Richmond Screw Anchor Co. v. E. W. Minter Co.

300 S.W. 574, 156 Tenn. 19, 3 Smith & H. 19, 1927 Tenn. LEXIS 82
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 300 S.W. 574 (Richmond Screw Anchor Co. v. E. W. Minter Co.) 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
Richmond Screw Anchor Co. v. E. W. Minter Co., 300 S.W. 574, 156 Tenn. 19, 3 Smith & H. 19, 1927 Tenn. LEXIS 82 (Tenn. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swiggaet

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Johnson City Hotel Company made a contract with E. W. Minter Company, Incorporated, for the construction of a hotel building’ at Johnson City, known as the John Sevier Hotel. The original contract price was approximately $¡450,000, to which extras Viere added, making the total in excess of $500,000.

Upon the completion of the hotel a number of suits were filed by subcontractors of the E. W. Minter Company, including* furnishers of both materials and labor, seeking to perfect liens upon the hotel property for the materials and labor furnished. Other suits were filed by unsecured creditors of the EL W. Minter Company, seeking to attach, in the hands of the hotel company, the retained percentage of the contract price. In all, there were seventeen suits, which were consolidated in the chancery court.

As the consolidated causes are presented to this court, the principal contest is made by certain unsecured creditors against the lien claimants, the purpose of which is to defeat the lien claims in order that the retained percentage may be available for the payment of the unsecured debts. In each of the causes, which are involved here, the Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Company *25 was made a party defendant, as the snrety on the building contract of the E. W. Minter Company with the Hotel Company, the complainants, claiming liens, seeking to have the Bonding Company respond to the extent that the lien recoveries exceed the amount of the retained percentage of the contract price in the hands of the hotel company.

Petition for certiorari was filed in this court by unsecured creditors, the Richmond Screw Anchor Company, the Patent Scaffolding Company and Elwyn E. Seelye, to review the decree of the Court of Appeals sustaining the claims of the lien creditors.

Petition for certiorari was filed in this court by the Hotel Company to review the decree of the Court of Appeals in holding it liable to the lien creditors for any sum in excess of the retained percentage.

Petition for certiorari was filed by the Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Company to review the decree of the Court of Appeals in sustaining the several liens. This petition .also contends that the Chancellor and Court of Appeals were in error in rendering any decree against it in the present causes, regardless of the merits of the lien claims against the hotel company.

Each of these petitions has heretofore been granted, and oral argument has been heard at the bar of the court by counsel for all parties.

The foregoing is a general statement of the causes, without reference to certain minor contentions of the several parties, all of which will more particularly appear herein below.

The petition of the unsecured creditors is directed at the decree of the Court of Appeals sustaining the lien claims of three foreign corporations, the Cornell Company, W. A. Burkard Company and the Roanoke Vi- *26 trolite & Marble Works, on the ground that their several claims arose out of business transacted in Tennessee while each of them was doing business in Tennessee as a foreign corporation without complying with the laws of Tennessee providing for the domestication of foreign corporations.

These corporations replied that their several claims arose from transactions amounting to interstate commerce, within the protection of the interstate commerce clause of the Constitution of the United States, and also that, each of them came to Tennessee to execute a contract entered into elsewhere, with no intention to carry on its business in Tennessee; that the business done by it in Tennessee was an isolated transaction, to perform which the laws of Tennessee did not require it to domesticate.

The Court of Appeals sustained the contention of these corporations that, they were not doing business in Tennessee to the extent that they were required to domesticate, but held that their several transactions in Tennessee were not interstate commerce nor within the protection of the interstate commerce powers of the Federal government.

No petition for certiorari was filed by the three foreign corporations, and we' are, therefore, without jurisdiction to review the action of the Court of Appeals in overruling their several claims that they were engaged solely in an interstate commerce transaction. Brown v. Brown, 155 Tenn., 530, 296 S. W., 356, 360, and cases there cited.

The Chancellor made a reference to the clerk and master for a report as to whether these corporations, and others, had transacted business in Tennessee in violation of the domestication laws. The clerk and master reported in the negative, and his report was concurred in by the Chancellor. The Court of Appeals held that this *27 was a concurrent finding binding npon it, if supported by any material evidence. This holding is attacked, on the ground that whether the foreign corporations involved were transacting business which the statutes of Tennessee made unlawful because the several corporations have not domesticated, was a question of law and not a question of fact.

We do not think the determination of this contention is material or necessary in the present cause, fpr the reason that the evidence presents no controversy of fact as to the nature or extent of the business transacted in Tennessee by each of the three foreign corporations; and the effect of the action of the Court of Appeals is that, in its opinion, the business transacted by the several foreign corporations in Tennessee, as shown by the undisputed evidence, was not in violation of the statutes of Tennessee.

The contention of the unsecured creditors relied upon to defeat the lien claimants is not a defense in which they have a property interest. They invoke the public policy of the State, to repel the lien claimants from the courts of the State on the ground that their several claims arose out of their own violation of the laws of the State. The proposition is stated in Cary-Lombard Lumber Co. v. Thomas, 92 Tenn., 587, 594, as follows:

“The Courts will deny any relief upon any illegal contract or transaction, whenever the illegality is made to appear, whether in the pleadings or proof, and will repel the party guilty of the illegality from the Court whenever the fact appears.”

Before undertaking to set out in detail the evidence as to the business transacted by each of the corporations, we deem it proper to determine what business transacted in Tennessee by noncomplying foreign corporations is made unlawful.

*28 Acts 1877, chapter 31, was the original statute of Tennessee on this subject. It authorized foreign corporations organized for the purpose of mining, quarrying or manufacturing, and similar purposes, to “carry on” the business of their respective charters in Tennessee, upon filing a copy of such charters with the Secretary of State, and otherwise complying with the terms of the statute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 S.W. 574, 156 Tenn. 19, 3 Smith & H. 19, 1927 Tenn. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richmond-screw-anchor-co-v-e-w-minter-co-tenn-1927.