and transferred all of the notes, accounts, and judgments, of said bankrupt .to the defendant, Worley Harr.

On, or about, the 1st day of October, 1925, the defendant, Worley Harr, present owner of said judgment, caused an execution to be issued upon said judgment, and the same was levied by garnishment upon the Southern Railway Company, the employer of complainant; and as a result thereof, complainant’s wages were impounded, and he thereupon filed his original injunction bill in this cause, undertaking to set aside said judgment, and procured an injunction restraining these defendants from further proceeding in the enforcement of the collection of said judgment.

The complainant alleges in his bill,, first, that at the time he executed the note in question, he was an infant, under twenty-one years of age, and that shortly after the execution of said note, he avoided said contract by a cancellation of the policy; and, second, that he was never served with process at the time the suit was instituted and judgment rendered by the Justice of the Peace and that said judgment is, therefore, void.

The defendant Duncan filed a demurrer to said bill, setting up the fact that no relief whatever was sought against him, and prayed that the bill be dismissed as to him. Said demurrer was heard by the Chancellor on the 6th day of April, 1926, and by him overruled, with the right to said defendant to rely thereon at the hearing.

Thereupon, both defendants filed answer to said bill, the defendant, Duncan, stating his interest in said suit; and the defendant, Harr, denying all material allegations made in said bill.

The cause was heard by the Chancellor on August 12, 1926, and a decree entered against defendants, in favor of complainant, and granting to him all the relief sought in his original bill, and *676 setting aside the defendant Harr’s judgment obtained against complainant for $32.71, and costs, and taxing these defendants with all the costs.

The Chancellor found as facts in the case that the judgment rendered by the Justice of the Peace was purchased by the defendant Harr from the trustee in bankruptcy of Harr, Storchi & Anderson; that the defendant Duncan claimed an interest in said judgment, and had caused an execution to issue thereon; that the judgment was upon a note executed by complainant during his minority for an insurance premium, and that he was not bound by his contract either upon his insurance application, or upon the note executed by him. He further found that the insurance policy for which the note in question was executed, was never delivered to complainant, and that the application for said insurance was cancelled a few days after the execution of the note; and that the complainant Homer was never served with process at the time judgment was rendered on said note before the justice, and that said judgment was, therefore, void.

Prom this decree, the defendants have appealed and assigned errors. There are five assignments, but the brief filed for appellants contains this:

‘ ‘ The only question involved in this lawsuit is covered by the fourth assignment of error, to-wit, was the complainant, Homer, served with process at the time he was sued upon this note before the Justice of the Peace, on April 4, 1921?”

Manifestly this is true. If the complainant was not served with process, then the injunction in this ease was properly granted and properly made perpetual and errors of the Chancellor on other questions are immaterial, and if complainant was served with process when sued on April 4, 1921, after he became of age, before Ailor, Justice of the Peace, then he was bound to set up in that suit all available defenses and if he did not do so but allowed judgment to go by default he cannot now obtain any relief under the allegations and facts of this present suit.

The bill alleges that there appears on the docket of J. R». Ailor, a Justice of the Peace for Knox county, a judgment for $32.71 and costs in favor of Harr, Collins & Anderson, entered on the 6th day of April, 1921. If the summons had been produced at the hearing, with the return of the officer showing service on complainant, W. D. Homer, the question would not be debatable, because there is no proof to support the contention of complainant except his denial that he was served.

The absence of the summons and the note is accounted for by the deposition of Prank P. Bowen, counsel for the defendant' in this case. His testimony in part is as follows:

*677 “I have seen and examined the original warrant issued by J. R. Ailor, Justice of the Peace, for Knox county, on the 4th day of April, 1921, in the case of Harr, Collins & Anderson v. W. D. Homer. I have also seen and examined the officer’s return on said warrant, which shows that the same was served on the defendant in that case by W. A. Channaberry, constable for Knox county, citing him to appear for trial on the 6th day of April, 1921, and said return was signed by the said Channaberry as constable aforesaid.
‘ ‘ The warrant and the note on which that suit was based were brought to my office by the defendant Duncan on or about the 26th day of May, 1926, and I placed the same on my desk for the purpose of using them in the taking of the defendant’s proof; but in some way the warrant and the note became lost or misplaced and I have been wholly unable to find them after making diligent search.”

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Related

Goodall ex rel. Fitzpatrick v. Doss ex rel. Doss
312 S.W.2d 875 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Tenn. App. 674, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/homer-v-duncan-tennctapp-1927.