Peoples Bank of Springfield v. Brown

8 Tenn. App. 281
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 6, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 Tenn. App. 281 (Peoples Bank of Springfield v. Brown) 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
Peoples Bank of Springfield v. Brown, 8 Tenn. App. 281 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

HEISKELL, J.

The original’ bill was filed in this case on January 4, 1924, by the Peoples Bank of Springfield against the defendant, B. R. Brown, seeking to recover upon a certain note for $3000 dated August 18, 1923, payable to the order of W. 0. Moats four months after date, the said note being endorsed by said W. 0. Moats. The said bill merely alleged that complainant was the purchaser for value of said note, without alleging that it was the holder in due course or stating the circumstances under which it acquired said note.

The defendant answered said bill on May 23, 1924, claiming in substance that said note was executed by him in the purchase of thirty shares of the Fly-Exit Screens Company’s capital stock, said company being a foreign corporation, chartered under the laws of the State of Delaware, and that said corporation had not complied with the statutes and laws of the State of Tennessee relative to filing copy of its charter with the Secretary of State, as a condition precedent to doing business in Tennessee, and that it had failed to comply with the Blue-Sky Statutes of Tennessee as a condition precedent to its sale of its corporate stock in Tennessee; and that accordingly the said note or transaction was unenforceable. Defendant also claimed that the said stock was at the time worthless, and that said note was fraudulently obtained from him by the said Moats, president and directing head of the said company.

The defendant denied that complainant bank was an innocent holder for value of the said note, and alleged that complainant merely took the said not.e as collateral to an obligation of J. 0. Draughon, in a fraudulent scheme between complainant and said Draughon and Moats to defeat defendant in his said defenses and equities against said note, and that complainant’s possession of said note was therefore wrongful and fraudulent. The defendant filed *283 tbe said answer as a cross-bill making said J. 0. Draughon and W. 0. Moats parties defendant, and alleging in substance that at the time of execution of said note they were stockholders in said company and liable as partners therein, on account of said company’s non-compliance with the Domestication and Blue-Sky Statutes of Tennessee. The defendant accordingly prayed that the said note be declared fraudulent, Amid and uncollectible, and that his said purchase of said stock be rescinded and the said note can-celled. The defendant prayed in the alternative that if complainant should be held to be the holder in due course of said note any recovery by complainant should be paid by the said W. 0. Moats and J. 0. Draughon, and that judgment therefor be accordingly rendered over against said W. 0. Moats and J. 0. Draughon in favor of the defendant, (cross-complainant).

The defendant W. 0. Moats answered defendant’s said cross-bill by mailing general denials of the allegations, and claiming that the note in question Avas executed for his personal accommodation.

Complainant Bank answered defendant’s said cross-bill, denying that it had any knoAvledge of any transaction between the defendant and W. 0. Moats, ;and denied that it knew that said BroAAm note Avas without consideration. It also denied that it Avas connected in any Avay Avith the alleged fraudulent stockselling scheme of the said Moats, or that it had any knowledge of such fraud or the Avorthlessness of the stock for Avhich the said note was executed. Said bank alleged that it took said note as collateral security to a note of said J. 0. Draughon, before said note came due, and that it accordingly became the holder thereof in due course.

On December 22, 1924, the said J. 0. Draughon ansivered the cross-bill filed against him, the bank and Moats by BroAvn.

He admitted that Broiyn executed the note in' question, and stated that the note Avas payable to order and recited that it was executed for value received. He stated that he did not admit that said note Avas not executed for value or that it was fraudulently obtained; that as to hoAV this Avas he did not know.

That he did not Ioioav what representations Avere made by Moats to BroAvn to secure said note or for what said note was executed, but that he did not admit any of the allegations of Avhat representations were made by Moats to BroAvn or that said note was given for stock or that no stock Avas issued to BroAvn for said note or that Brown notified Moats he did not want any of the stock.

Draughon then showed that he, himself, Avas at the time a stockholder in said company, ihat he thought it was all right in every respect and had done all that it should do as to incorporating, ■qualifying, etc., and that it had a bright future, all based on what Moats had told him about it.

*284 That Moats came to him with the note in question, stating that the maker, Brown, lived in Sumner county and was unknown to the Peoples Bank and requested him, Draughon, to execute his note for $3000, due five months after date and he could sell Draughon’s note to the said bank and as the Brown note was due in four months that would give ample time in which to collect the Brown note and thus meet Draughon’s note; that it was represented to him that Brown was good and solvent, and he believed it,- and wanted to help the company out; believed it was all right and had good prospects but wras in need of ready money, and thereupon he executed his note for the Brown note and that his note was sold to the bank with Brown’s note behind it as collateral; that when Brown’s note came due and was not paid that he renewed the note he had executed to Moats and which had been sold to the bank by making his note payable direct to th,e bank, and renewed this renewal which last was placed with the American National Bank as security to the Peoples Bank’s indebtedness to said American, this suit in the meantime having been brought on the Brown note, and that said American National Bank at this time holds his, Draughon’s said note.

That at the time he took said• Brown. note he believed the said Brown had executed the same in good faith and for value, and that he, Draughon, became the holder thereof in due course before ma-. turity for value, and averring that he was entitled to have said Brown note collected and the proceeds thereof applied to the payment of his said note then held by the American National Bank.

Draughon showed in his answer that he was a farmer, sixty-nine years of age, had lived all his life on the farm; that he was not a director in said company as the cross-bill charged, but had been informed he had been elected a director and he then resigned immediately, for he knew nothing about the manufacturing business and lived too far away to serve; that he knew nothing about the affairs of the company and all that he had ever done was to buy stock in it and loan money for its benefit, and that he thought the company was all right in every respect at the time he took Brown’s note.

Respondent stated in his answer that he was simply a stockholder in the company just as was Mr. Brown.

Draughon expressly denied that he had any knowledge of any kind or character of any infirmity in said Brown note, and he stated that he did not admit there were infirmities in it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Tenn. App. 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-of-springfield-v-brown-tennctapp-1928.