Napier v. Stone

114 S.W.2d 57, 21 Tenn. App. 626, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 30, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 114 S.W.2d 57 (Napier v. Stone) 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
Napier v. Stone, 114 S.W.2d 57, 21 Tenn. App. 626, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

CRCWNOYER, J.

This is a suit to set aside a sale of land under a deed of trust and to have said deed of trust reformed and released.

*628 Mrs. Ella Napier was the owner of a twenty-acre tract of land in the Twelfth civil district of Smith county, for which she had paid $450 in 1932.

On March 15, 1934, she executed a note for $95, due one year after date, to the Lebanon Cemetery Trust Fund, and on the same date executed a mortgage on her land to secure same.

On May 1, 1934, she executed a note for $35, due sixty days after date, to the “Lebanon Cemetery,” and on the same date executed a deed of trust conveying said lands (subject to the first mortgage) to A. A. Adams, Jr., trustee, to secure same.

Mrs. Napier insists that she borrowed and was given only $60 in March and $15 in May.

C. L. Stone contends that Mr. and Mrs. Napier applied to him for a .loan of $60; that he told them he would procure a loan for them from the Lebanon Cemetery trust fund if they would borrow $95 and pay him $35 which Will Napier owed him, and execute a note for $95 to the Lebanon Cemetery trust fund and a first mortgage on Mrs. Napier’s property to secure it; that they agreed to this and executed the note and mortgage, he taking the acknowledgment, and he secured the loan of $95 for them, took out $35 in payment of Will Napier’s debt to him, and gave Mrs. Napier $60.

Mrs. Napier insists that she asked Stone to make her a loan of $60 to which he agreed; that she did not agree to assume any of her husband’s debts; that nothing was said about the Lebanon Cemetery; that Stone gave her $60 and she signed a note and mortgage without reading them; that she is uneducated and cannot read but can write her name.

As to the $35 note and deed of trust the testimony is similar. Stone testified that Mrs. Napier wanted to borrow $15, that he told her he would arrange for a loan from the Lebanon Cemetery if she would borrow a sufficient amount to pay him $20 which Will Napier owed him for a mule; that this was agreed to; that he wrote a note for $35 and a deed of trust to secure the same, which they signed, he (Stone) taking the acknowledgment to the deed of trust, and he secured $35 from the cemetery fund and gave Mrs. Napier $15. Mrs. Napier’s insistence is that she asked for $15; that her husband’s debt was not mentioned; that she received $15 and executed a note and deed of trust without reading them.

There is some testimony that the signatures of Will Napier on the notes and mortgages are forgeries, but this is controverted. But there is no evidence that Mrs. Ella Napier’s signature is not her genuine signature. Both instruments are obligations of Mrs. Napier’s. Will Napier’s signature on them was unnecessary. The chancellor found that he signed them, and we think he was correct. But this does not affect the suit.

*629 On tbe 25tb of May, 1934, Mrs. Napier repaid $15 of the last loan to Stone, for which he gave her his receipt. She testified that she asked him to release the second mortgage and he told her that he would do so when she paid interest on the $15 for three weeks and the cost of recording the deed of trust, which he told her she could pay when she paid off the first mortgage. Stone testified that, when she paid the $15, she asked that the trust deed be released and that he told her he would release it when she paid the balance of the $35 loan. He admits that she demanded her note when she paid the $15.

Mrs. Napier testified that she discovered five or sis months later that the mortgages on record were for the sums of $95 and $35; that she went to Stone’s house and told him what she had discovered and he said that he had added to each loan a sum her husband owed him, but he finally agreed to correct the mortgages. Stone denies this.

On January 28, 1935, the trustee under the deed ofHrust to secure $35 (on which had been paid $15.00) advertised the land for sale on the 19th of February, to satisfy a note for $35, by posters placed at three places in the county — the courthouse, Cooksey’s store at Eome, and on the property. The advertisement did not mention the name of the holder of the note.

No notice was given to Mrs. Napier, who was living in Nashville at this time, and she did not know of the sale until after it had taken place.

The land was sold (subject to the first mortgage of $95.00) for $10' to E. S. Eatherly, there being only one bid.

This tract of twenty acres had been the home of Eatherly’s wife’s family, and she was anxious to buy it. Eatherly was related in some degree to Stone.

Mrs. Napier-filed-her original bill in this cause to have the sale set aside because the debt had been satisfied and because the sale price was inadequate, and to have the deed of trust to secure $35 reformed to read $15, and to have the same released because the note had been paid.

The defendants answered and denied the allegations of the bill, and insisted that the sale was valid.

The chancellor found and held that the material allegations of the bill and the determinative issues made by the pleadings were not sustained by the evidence; that the advertisement and sale of the land were regular;- and that the consideration for the land was not inadequate; and he dismissed the complainant’s bill.

The complainant excepted to said decree and appealed to this court and has assigned errors, which are, in substance, as follows:

(1) The chancellor erred in failing to hold that the mortgages were invalid because the acknowledgments were taken by Stone wlm was interested in the transactions.

*630 (2) The chancellor erred in holding that the mortgages and notes for $95 and $35, respectively, were executed by Mrs. Napier.

(3) The chancellor erred in holding that the consideration for the sale was adequate.

In this ease it appears that Stone acted for the cemetery company; that nobody else connected with the company had anything to do with the transactions; therefore the company is chargeable with notice of the transactions. Where the agent is the sole representative of the principal in the transaction, the principal is chargeable with notice. Smith v. Bank, 132 Tenn., 147, 150, 177 S. W., 72.

1. The appellant’s first assignment of error is that the mortgage and deed of trust are illegal and void because the acknowledgments were taken by said Stone as notary public when he was interested in the transactions, therefore incompetent to take such acknowledgments.

The cemetery company is incorporated and Stone is stockholder and director and manager.

It was held by our Supreme Court in Cooper v. Hamilton Perpetual Bldg. & Loan Ass’n., 97 Tenn., 285, 37 S. W., 12, 13, 33 L. R. A., 338, 56 Am. St. Rep., 795, and Reed Fertilizer Co. v. Thomas, 97 Tenn., 478, 37 S.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.2d 57, 21 Tenn. App. 626, 1937 Tenn. App. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/napier-v-stone-tennctapp-1937.