Piggott Nursery Company v. Davis

113 S.W.2d 1102, 195 Ark. 738, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 28, 1938
Docket4-4963
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 113 S.W.2d 1102 (Piggott Nursery Company v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Piggott Nursery Company v. Davis, 113 S.W.2d 1102, 195 Ark. 738, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 66 (Ark. 1938).

Opinion

Baker, J.

The matters in controversy upon this appeal are disputed questions of fact. If we should attempt to set out in detail the testimony in- relation thereto, the ■extension of our opinion would be burdensome and unprofitable. In order to expedite matters as much as possible we shall content ourselves with a narrative of the matters in issue and our comments thereon, quoting or paraphrasing’ only that portion of the testimony that may become necessarily essential. The Piggott Nursery Company, the appellant here, brought this suit in the chancery court to foreclose a mortgage given to secure a purported note alleged to have been executed by ap-pellee, Blanche M. Davis, to Piggott Nurseries, Inc. Pig-gott Nurseries, Inc., is not the same organization as the appellant. It is alleged that the original note so given to the Piggott Nurseries, Inc., was delivered to Ed Blie-den, as trustee in bankruptcy, when Piggott Nurseries, Inc., was adjudicated bankrupt; that Ed Blieden made a written assignment of the note to W. D. Stevens who shortly thereafter again assigned or transferred to Pig-gott Nursery Company. The prayer was for a decree for the amount of the note, $5,000, as alleged, and for the foreclosure of a mortgage on the property described therein.

Blanche M. Davis, by answer duly verified, denied the execution of the $5,000 note; admitted the execution of a mortgage and pleaded no consideration therefor, and the bar of the statute of limitations- for five years.

Decree was in favor of Blanche M. Davis, and Pig-gott Nursery Company has appealed.

Some facts are undisputed. Dr. T. L. Davis was indebted to Piggott Nurseries, Inc., and executed his note to that company for $4,463.52, dated January 1, 1928. This was due one year after date and bore interest at 7 per cent. The note was indorsed by E. H. Ballard, and was secured by certificates of capital stock of Piggott Nurseries, Inc., of the face value of $3,500, and capital stock of the Bank of Piggott, of the face value of $1,500. About three months after the execution of this note Dr. Davis died. He left surviving him his widow, Blanche M. Davis, as principal beneficiary under his will, but the estate was subject to the payment of his debts. Mrs. Davis, at that time, appointed E. H. Ballard as her attorney in fact with power to sell lands, which she had received from her husband’s estate, and with power to sell gravel from some of the lands and collect proceeds from the sale of such gravel.

The note so executed by Dr. T. L. Davis was never probated against his estate. On January 1, 1930, it is alleged that Mrs. Davis executed a $5,000 note, intended to take up or at least to be substituted for the $4,463.52 note that Dr. Davis had executed. It was on January 24th thereafter that Mrs. Davis executed the mortgage sued on. About that time, the Piggott Nurseries, Inc. stock and the Bank of Piggott stock held for the security for the aforesaid note executed by Dr. Davis was taken down and distributed among some other creditors of the Davis estate. It is alleged that Mrs. Davis executed this $5,000 mortgage in order that she might be permitted to take down this stock to be used in the settlement of other debts. She denies, however, the correctness of this statement. The record does not mate clear ¡just' what the negotiations were or who authorized them, whereby the certificates of nursery stock and the bank stock were delivered to the other parties. That fact, perhaps, is not essential now. E. H. Ballard made no sale of any property under the power of attorney except some gravel. At first, when gravel was sold and money collected therefor, checks or proceeds therefrom were sent to Mrs. Davis, after deducting five per cent, as a commission. Finally Ballard, who held the note given by Dr. Davis, and later also the $5,000 note, if one was executed, insisted that at least a part of the money collected by him should be appropriated by him and he applied to the payment of this indebtedness. He wrote Mrs. Davis to this effect. She returned to him a check for $38.58 in response to his letter. Thereafter, he made certain collections and applied those. Piggott Nurseries, Inc., went into bankruptcy, and among the assets delivered over for the benefit of creditors was this debt alleged to have been owing by Mrs. Blanche Davis. The trustee in bankruptcy failing to collect the debt, and if not having been presented against the estate, the original security, the capital stock of Piggott Nurseries, Inc. and the bank stock having been detached, the note and mortgage were offered for sale. and W. D. Stevens, who was one of the principal stockholders of the Piggott Nursery Company, offered, and it was sold to him for $500. Stevens, Ballard, and Miss Hughes, and perhaps some other witnesses, all say that it was the $5,000 note that was delivered to the trustee in bankruptcy that he sold.. Certified copies, however, of the pertinent parts of the proceedings in bankruptcy show that there was sold a note, not for $5,000 but for $4,463.52, dated January 1, 1928. This is a note of the late Dr. T. L. Davis, which it is not even claimed that Mrs. Davis signed.

The same note was described in the order of the referee confirming the sale to W. D. Stevens, and no mention is made in any of these instruments of the alleged $5,000 note, though the mortgage itself purports to secure a $5,000 note, and it is alleged by several of these witnesses that the original note executed by Dr. Davis and the $5,000 note alleged to have been executed by Mrs. Davis were pinned together and kept together until about the time of the institution of this suit. It was not alleged in the original complaint that either of these instruments was lost, but after the defendant, Blanche Davis, had denied the execution of the $5,000 note, under oath, and after some proof had been taken, it was shown that the notes could not, or would not, be produced, an amendment was filed to the complaint alleging the loss of both notes, but the Piggott Nursery Company offered what was alleged to be a copy of the $5,000 note, reproduced from records, showing credits indorsed thereon, the said credits being the same, it was alleged, as had been entered upon the margin of the mortgage, which was produced and offered in evidence, and from these credits on the margin of the mortgage similar credits were entered upon the margin of the record. They were the same as had been kept by Ballard.

The first question for determination, we think, is the one in regard to the execution of the note for $5,000, the second question is one of limitations. Was the obligation barred, whether it be the first or second of these notes? Other questions are incidental hardly rising to such dignity as to require a 'discussion. One of these, incidental matters may be mentioned here.

Mrs. Davis admits that she executed the $5,000 mortgage, but says that it was without consideration. It is shown that she took the property belonging to her husband’s estate, subject to his debts. If her object was to pay or secure the indebtedness owing by the estate in order that she might hold the property, there was consideration. This is appellant’s contention. If true, it would appear that this plea of no consideration is not available to her. She states otherwise.

The question of the execution of the $5,000 note is one of serious difficulty.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lupton v. Lupton
194 S.W.2d 686 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.W.2d 1102, 195 Ark. 738, 1938 Ark. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piggott-nursery-company-v-davis-ark-1938.