Horn v. Goodman

1 Tenn. App. 90, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 11, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tenn. App. 90 (Horn v. Goodman) 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
Horn v. Goodman, 1 Tenn. App. 90, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

Complainants have appealed from a decree rendered by Chancellor Israel II. Peres in the chancery court of Shelby county, Tennessee, dismissing their bill and taxing them with costs.

Complainants filed their bill in said court seeking to enjoin Leo Goodman as trustee from foreclosing three certain deeds of trust. Advertisement had been made in a Memphis paper. Goodman was the trustee in all of said deeds of trust, having been substituted for the original trustee, Dave Solinsky. All three of said trust deeds covered certain real estate in Shelby county, Tennessee, and were for the purpose of securing Levy and Solinsky, a mercantile corporation, of Nashville, Tennessee. The bill sought to enjoin the-foreclosure of said three deeds of trust, and also to declare said trust deeds void on the following grounds:

First: That the indebtedness secured in the first two trust deeds had been paid.

Second: That all of said trust deeds were not supported by any consideration.

Third: That they were void for uncertainty as to the debts secured, and as to the last trust deed given there was a contemporaneous oral agreement that said trust deed should be canceled on demand of the mortagor. It appears that Horn Brothers consisting of Leo Horn, Harry Horn and Ben P. Horn, was a partnership firm, and operated two stores in Memphis, Tennessee, prior to 1920 and had operated the same for a number of years. One store was operated under the trade name of the United Clothing & Hat Company. Abraham E. Horn, one of the complainants, is a lawyer, and the son of Leo Horn of the first of Horn Brothers. The other complainant, Mrs. Rose Horn, is the wife of Harry Horn of Horn Brothers. It appears *92 that on November 17, 1917, Horn Brothers and United Clothing and Hat Company were both heavily indebted to the defendant Levy and Solinsky for merchandise sold to said two merchantile firms. On November'7, 1917, Harry Horn and his wife, Mrs. Rose Horn, conveyed certain real estate to secure Levy & Solinsky, securing certain indebtedness due from said firm of Horn Brothers. Likewise a second trust was given on November 20, 1918, by the said parties, and on July 2, 1920, Abraham B. Horn and Mrs. Rose Horn executed a trust deed to secure the same beneficiaries mentioned in the first and second trust deeds. Thus it will be seen that Mrs. Rose Horn conveyed real estate in all three of said trust deeds, and Abraham Horn only conveyed real estate in the last trust deed.

The defendants filed a demurrer. This demurrer was sustained, and complainant’s bill was about to be dismissed when they received permission to file an amended bill. This was done. The bill was never dismissed. Defendants were given time in which to file an answer, and an answer was filed. Defendants also filed a cross-bill seeking to foreclose their three trust deeds, and denying all the material allegations of the complainants bill. Later a number of amendments were permitted to be filed to the amended bill, which had been anwered. It appears that one of these amendments was not answered. Thereupon complainants took pro confesso against the defendants on the amendment. The defendants appeared and insisted that a pro confesso as to an amendment was unheard of in equity practice; however, to be safe, they filed an affidavit- and asked permission to be allowed to have their answer treated as denying the allegation contained in the amendment. This was granted. Complainants excepted to the setting aside of the pro confesso. Thereupon, after their series of amendments to the bill, pro confesso was taken on one of the amendments to the bill, and the setting aside of this pro confesso on thé amendment to the bill, the answer and amended answer of the defendant, the complainants took the depositions of Leo Horn, Ben P. Horn and Harry Horn of the first of Horn Brothers, and complainants A. E. Horn and Mrs. Rose Horn. The defendants took the depositions of Charles Levy, an officer of the defendant corporation, and W. H. Bailey, a bookkeeper for said firm. Numerous letters and other exhibits were filed. The cause came on to be finally heard on March 27, 1925, upon the whole record in the cause, when the chancellor decreed that all three of said trust deeds which had been attacked-were valid and existing, and complainant’s bill was dismissed. It appeared further that during the pendency of this suit a certain part of the real estate conveyed by the defendants had been sold by consent and the proceeds had been paid into the registrar of the court, and these sums were orders to be paid over to the defendants and cross-complainantS. Cross-complainants’ bill *93 was sustained and the ramming part of the real estate not sold was ordered foreclosed, according to the terms of the trust deeds. The complainants excepted to the decree of the chancellor, and prayed' and were granted an appeal to this court. They perfected the same, and have assigned errors in this court, as follows:

“First: The court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the amended bill, which demurrer was filed in connection with the answer on May 23, 1922.

“Second: The court erred in setting aside the pro confesso taken and entered on September 16, 1922, on the amendment to the bill which was filed on July 24, 1922.

1 ‘ Third: The court erred in sustaining the exceptions filed by the defendants to the testimony of complainant’s witnesses.

“Fourth: The court erred in overruling the exceptions filed by the complainants to the testimony of defendant’s witness Levy and exhibits 5 to 11 to his deposition.

“Fifth: The court erred in the final decree, in holding that the ded of trust described in the bill and particularly the one of July 2, 1920, was valid and existing; in dismissing complainants’ bill and all amendments thereto; in ordering the payment to defendants of all the funds derived from the sale of the property covered by said deed of trust; in ordering that defendants should have the right to proceed to foreclose the unsold property covered by said deed of trust, applying all the funds derived from the property now covered in said deed, as well as the cash referred to, to the debt of Horn Bros, to Levy & Solinsky; and in taxing all the costs of the cause against the complainants and their surety.”

As to the first assignment, the complainants were not prejudiced by any action upon the demurrer. While the decree recites the demurrer was sustained, yet complainants ’ bill was not dismissed. Evidently complainant was ready with an amended bill at the time the demurrer was acted on, and filed with the permission of the court said amended bill, which bill was ordered to be answered. The defendants received no benefit from their demurrer, and this assignment of error is overruled.

The original bill had not alleged any fraud, and it was insisted that the trust deeds on their face showed proper consideration.

As to the second assignment, we are of opinion that the complainants were not entitled to a pro confesso because the amendment to their bill had not been answered. The defendants had a very full answer filed in the cause when this amendment was submitted. However, the setting aside of pro confesso is largely within the sound discretion of the chancellor. He saw proper to set this pro confesso aside, if the complainant had been entitled to a pro confesso.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. App. 90, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horn-v-goodman-tennctapp-1925.