Johns v. Phœnix National Bank

56 P. 725, 6 Ariz. 290, 1899 Ariz. LEXIS 90
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1899
DocketCivil No. 654
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 56 P. 725 (Johns v. Phœnix National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johns v. Phœnix National Bank, 56 P. 725, 6 Ariz. 290, 1899 Ariz. LEXIS 90 (Ark. 1899).

Opinion

STREET, C. J.

1. On October 31, 1896, A. L. Johns, the plaintiff in error in this court, as plaintiff'in the district court, filed a complaint against the defendant, the Phoenix National Bank, a corporation, seeking to recover $25,654.39 damages for the conversion of certain choses in action, and alleges: That the Bank of Tempe, being the owner of several promissory notes aggregating the sum of $17,953.51, principal and interest, did, on the-day of March, 1894, pledge the said notes to the said Phoenix National Bank as collateral security to secure the payment of an overdraft then due and of overdraft privileges. The first of said notes was for the sum of one thousand dollars, signed by Robert Bowen and W. A. Daggs; the second for three thousand dollars, signed by'A. J. Daggs, and indorsed by R. E. Daggs; the third for seven thousand dollars, signed by A. J. Daggs, and indorsed by R. E. Daggs; the fourth for five thousand dollars, signed by A. J. Daggs, and indorsed by R. E. Daggs; the fifth and sixth each being for four hundred dollars, and signed by H. Z. Zuck. That on the twenty-third day of May the Bank of Tempe made a general assignment for the benefit of creditors to D. A. Abrams, who thereupon became the assignee in bankruptcy of said Bank of Tempe; that thereafter on the twenty-eighth day of November, 1894, the Phoenix National Bank unlawfully sold, assigned, and delivered the notes to A. J. Daggs, the maker of a portion thereof, and that thereafter, on the ninth day of March, 1895, said Abrams, assignee of the Bank of Tempe, sold and assigned to said A. J. Daggs all of the right, title, and interest of said Bank of Tempe “in and to that [292]*292certain chose in action of conversion, and all right in action against the defendant growing ont of the sale and conversion by the defendant of the notes described, and all right to recover damages arising out of such sale and conversion,” etc., by reason of such sale to A. J. Daggs; that thereafter, and on the seventh day of April, 1895, said A. J. Daggs sold and assigned to the plaintiff, A. L. Johns, all his right to recover from the defendant damages arising from the sale and delivery of the promissory notes by the Phcenix National Bank to the said A. J. Daggs; that afterwards the said A. J. Daggs, who is attorney for plaintiff, and who was the principal debtor on the greater part of the obligations, and who received the assignment of the notes from the Phcenix National Bank, and who received the right to damages in the chose in action from Abrams, assignee, because of such assignment, and who after-wards transferred his right of action to Johns, plaintiff, made a demand on the defendant, the Phoenix National Bank, for the payment and settlement of the damages complained of. On June 9, 1897, the cause was tried to the court without a jury, and, upon the evidence offered by the plaintiff, judgment was rendered for the defendant, whereupon plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial, which, on June 18, 1897, was heard by the court, and denied, and plaintiff gave notice of appeal to the supreme court of the territory. These proceedings were in the May term of the district court, 1897, which term adjourned sine die on November 20th of that year. On December 4th of that year plaintiff filed an appeal-bond with the clerk of the district court, with the London Company, a corporation, as surety, signed by R. E. Daggs, as secretary of the London Company, and by the plaintiff, A. L. Johns, by A. J. Daggs, his attorney, which was by said clerk approved. The defendant, on December 6, 1897, excepted to the bond and to the sufficiency of the sureties. The justification of sureties coming before the court for adjudication, the court, on December 31, 1897, entered an order disapproving the bond and the sureties thereon, and permitted the appellant to file a new bond, with sureties, by January 8, 1898. No new or further bond on appeal was ever filed, but on January 7, 1898, the plaintiff filed his appeal in the supreme court of the territory for the January term, 1898, the first day of which began on the 10th of January, 1898; whereupon defendant (appellee) [293]*293moved that the appeal he dismissed, on the ground: 1. “That no appeal-bond in this case has ever been approved by the district court of Maricopa County, or the clerk thereof, from which said court this said appeal comes, or by any other person having authority to approve said bond; and the only bond on appeal presented by appellant for approval was disapproved by the said district court, as shown by the minute orders of said court, and certified to, a copy of which is hereto attached; and therefore this court is without jurisdiction in this case.” 2. “Because of that disapproval the said bond is not an appealable order, and therefore this court has no jurisdiction in this case.” 3. “That the appellant herein has not served upon the attorneys for appellee a copy of his brief in said cause within thirty days after his attempt to perfect his appeal herein, in accordance with subdivision 5 of rule III (2 Ariz. xxxiii, 35 Pac. vi) of the court, or at all.” 4. “For the reason there is no bill of exceptions or statement of facts filed in this cause.” And 5. “That the statement or record filed herein does not comply with law.-” Appellant based his motion upon certificates of the clerk of the district court, and upon the record and papers on file in the supreme court. The motion to dismiss was, on the eighteenth day of January, 1898, sustained, and the then appeal of the present plaintiff in error was dismissed. Ante, p. 181. On February 9, 1898, a mandate issued out of the supreme court to the district court, which, together with all of the original papers theretofore transmitted by the district court to the supreme court, were returned to the district court, the attempted appeal having been made under act No. 71 of the nineteenth legislative assembly, without the aid of a bill of exceptions or statement of facts, but upon the original papers and the transcript of the reporter’s notes of the trial.

The plaintiff next, on the eleventh day of February, 1898, filed his petition in error and his bond on proceedings in error with the clerk of the district court, and obtained from the clerk of said court a summons in error of that date, which is in form and words as follows, to wit: “Summons in Error. In the name of the territory of Arizona, to L. H. Orme (sheriff) or any constable of Maricopa County, greeting: You are hereby commanded to summons the Phcenix National Bank, a corporation, with principal place of business at Phcenix, [294]*294Maricopa County, Arizona, to be and appear before our supreme court at tbe next regular meeting thereof to be held at the city of Phcenix, Maricopa County, Arizona, being on the second Monday in January, 1899, and then and there defend a writ of error granted on petition of A. L. Johns therein-against the Phcenix National Bank, as defendant in error therein,” etc. The plaintiff then attached the petition in error and the summons in error to the identical papers which he had filed in the supreme court on January 7, 1898, on appeal, and put another cover thereon, and filed it with the clerk of the supreme court on January 6, 1899, for the January term of 1899, entitling it “A. L.

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Bluebook (online)
56 P. 725, 6 Ariz. 290, 1899 Ariz. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johns-v-phnix-national-bank-ariz-1899.