Nabors v. Hamilton Trust & Savings Bank

2 Tenn. App. 523, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 22, 1926
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 523 (Nabors v. Hamilton Trust & Savings 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
Nabors v. Hamilton Trust & Savings Bank, 2 Tenn. App. 523, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

Mr. O. E. Caudell, a resident of Evansville, Indiana, manufactured and sold carbide gas lighting and heating plants. He carried on his business at Evansville under the name and style of American Generator Company.

Mr. F. B. Nabors and wife, Mrs. F. B. Nabors, were residents of Hamilton county, Tennessee.

On February 28, 1922, Mr. Caudell, through an agent at Chattanooga, sold them a carbide gas lighting and heating plant which was installed in their home. In consideration therefor, they executed and delivered to him, or to his agent for him, their negotiable *524 promissory note for $307.25, dated February 28, 1922, and due and payable twelve months after date at the Mercantile Commercial Bank, Evansville, Indiana. Said note provided for attorneys’ fees, and interest at eight per cent after maturity.

On May 20, 1922, Mr. Caudell endorsed and sold the note to H. A. Mann, a resident of Evansville, Indiana, and engaged in the real estate and investments business there.

Just prior to the maturity of the note, Mr. Mann put it in the North Side B'ank of Evansville, which bank forwarded it to the Hamilton Trust & Savings Bank of Chattanooga, Tennessee, for collection.

On February 26, 1923, Nabors and wife filed the original bill in this cause. (In stating the ease we treat the bill as including the amendments thereto). The bill was against the Hamilton Trust & Savings Bank, O. E. Caudell and H. A. Mann. Its object was to enjoin the collection of the note upon the ground that the carbide plant was worthless, that a fraud had been committed upon complainants in the sale to them of the plant and in the execution of the note therefor and that Mann was not a bona-fide purchaser of the note for value and without notice, etc.

The bank filed an answer stating that it simply held the note for collection and expressing a willingness to abide by the orders of the court.

Mr. Caudell made no defense to the bill, but Mann filed an answer and cross-bill denying that he had any knowledge or notice of any equities or defenses and alleging that he was a bona-fide purchaser for value and without notice, etc., and praying for a recovery on the note. . To this cross-bill Nabors and wife filed an answer denying that Mann was a bona-fide purchaser, reiterating the allegations of fraud contained in their original bill, and alleging that Mann was not only not a bona-fide holder of the note, but was in collusion and conspiracy with, and was a stool pigeon of, Caudell for the purpose of collecting the note. The original bill had also alleged this latter fact.

Proof having been taken, the Chancellor found and decreed: “that the said H. A. Mann, cross-complainant in this cause, is the owner of said note by purchase and is an innocent purchaser for value in due course and before maturity. It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the cross-complainant, H. A. Mann, have and recover of the defendants, F. B. Nabors, and his wife, Mrs. F. B. Nabors, the sum of $307.25, together with interest after maturity at the rate of eight per cent per annum, amounting to $52.-58, aggregating $359.83. And it further appearing to the court that said note provided for attorneys fees and the court being of the opinion that $50 would be a reasonable fee for Whitaker & *525 Foust for their services in this cause it is, therefore, ordered that the cross-complainant have and recover of the defendant in addition to said decree the sum of $50 as attorneys’ fees. The costs of the cause will be paid by complainants and the surety on their cost bond, Murray & McCalla, for all of which, including the judgment, execution will issue.”

Nabors and wife have appealed to this court and have made, fourteen assignments of error all of which, as we understand the argument in support thereof, question the holding that Mann was a-holder in due course, etc., of the note. In this connection the facts are as follows:

As stated, Caudell manufactured the carbide plants at Evansville, Indiana. T. A. Morgan, whose residence and place of business was at Chattanooga, was Caudell’s agent, and had charge of sales in the States of Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama. Mr. Morgan at .the time he sold the plant to Nabors and wife, told them that it would light their home and supply heat for ironing, etc., would be serviceable in all respects and would require only 100 pounds of carbide a year. He told them that their note would not be negotiated but would be held until maturity and that if at that time the plant had proved unsatisfactory the, note would be surrendered to them. That he or his principal would keep the plant in repair for a year and would furnish them a written guarantee to the above effect, which he failed to do.

The plant used 100 pounds of carbide in a few months. Nabors, put in another 100 pounds and in a few weeks thereafter it ceased to operate entirely. He made demand upon Morgan and upon Mr. Caudell (who happened to be in Chattanooga at the time) to put the plant in working order, but both failed to do anything.

Without attempting to go fully into the details of complainants’ proof, we think it shows that it made out a state of facts which would have constituted a clear defense to the note had Caudell sued them upon it. But we do not think that even complainants’ proof, which the cross-complainant did not attempt to contradict, goes to the extent of showing that Caudell was manufacturing and selling a plant which was worthless, or that his entire business plan and operations were a fraud on all of his customers. In other words, the plant which complainants bought did not operate successfully, and some others which Caudell sold seem to have given trouble, and he failed to live up to his contract with complainants, but as stated, even complainants’ proof fails to show that all of his plants were worthless or that all of his sales were frauds, and the record shows that he was still in business at the time the proof was taken more than two years after the execution of the note.

*526 Mr. Mann had at one time lived in Tennessee, but for the last fifteen years had lived in Evansville, Indiana. He was engaged in the real estate and investment business at Evansville and as a part of his business he seems to have bought notes and other negotiable instruments, choses in action and securities. He had known Mr. Caudell for seven or eight years and lived about ten city blocks from where Caudell lived and about fifteen city blocks from Mr. Caudell’s place of business or manufacturing plant. He had been in Caudell’s plant about twenty times altogether and Caudell had been in his office four or five times. Mann was not connected with- and had no interest in Caudell’s business and had no intimate knowledge thereof. Nor did he have knowledge as to Caudell’3 financial standing or- worth. He had no other transactions with him except the purchase of the notes hereinafter mentioned.

He bought the note involved in this suit on May 20, 1922, along with several others. Altogether he bought nineteen notes from Caudell, the first in December, 1921, and the last in 1922. The face value of these notes ranged between $260.25, and $307.25. He paid face value less ten per cent for all the notes which he' bought.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. App. 523, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nabors-v-hamilton-trust-savings-bank-tennctapp-1926.