Hurst-Boillin Co. v. Kelly

146 Tenn. 251
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 146 Tenn. 251 (Hurst-Boillin Co. v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurst-Boillin Co. v. Kelly, 146 Tenn. 251 (Tenn. 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKinney

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Complainant, wholesale grocers at Clarksville, filed this bill against Frank Kelly, a resident of Lexington, Ky., and the Northern Bank of Tennessee, a. Clarksville banking corporation, in which it alleged the purchase of a car of beans from defendant Kelly for $3,765.44, represented by draft attached to bill of lading which it had paid, the proceeds of which belonged to Kelly, and which was in possession of said Northern Bank of Tennessee. It alleged that .said beans were inferior in quality and that they did not come up to warranty, and that the contract had been breached to its damage in excess of $1,000, ana it undertook by garnishment proceedings to appropriate a sufficient amount of said funds to the payment' of its claim.

Kelly filed a plea in abatement, denying that the fund in bank belonged to him.

An intervening petition was filed by the Bank of Lexington, Ky., in which it was alleged:

“That it is a banking corporation, incorporated under the laws of the State of Kentucky, engaged in the banking-business at Lexington, Ky., and has been so engaged for a number of years; that on or about September 27, 1919, a certain draft for $3,765.44, drawn by the defendant Frank Kelly, on the complainant, Hurst-Boillin Company, and payable to the petitioner, was negotiated to the petitioner by the said Frank Kelly in the due course of trade, and for a valuable consideration, and that attached to the said draft was a bill of lading covering a carload of beans shipped to the complainant.
“That the petitioner forwarded the said draft for collection for its own account through its correspondent, the [253]*253Fifth and Third National Bank of Cincinnati, Ohio, and is advised that the draft was then forwarded through the Fourth and First National Bank at Nashville, Tenn., to the defendant Northern Bank of Tennessee, Clarksville, Tenn. - that the complainant paid to the Northern Bank of Tennessee, the face of the said draft, taking up the same, together with the hill of lading thereto attached; and that immediately after payment to the defendant Northern Bank of Tennessee the complainant attached the proceeds of the draft, the sum of $3,'765.44, in the hands of the defendant Northern' Bank of Tennessee.
“That the petitioner knows nothing whatever of the contract entered into hy the complainant with the defendant Frank Kelly, or of any warranties made by the said Kelly as to the quantity or quality of the beans covered by the bill of lading attached to the draft; that it cannot state whether or not the merchandise covered by the bill of lading measured up to the warranty, made by the defendant Frank Kelly, if such warranty was in fact made; and that it is advised that its rights cannot be in any way prejudiced or affected by any warranty made by the defendant Frank Kelly to the complainant or by any breach of such warranty.
“That at the time of the attaching or impounding of the proceeds of the said draft, October 4, 1919, the defendant Fránk Kelly had no interest whatever in the said draft or the proceeds thereof, and had had no such interest since the date the draft was drawn; that, as stated above, the petitioner was, from and after the date of the drawing of the draft, the bona-fide holder of same, having obtained it for a valuable consideration and in the due course of trade; and that since the draft showed on its face that it [254]*254was the property of the petitioner, and since it was in fact the property of the petitioner, and since the defendant Frank Kelly was not the owner of, or. entitled to, any part of the proceeds thereof, the proceeds of the said draft were not subject to attachment by the complainant for any amounts which the defendant Frank Kelly might owe to the complainant, or for any other obligation of the said Frank Kelly.”

Upon the hearing the chancellor dismissed complainant’s bill, and it has appealed, and has assigned numerous errors.

The first question raised by complainant is that in any event it is entitled to a personal judgment against Kelly for the reason that, by filing said plea, he entered his appearance.

To this we cannot consent. The plea went to the jurisdiction of the court. If the fund did not belong to Kelly, then the court had no jurisdiction, and jurisdiction can always be raised by plea in abatement. The burden was upon complainant to prove that this fund belonged to Kelly. This it has not done.

Complainant relies upon Implement Co. v. Bank, 128 Tenn., 320, 160 S. W., 848, in which the court said:

“The question for decision is whether the Mercantile National Bank became the absolute owner of the draft, or whether the draft was received by it only for collection.
“This is to be determined by the intention of the parties, as evidenced by their acts. We are of the opinion that the agreement to charge back in case the paper should be returned is a controlling consideration. It is irreconcilable with absolute ownership on the part of the bank. An agreement in advance to charge back on failure of collection imports necessarily only a limited ownership, as in case of a bailment.”

[255]*255Under the facts of that case the court held that the bank received the paper only for collection, which was based upon the express agreement to charge back.

In the instant case no such agreement was proven. On the contrary the cashier, F. G. Stilz, testified, as follows:

“Q. 5. State whether or not some time in September, 1919, Frank Kelly negotiated to your bank a draft on complainant, Hurst-Boillin Company, at Clarksville, Tenn.?
“A. Yes, sir; he did, on September 27, 1919.
“Q. 6. How were the-proceeds of the draft conveyed to him, by deposit or otherwise?
“A. By deposit.
“Q. 7. Have you a copy of the original deposit slip ?
“A. I have the original deposit slip.
“Q. 8. Will you hand that to the stenographer and mark it Exhibit No. 1, to your deposition?
“A. Yes.
“Q. 14. Was the draft left for-collection or was he allowed to check on the fund?
“A. He was allowed to check on it.
“Q. 25. State whether or not he did check on it?
“A. He did.
“Q. 16. When were you first notified that the Cincinnati Bank had charged you up with the proceeds of this draft?
“A. On October 6th, by telephone first.
“Q. 17. After receiving this notification, did you see the defendant Kelly?
“A. Yes.
“Q. 18. Please relate what transpired when you talked to him about the matter.
[256]*256“A. I told Mm wbat the Fifth and Third National Bank of Cincinnati had told ns about the money being attached; I told him that he would have to make the amount good. He said he couldn’t do it; refused to do it-; he had never heard of such a transaction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 Tenn. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurst-boillin-co-v-kelly-tenn-1921.