Julian v. American Nat. Bank

106 S.W.2d 871, 21 Tenn. App. 137, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 1, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 106 S.W.2d 871 (Julian v. American Nat. Bank) 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
Julian v. American Nat. Bank, 106 S.W.2d 871, 21 Tenn. App. 137, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

Frank N. Julian, receiver of Citizens Life Insurance Company, an Alabama corporation, brought this suit by original bill filed in the chancery court of Davidson county, part 2, on August 22, 1931, against American National Bank, a national banking corporation with its principal office and place of business in Nashville, Davidson county, Tenn.

The legal situs and home office of Citizens Life Insurance Company was in the city of Huntsville, Ala. Frank N. Julian, a resident and citizen of Birmingham, Ala., was appointed receiver of Citizens Life Insurance Company by decree of the United States District Court for the Northeastern Division of the Northern District of Alabama, on May 27, 1930, and was appointed ancillary receiver of said Citizens Life Insurance Company by the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee, Nashville Division, on June 23, 1930, and this suit was brought by said Julian in his capacity as such receiver and ancillary receiver.

The due appointment of said Julian as such receiver and ancillary *140 receiver is now admitted by the defendant; but defendant denied below and, through an assignment of error, asserts here that Julian, receiver, etc., was not authorized to bring this suit.

The relief sought by complainant was in part granted and in part denied by the final decree of the chancery court, and both parties appealed to this court from that decree and have assigned errors here.

We have been greatly assisted in the investigation of the large record in this case by the written findings and opinion of the learned chancellor and the oral arguments and elaborate briefs and written arguments by able counsel; but counsel differ so widely in some particulars as to what are the controlling issues in the case that we think it well to preface our consideration of the assignments of error with a statement of the pleadings through which the issues were presented to the chancery court.

Numerous documentary exhibits were filed as exhibits to complainant’s bill, to which we need not refer (as exhibits) at this time, as they were subsequently identified by proof or stipulation; but, for pui’poses of eonvient reference hereinafter, we will note the numbers of the separate paragraphs in which the several allegations of complainant’s bill are made.

In paragraph I (after setting forth the facts with reference to the parties, which we have, in substance, hereinbefore stated), complainant alleges that, “Ida Y. Williams and all the others, who, as plaintiffs, brought the original suits under which your complainant herein was appointed receiver, were policy holders of the Southern Insurance Company whose policies were re-insured by the Citizens Life Insurance Company, and for whose benefit the collateral, hereinafter mentioned, referred to and described in Section III of this bill, had been deposited by the Southern Insurance Company with the Insurance Commissioner of the State of Tennessee and was being held by him as a trust fund for their benefit. ’ ’

In paragraph II it is alleged that on or about August 23, 1929, a certain note for $116,099.74, payable to the defendant and purporting to be signed by Citizens Life Insurance Company, was signed in the defendant’s banking house in Nashville and delivered to the defendant by Joe F. Little.

In paragraph III it is alleged that, “At the time of the signing of said note there was deposited therewith, and as collateral security thereto, certain securities aggregating $101,099.57 of which the following is a true and correct list and description: [And then follows an itemized list of twenty-one 'Securities’ aggregating the aforesaid sum of $101,099.57.]”

In paragraph IY it is alleged that, “contemporaneously with the signing of the aforesaid note and the securing of the same by the *141 aforesaid collateral, a certain check for $116,199.74, payable to the defendant and purporting to be signed by Citizens Life Insurance Company, was delivered to the defendant. ’ ’

In paragraph V it is alleged that, “Prior to the happening of the matters aforesaid, the defendant American National Bank was the holder and owner of the following notes:

“$27,000.00 note of Southern Insurance Company, dated July 26, 1929, due 30 days after date, payable to the American National Bank;
“$24,115.00 note of Southern Insurance Company, dated July 29, 1929, due 30 days after date, payable to the Cumberland Yalley Office, American National Bank;
“$15,000.00 note of Southern Insurance Company, dated July 31, 1929, due 30 days after date, payable to the American National Bank;
“$9,000.00 note of Southern Insurance Company, dated July 19, 1929, due 30 days after date, payable to the Cumberland Yalley Office, American National Bank;
“$19,200.00 note of Will G. Harris, dated June 24,' 1929, due 30 days after date, payable to the American National Bank;
“$10,200.00 note of Bussell E. Sharp, dated May 24th, 1929, due 30 days after date, payable to the American National Bank;
“$11,600.00 note of L. T. Little, dated May 24, 1929, due 30 days after date, payable to the American National Bank.”

It is further alleged in paragraph Y that said seven notes above listed were paid by the aforesaid check (described in paragraph IY), and were marked “Paid” and surrendered by the defendant, the defendant claiming at that time there was due on said notes, principal and interest, the exact sum of $116,099.74.

In paragraph YI it is alleged that, “for a long time prior to the happening of the matters aforesaid, the Southern Insurance Company, a Tennessee insurance corporation, had been engaged in the insurance business and had been a customer of the American National Bank, and had had many transactions with the Bank and its officials.”

In paragraph VII it is alleged that, “at the time when Ida V. Williams and the other plaintiffs in the ease of ‘Ida V. Williams, et al., v. Citizens Life Insurance Company,’ in which complainant was appointed receiver, were re-insured by the Citizens Life Insurance Company, the Southern Insurance Company, pursuant to the provisions of chapter 160 of the Acts of the Tennessee Legislature for 1895, had on deposit with A. S. Caldwell, Insurance Commissioner of Tennessee, as security for its policy holders all the aforesaid collateral which is described in Section III hereof; and complainant avers that at said time and at all times thereafter until the date of complainant’s appointment as receiver, the Citizens Life Insurance Company was insolvent. ’ ’

*142

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W.2d 871, 21 Tenn. App. 137, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/julian-v-american-nat-bank-tennctapp-1937.