Mecone v. Memphis Cotton Refining Co.

3 Tenn. App. 574, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 20, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Tenn. App. 574 (Mecone v. Memphis Cotton Refining Co.) 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
Mecone v. Memphis Cotton Refining Co., 3 Tenn. App. 574, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

Vince Mecone has appealed from a decree of the chancery court dismissing his bill against the Wilson-Ward Company, a corporation, located in the city of Memphis. There were other defendants sued with the 'Wilson-'Ward Company, and appellant procured a judgment against the other defendants, but they have not appealed. Complainant’s bill was filed the first day of August, 1923. The bill alleges that appellant (hereinafter called complainant) is the holder of four notes signed by the Mlemphis Cotton Refining Company, dated July 2, 1920; one note for $20,000, payable July 2, 1923,' and three notes for $200 each, payable July 2, 1922, January 2, 1923, and July 2, 1923. These notes evidenced a loan made by appellant to the Memphis Cotton Refining Company of $20,000, secured by a deed of trust on property of said Company in the city of Memphis. The loan was made and appellant was induced-to purchase the notes upon the representation and agreement of the Memphis Cotton Refining Company and R. S. Bryan and S. T. Speers that the proceeds of the notes were to be expended in the construction of two additional steel and concrete buildings on the property on which the deed of trust was given securing said notes, and this was the inducing cause of the loan, the property not being worth the amount of the loan in the absence of such improvement.

R. S. Bryan, who was the president, and S. T. Speers, who was the general manager, of the Memphis Cotton Refining Company, were made parties defendant to the original bill.

At the time of the making of the loan, the Memphis Cotton Refining Company gave to appellant a bond in,the penal sum of $20,-000 to guarantee the construction of this improvement, Spears and Bryan being sureties on said bond.

Later, in consideration of the surrender of this bond, another bond was given on August 2, 1921, in the same sum guaranteeing the completion of one of the buildings prior to July 1, 1922, Speers and Bryan both being sureties on this bond.

Complainant . alleges that he purchased the notes executed by the Memphis Cotton Refining Company, which notes were payable to “ourselves” executed by the defendant Memphis Refining Company, and endorsed by it. The notes are found as exhibits in the transcript. They bear the signature of Memphis Cotton Refining Company by R. S. Bryan, president, and John J. Mulroy, secretary, and are endorsed on the back in the same manner, and by the same parties who executed them.

Default was made in the payment of the interest on the principal note of $20,000 due July 2, 1922, and in the installment of interest due January 2, 1923, all of the indebtedness was declared *576 due, the trust deed was foreclosed, and the net amount realized from the foreclosure of sale of $9,014 was credited on the principal note.

Recovery was sought against the Memphis Cotton Refining Company of the ¿mount due on the notes from the defendants, Bryan and spears as sureties on the bond, and from Wilson-Ward Company because of the fact that it received the moneys from the defendant, Memphis Cotton Refining Company, with knowledge of the trust impressed on them, the amount received, $15,000, being more than the balance due complainant, which is $10,985.60.

It is the contention of appellant that the $15,000 was received by Wilson-Ward Company with full notice and knowledge of the purpose for which the money had been received by the Memphis Cotton Refining Company and of the trust impressed upon it.

The bill alleged that the trust deed had been foreclosed, which trust deed had been executed by the Memphis Cotton Refining Company and complainant had received something more than $9,-000 on his indebtedness, leaving a balance due of $10,985.60. The prayer of the bill was in accordance with the allegations — prayer for judgment against the Memphis Cotton Refining Company for the balance due; against Bryan and Speers as sureties on the indemnity bond, and against the Wilson-Ward Company for the reason that it had accepted $15,000 of complainant’s money from the Memphis Cotton Refining Company on the indebtedness of said Company to the Wilson-Ward Company; that R. S. Bryan, the president of the Memphis Cotton Refining Company was also president of the Wilson-Ward Company, and he was familiar with all of the facts and conditions surrounding the loan of complainant to the defendant Memphis Cotton Refining Company and the purposes for which the loan was procured — the erection of buildings upon the lot owned by the Memphis Cotton Refining Company.

The Wilson-Ward Company filed an answer in which it denied that it had any knowledge of any trust character impressed upon any funds borrowed from the appellant by the Memphis Cotton Refining Company and stated that the Memphis Cotton Refining Company was managed exclusively by S. T. Speers. The Wilson-Ward Company was a cotton factor, receiving cotton from the Memphis Cotton Refining Company, advancing- money to it, and generally acting as a financial agent of this company.

The Wilson-Ward Company admitted the receipt of the $15,000, but stated that it had been deposited with'them by the Memphis Cotton Refining Company, which was at that time indebted to them, in the same way that other funds were deposited, was not impressed with any trust character, was treated as any other funds, and because of said payment, which reduced the indebtedness of the Mem *577 phis Cotton Refining Company to the Wilson-Ward Company, the later company subsequently paid out for the account of the Memphis Cotton Refining Company considerably more money than the $15,000, part of which was used to pay for the- buildings.

Originally a joint answer was filed by R. S. Bryan and S. T. Speers, in which they admitted the execution of the bond by them, that the foreclosure had been had, and that there was on the face of the notes the balance due as set out in the bill. The answer further set out that because of the financial condition of the Memphis Cotton Refining Company, and financial conditions generally, that Me-cone agreed to foreclose the property and hold it in trust for the defendants, so that they would have an opportunity of making a better sale than could be had under a foreclosure.

At the outset of this litigation, it appears that the Memphis Cotton Refining Compaq, the Wilson-Ward Company and the two sureties, Bryan and Speers, had the same counsel who filed answers for the three defendants. After the answers were filed, the defendant. S. T. Speers procured the consent of the court to withdraw his joint answer with his co-defendant R. S. Bryan. He employed other counsel and filed a separate answer. In this separate answer he admits that the allegations of the bill were substantially correct “except any and all allegations of any fraud, collusion or misconduct on the part of this defendant in connection with the co-defendant, Wilson-Ward Company.”

He further averred in regard to the foreclosure that it had been had as stated in the joint answer theretofore filed by him and R. S. Bryan, with the idea that the property would be held in trust until it could be resold at greater advantage.

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3 Tenn. App. 574, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mecone-v-memphis-cotton-refining-co-tennctapp-1926.