Mountain City Mill Co. v. Lindsey

8 Tenn. App. 337, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 148
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 15, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 Tenn. App. 337 (Mountain City Mill Co. v. Lindsey) 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
Mountain City Mill Co. v. Lindsey, 8 Tenn. App. 337, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 148 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

This is a suit on a contract of guaranty. A judgment was rendered by the chancery court in favor of the complainant Mountain City Mill Company and against defendants E. A. Lindsey, S. B. Eeid, L. D. Scott, P. J. Stumb and G. A. Maxwell for the principal sum of $5,481.64, and $849.65 interest thereon from the date of the filing of the bill (September 5, 1924) to the date of the decree (August 5, 1927), making the full sum of $6-,331.29, and also for the cost of the cause, for all of which execution was awarded.

The defendants against whom judgment was thus rendered have brought the case to this court by ,an appeal, duly perfected, and have assigned errors upon the findings, opinion and decree of the chancery court.

Along with the appellants, Mrs. Frankie B. Villines was a party-defendant to the complainant’s bill when filed, but -while the suit was pending in the chancery court the complainant was permitted, without objection, to dismiss its bill against her, which dismissal was “without prejudice.”

*339 The facts found by the learned Chancellor, and his views of the law applicable to the facts, appear from his “findings of fact and opinion” made a part of the record, as follows:

“This is a suit brought by Mountain City Mill Company against E. A. Lindsey, Frankie B. Villines, S. B. Reid, L. D. Scott, P. J. Stumb and G. A. Maxwell on a contract of guaranty.
‘ ‘ The bill states in substance as follows:
“ ‘Complainant is a manufacturer and seller of flour, meal and bakery products.
“ ‘Defendants are stockholders in Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company, a corporation formerly engaged in operating a number-of retail grocery stores in Chattanooga and other places.
“ ‘For some time prior to the execution of the guaranty in question, complainant had been .extending credit to Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company. The account had grown larger than complainant felt it could safely carry and complainant refused to continue to carry it at such a high figure. Thereupon to induce complainant to continue to advance credit and carry the account at a higher figure, defendants, as stockholders in the Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company, gave the guaranty now in question.’
“The guaranty reads as follows:
“ ‘Nashville, March 7, 1922.
“ ‘Mountain City Mill Company,
“ ‘Chattanooga, Tennessee.
“ ‘Gentlemen:
“ ‘Referring to your letter of March 3rd, addressed to the Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company, we, the undersigned stockholders in the Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company hereby undertake to indemnify you against loss in selling the Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company to the extent of $10,000, provided that this $10,000 so guaranteed is over and above 'a line of credit of $10,000 which you agree to give the Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company without any guaranty. In other words, it is intended by this writing that the Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company shall have a credit to the extent of $20,000 or so much thereof as may be necessary. Of this, $10,000 is to be carried by you on a straight line of credit of the Parham-Lind-sey Grocery Company, and any additional amounts over and above the $10,000 straight line of credit ¡is to be guaranteed by the undersigned to the extent of $10,000 over and above the $10,000 straight line and no more.
*340 “ ‘It is undei’stood that hereafter at any time when it suits this concern to make you a statement, if the statement referred to satisfies your credit department, this guaranty will be surrendered back into our hands.’
“This guaranty was signed by all of the defendants. Relying on the above guaranty, complainant sold a large bill of goods on credit to the Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company.
“In March, 1923, Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company be-' came involved in financial difficulties. Its assets, or a major portion of them, were converted into cash by a creditors’ committee and distributed, pro rata, among its various creditors, including complainant. When the creditors’ committee took charge, Paidiam-Lindsey Grocery Company owed complainant on the account $22,502.17. The payments or dividends received by complainant from the creditors’ committee amounted to $14,518.36. Complainant applied $10,000 of this amount to the $10,000 unsecured straight line of credit, $2502.17 to the excess over the guaranteed line of credit, and the residue on the guaranteed line of credit, thus leaving $7983.81 unpaid on said guaranteed line of credit. Complainant asks for a decree lagainst the defendants for this amount and for the costs of the court.
“All of the defendants filed answers to the bill.
“The suit was dismissed as to defendant Frankie B. Villines, and 'her answer will not be adverted to. No exception was made to said dismissal.
“The answer of the other defendants is a joint answer, and in substance, is as follows:
“Defendants admit that prior to March, 1922, complainant extended credit to said Parham-Lindsey Grocery Company, but deny that complainant declined to extend credit for an amount in excess of $10,000. On the contrary, complainant extended credit to s,aid ¡company to an amount in excess of $20,000, and early in March, 1922, said company was indebted to complainant in an amount in excess of $20,000.
“Defendants admit that they wrote the letter set out in the bill, but deny that it is susceptible of the construction placed thereon by complainant.. They deny that the contract made in said letter was for the purpose of inducing complainant to extend credit to said grocery company. They deny that said letter was ever .accepted by complainant or that they were notified of such acceptance. They say that said letter was nothing more than a proposition of guaranty; that said proposition never became binding upon them, and that they never became *341 guarantors of tbe account of said grocery company then or thereafter owing to complainant.
“They admit that said grocery company became involved in financial difficulties and that it has ceased to be a going concern. They admit that its .assets, or the major portion thereof, had been converted into cash and have been distributed, pro rata, among the various creditors of said grocery company, including complainant. They admit that payments or dividends received by complainant from the committee amounted to $14,518.36. They deny that complainant had the right to apply said amount as it has done.
“Defendants contend that there was no consideration for the execution of said paper writing of March 7, 1922.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Tenn. App. 337, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mountain-city-mill-co-v-lindsey-tennctapp-1928.