Mitchell v. Sherrell

11 Tenn. App. 210, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 85
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 23, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 11 Tenn. App. 210 (Mitchell v. Sherrell) 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
Mitchell v. Sherrell, 11 Tenn. App. 210, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 85 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

DeWITT, J.

Complainant .John E. Mitchell, a negro, owned a tract of 65 acres of land which was encumbered by a mortgage to secure a debt of nearly $800 which he owed to B. C. Wallace. He also owed a debt of about $125 to D. C. Sherrell Company, a mercantile partnership, of which IT. E. Sherrell was a member. Wallace’s note being overdue, he caused the land to be advertised for sale under foreclosure. Mitchell persuaded H. E. Sherrell to pay the Wallace note upon his taking a new mortgage to secure the loan and also the note held by D. C. Sherrell Company. Sherrell was moved by a desire to secure the payment of this note, as Mitchell was apparently unable otherwise to secure or pay it. On July 31, 1925, Mitchell and his wife signed and acknowledged the execution of a mortgage to secure payment of their note to H. E. Sherrell for $1500, due September 1, 1925. On August 1, 1925, Mitchell executed a mortgage to H. E. Sherrell and D. C. Sherrell Company conveying, as recited, "all of my crop of corn, estimated at 15 acres, and also all of my crop of cotton, estimated at 30 acres, planted and to be planted, cultivated and stored the present year on Joe Smith’s and my tracts of land in the 18th Civil District of Lincoln County. ’ ’ In this instrument it was recited:

"Whereas, I am indebted to H. E. Sherrell by note for $1500 and to D. C. Sherrell Company by note for ‘approximately $125,’'and D. C. Sherrell Company agree to sell and deliver to me goods, wares, merchandise, -supplies, etc., during the present year to the amount of $200, should I desire to do so, and I execute this paper to secure the payment of said amount and any further sums they may furnish me. If I pay off said account and notes and expenses of this trust by October 15, 1925, this paper shall be void, if not so paid, said H. E. Sherrell and D. C. Sherrell Company or agent shall sell the crop produced on said land or a sufficiency thereof, publicly or privately, for cash and apply proceeds, '
"First, to the expenses of this trust, secondly, to said account and notes, the surplus, if a.ny, will be delivered up or paid over to the'maker hereof. H. E. Sherrell and D. C. Sherrell Company, or agent, may take possession of said crops and at any time, if *213 necessary, to secure tbe same for tbe purpose of this trust, and to do whatever is necessary to secure tbe payment of tbe aforesaid amounts.”

Tbe explanation of tbe short period provided for payment given is that it was contemplated that Mitchell would secure a Federal Land Bank loan and pay the debts, but this was not accomplished.

No further monies were advanced or goods furnished by Sherrell to Mitchell, but the explanation given by IT. E. Sherrell is that it was thoroughly understood between him and Mitchell that the latter was to pay just what he owed and no more, regardless of the amount of the note given-; that his purpose in taking the chattel mortgage was to be thoroughly protected, as Mitchell owed money to other people; that he knew that Mitchell could not obtain from the Federal Land Bank sufficient money to pay these debts; and that the crops, together with the money derived from such loan, would discharge the debts. These statements are not denied by Mitchell, except that he testified that he did not know that the mortgages were to secure a note for as much as $1500.

Mitchell did not account for these 1925 crops and the mortgage thereon availed nothing. In the autumn of 1925 H. E. Sherrell advertised the land for sale under a power of sale given in the mortgage. Upon the request of Mitchell for additional time, and upon his representation that he would get the money and pay him, Sherrell refrained 'from making the sale.

In the early spring of 1926 Mr. Sherrell discovered that Mitchell had left the place. lie thereupon took possession and rented the land to one Holman. No rents were received .prior to a sale under foreclosure which took place on September 8, 1926. At said sale H. E. Sherrell became the purchaser upon his bid of $800. It was provided in the mortgage: “Said Ii. E.-Sherrell is authorized to bid on and to purchase said land at such sale as if he were. disinterested, and is authorized to execute, proper deed or deeds to the purchasers, conveying said land to the purchaser or purchasers, at such sale.” Mr. Sherrell, as mortgagee, executed a deed purporting to convey the land to himself.

On November 2, 1927, Mitchell and his wife filed the bill in’ this cause in ignorance of the said foreclosure. They alleged that the mortgages were given for an amount largely in excess of the indebtedness due, which they stated to- be not over $870; that the tenants of the land for 1926-1927 were one Holman and one Kollins ; that II. E. Sherrell had caused said tenants to attorn to him; that while said tenants were thus in possession the farm had been damaged. They prayed for an accounting, for an adjudication that the mortgage in excess of the amount shown to be due was void, for damages, *214 and for rents for 1926 and 1927, at $200 a year, to be credited on the actual debt. The bill was filled against TI. E. Sherrell individually and Mrs. D. C. Sherrell and IT. E. Sherrell as composing the partnership of D. 0. Sherrell Company.

Defendants denied any .liability to complainants and denied especially an averment in the bill that IT. E. Sherrell ever represented to Mitchell that the mortgage recited that it was to secure only the amount paid to satisfy the "Wallace debt and the note due D. C. Sherrell Company. They set forth the foreclosure and claimed title to the land thereunder, from September 8, 1926.

The complainants thereupon filed a supplemental bill alleging" that the property was not advertised by H. E. Sherrell and that the sum of $800, as set out in the deed, was far below a just and .fair price for the land. They prayed that the deed be declared void and can-celled; that a sale of the land be made under orders of the Chancery Court; that the proceeds thereof be applied, first, to the payment of what amount the complainants legally and justly owe the defendants; that the balance be applied by being paid over to complainants.

The allegations of this supplemental bill were traversed by defendants in an answer. Much testimony was taken and upon the hearing the Chancellor dismissed the original and supplemental bills. The complainants appealed., The assignments of error involve five propositions, as follows:

1. That the sale of the land was not advertised according to the provisions of the mortgage.

2. That the land was worth approximately $1800; and that the sum of $800 paid for it by the appellee was so inadequate that the Court should have set the sale aside and ordered a re-sale.

3. That the Court should have treated the mortgagee as a quasi-trustee of complainants and under obligation to make the land bring a fair price, and to refrain from buying it except at a fair valuation.

4. That as a condition precedent to a valid foreclosure, Sherrell, as mortgagee, should have had an accounting with the mortgagors.

5. That the Court should have awarded as rents approximately $200 and as damages for waste $100 to $150.

As to the advertisement and sale the provision in the mortgage is as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Tenn. App. 210, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-sherrell-tennctapp-1929.