Nashville Trust Co. v. Smythe

27 L.R.A. 663, 94 Tenn. 513
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 27 L.R.A. 663 (Nashville Trust Co. v. Smythe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nashville Trust Co. v. Smythe, 27 L.R.A. 663, 94 Tenn. 513 (Tenn. 1895).

Opinion

Snodgrass, Ch. J.

The question in this case arises under a bill filed July 30, 1892, by the Nashville Trust Co., as agent of Mrs. Martha M. Reed, against J. C. Smythe et al., to enforce lien for the purchase money evidenced by negotiable promissory notes, executed as consideration for certain real estate, sold and conveyed on the twentieth of December, 1890, by defendant, Everett, to Mrs. Marlin. There were one hundred and twenty-six of these notes for $20 each, except the last, which was for $25, payable [515]*515by Marlin and wife to Everett. They bore interest from date, and matured, respectively, on the first day of each succeeding month after their date, until the end of one hundred and twenty-six months. They were secured by lien, expressly reserved on the face of the deed, of Everett to Mrs. Marlin. The complainant alleged that Mrs. Reed became the owner of forty of said notes, maturing on and after April 1, 1898. The bill was filed on her behalf, and that of all other holders of said notes, and sought to sell the real estate for the amounts due on all. Other-note holders came in by petition, among them Miss C. L. S. Crowninshield, as guardian of C. Gr. and Caroline Underhill, and James S. Pilcher. They alleged that thirty of said notes, the thirteenth to the forty-second, inclusive, were assigned by said Everett to C. L. S. Crowninshield, as said guardian, on January 22, 1891, to secure the payment of $366.67 she, on that day, lent Everett; that at that time Everett was the owner of the entire series of notes, and that in the assignment of said thirty notes a preference was given over the other notes as to the vendor’s lien to secure the same. The instrument giving the preference was in writing, and was as follows:

“NASHViimn, Texn., January 22, 1891.
“ Twelve months after date we promise to pay to the order of Miss C. L. S. Crowninshield, as guardian of C. Gr. and Caroline C. Underhill, three hundred and sixty-six dollars and sixty-seven cents [516]*516($366.67) for value received, having pledged on deposit as collateral security for the payment of this note thirty notes out of the series of one hundred and twenty-six notes given by A. J. Marlin and Ella May Marlin for lot number thirty-one in B. E. Brown’s subdivision. Said thirty notes being numbers thirteen to forty-two, inclusive, of said series, and preference is given to said thirty notes over the other notes of the said series as to the vendor’s lien to secure the same.
(Signed).. ’ ’

These petitioners show that the remainder of said sixty-five notes held by said guardian and Jas. S. Pilcher were also held as collateral on said loan for $366.67, and that all of said sixty-five notes, after satisfying said loan of $366.67, . were the property of James S. Pilcher; and they asserted' priority for the thirty notes. Proof was taken, and it appeared that, at the time ; of the execution of this instrument, Everett was the owner of all the notes of the series, all of which were transferred by him, before maturity for valuable considerations, after January 22, 1891, the date of the assignment quoted, .and no other preferences were attempted to be given. The assignees of the other notes had no actual notice that the preference had been given as to the thirty notes assigned to Miss Crowninshield. . The property was sold, and the , amount, brought was insufficient for The payment of all the notes. The Chancellor decreed that no preference should be al-[517]*517loved to petitioner Crowninshield, guardian, and that all the note holders were entitled to share equally in the proceeds of the sale.

Petitioners Crowninshield and Pilcher appealed, and assign as error that the Court did not decree that, as to so much as was due to C. L. S. Crownin-shield on said note for $366.67, she was entitled to he first paid out of the proceeds of the property, basing said assignment on the following propositions of law:

“First. — A vendor of lands who holds a series of notes given for the purchase money, where a lien is expressly retained upon the. face of the deed, or a mortgagee who holds a number of notes which are secured by mortgage, in assigning one or more of such notes, has the power, by parol contract, to give to the assignee of such note or notes a preference as to payment out of the proceeds of the property, and the subsequent assignees of the other notes can take no higher rights than the vendor himself had; and citing Menken v. Taylor, 4 Lea, 445; Hicks v. Smith, 4 Lea, 457; Hill v. McLean, 10 Lea, 107; Christian v. Clark, 10 Lea, 630.
Second. — -The right and - power of a vendor or mortgagee to give a preference as to the vendor’s or mortgagee’s lien by parol contract, in the assignment of a part of the secured notes made at a time when the vendor or mortgagee is the owner and holder of' all the .other notes, is a rule of property in Tennessee, citing Nichols v. Levy, 5 [518]*518Wallace, 438; Gelpecke v. Dubuque, 1 Wall., 176; Lee Co. v. Rogers, 7 Wall., 181; Chicago v. Skeldon, 9 Wall., 50, and averring that the assignment of the ,notes in question, made January 22, 1891, when Everett held all other, notes, wherein the preference was given to Miss Crowninshield, guardian, etc., was a contract, which, in effect, embodied the rule established in the cases in 4 and 10 Lea, cited above, and the same was and is a rule of property as to all such contracts made since said decisions.”

The question of the case therefore involved in this assignment is, whether the assignee of the last assigned notes, they being negotiable promissory notes taken before maturity without actual notice of prior assignment and lien contract, and for valuable considerations, took them subject to any equity between the vendor , and vendee of the land or the prior assignee of the first notes assigned. The assignment of error treats it as though it were only a question whether the assignor passed his rights; and it is assumed, that being settled affirmatively, that the subsequent assignee takes no higher right than the assignor himself had:

In support of this assumption and contention, appellants lay down two propositions: That the assignee of a mortgage or deed of trust does not occupy the position of an assignee of commercial paper, but takes and holds the same subject to all the equities that could be urged against it in the hands of the original owner. Citing Olds v. Cummings, 31 Ill., [519]*519188; Walker v. Dement, 42 Ill., 272; Cramer v. Willetts, 61 Ill., 481; Haskell v. Brown, 65 Ill., 29; Temple v. Whittier, 117 Ill., 282; 7 N. E. Rep., 642; 44 N. W. Rep., 393; Harrison v. Burlingame, 48 Hun, 212.

And that the privileged character of negotiable paper does not extend to a mortgage by which it is secured. Citing Oster v. Mickley, 35 Minn., 245 (28 N. W. Rep., 710); Johnson v. Carpenter, 7 Minn., 176; Hostetter v. Alexander, 22 Minn., 559; Blumenthal v. Jassoy, 29 Minn., 177 (12 N. W. Rep., 517); Richardson v. Woodruff, 20 Neb., 132 (29 N. W., 308); Crane v. Turner, 67 N. Y., 437; Horstman v. Gerker, 29 Pa. St., 283; Twitchell v.

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Bluebook (online)
27 L.R.A. 663, 94 Tenn. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nashville-trust-co-v-smythe-tenn-1895.