Jefferson Lumber Co. v. Powers

134 So. 464, 223 Ala. 63, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 69
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1931
Docket6 Div. 650.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 134 So. 464 (Jefferson Lumber Co. v. Powers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jefferson Lumber Co. v. Powers, 134 So. 464, 223 Ala. 63, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 69 (Ala. 1931).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

This appeal is from a decree of the circuit court, sitting in equity, discharging the appellees from liability as indorsers on seventeen promissory notes executed by the Tishomingo Band & Bumber Company, a corporation, to the appellants, a partnership doing business as the Jefferson Bumber Company, and indorsed by the appellees Powers, Young, and Randall, representing an indebtedness of more than $50,000 for money advanced by appellants to the Tishomingo Company under a tripartite agreement between the parties, a copy of which is made Exhibit A to the bill.

The litigation was initiated by a suit at law brought by appellants against appellees, which, after plea in abatement going to the jurisdiction of the court was tried on an issue of fact and overruled, was, on the defendants’ motion made under section 6489 of the Code of 1923, transferred to the equity docket, and the bill upon which the decree is rested was then filed by appellees, the defendants in the action at law.

The first contention advanced by the appellants is that the court erred in overruling their motion to strike, and in granting the motion to transfer the case to the equity docket.

The substance of the averments of the motion to transfer is that the liability of the Tishomingo Band & Bumber Company represented by said notes arose out of and under said tripartite agreement between the parties under which the plaintiffs advanced money to said Tishomingo Company to enable it to set up mills and cut and manufacture the timber on its holding into lumber, which the plaintiffs agreed and undertook to put upon the market as agents of the owner, to plaintiffs’ customers; that quantities of such lumber were sold by the plaintiffs for and as the agents of said company, and, as a result, mutual and unliquidated accounts existed between the said Tishomingo Company and the plaintiffs,, involving numerous and sundry *66 items extending over a period of two or more years, which at the commencement of the suit, and still, subsist between them, in consequence of which plaintiffs were indebted to the principal on said notes in an amount sufficient, if not to satisfy said notes in full, to greatly reduce the amount thereof; that said Tishomingo Company is insolvent, and had been adjudged a bankrupt.

It has been ruled here that a motion made under the statute to transfer, to meet appropriate grounds of demurrer, must state “the equitable right or defense asserted, with the same precision and certainty in averment as is required to state such right in a bill in equity” (Ex parte Holzer, 219 Ala. 431, 122 So. 421, 422), yet, in the absence of demurrer, and on motion to strike, the averments of the petition or motion to transfer will be construed most liberally, in support of the equitable right or defense, and amendable defects will be treated as made. Scholze et al. v. Steiner et al., 100 Ala. 149, 14 So. 552.

It appears from the tripartite agreement between the parties, attached as an exhibit to the motion, that the plaintiffs in the action at law, A. J. Gray and E. W. McKinley, doing business as Jefferson Lumber Company, designated in the agreement as “dealers” and as “parties of the first part,” Tishomingo Land & Lumber Company, as “owner” and as “party of the second part,” and Henry C. Powers, George W. Randall, and W. R. Young, the defendants in the action at law, designated “the sole stockholders of said corporation, as parties of the third part,” were coadventurers in the business enterprises covered by the agreement. Therefore, taking as true the averments of the motion that at the time the suit at law was filed mutual and unliquidated accounts subsisted between the principal debt- or, the Tishomingo Company, and the plaintiffs, involving a large number of transactions covering many thousands of dollars, running through a long period of time, which upon adjustment would greatly reduce the liability of Powers, Young and Randall as indorsers, in connection with the alleged insolvency of the principal debtor, the defendants in the action at law were entitled to have the cause transferred to the equity docket that they might avail themselves of an equitable set-off against their alleged liability. Scholze et al. v. Steiner et al., supra; Elledge v. Hotchkiss, 222 Ala. 129, 130 So. 893.

After the transfer of the case to the equity docket, the defendants filed the bill on which the decree granting the relief is predicated.

The bill, in addition to the equitable set-off, indicated in the motion, asserted two additional grounds on which the complainants claimed their discharge from liability:

First, that plaintiffs in the action at law, defendants in equity, and appellants here, had violated the agreement between the parties in failing to retain out of the funds arising from the sale of lumber sold by the defendants in equity stipulated sums in reduction of the liability for advances made by them to the Tishomingo Company, which, if they had retained, would have been sufficient to discharge the liability on the notes.

The other asserted ground is that, by agreement entered into.between the appellants, the payees of the notes, with Powers, one of the complainants, in consideration of the transfer by Powers to appellants of all of Powers’ stock in the Tishomingo Company, Powers w'as discharged from liability on the notes, and this effected a discharge of all the indorsers.

The decree discharging the complainants is rested primarily on the violation of the contract by appellants in the respect above indicated, and incidentally it holds that Powers was discharged, with the effect that the other complainants were discharged pro tanto ; that is, from one-third of the liabilities.

The pertinent provisions of the agreement upon which the trial court rested its major conclusion are:

“Each and every advancement made by the dealers to the owner shall be repaid with interest at the rate of 7% per annum thereon. Such advancements shall be made only on written request therefor, in each instance, aeeompamed by a negotiable promissory note signed by the owner and the stockholders as the makers thereof and so draten as to bind them in compliance with its terms to pay to the order of the dealers at the First National Bank of Birmvngham, Alabama, the principal sum of said advancement on or before six months from date (and to be once renewed if necessary) with interest as aforesaid. Ninety days after the shipment of lumber is commenced, the oioner authorizes the dealer to retain the sum of two dollars for each one thousand feet of lumber shipped or delivered, and said amount so retained shall be applied toward paying advancements made by the dealer; but no such amount shall be so retained on account of any lumber shipped or delivered during said initial ninety-day period.” (Italics supplied.)

Subsequent to the agreement from which the foregoing is taken, another agreement was entered into between the appellants and the Tishomingo Company by which the amount authorized to be retained in reduction of the indebtedness for advances made was increased to $2.75 per thousand feet of lumber sold.

The contention of appellees, that Powers was discharged from liability on the notes in question, was litigated on the trial of the issue presented by the defendants’ plea in abatement in the action at law. At that hear

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Bluebook (online)
134 So. 464, 223 Ala. 63, 1931 Ala. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jefferson-lumber-co-v-powers-ala-1931.