Sampson v. Fox

109 Ala. 662
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 109 Ala. 662 (Sampson v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sampson v. Fox, 109 Ala. 662 (Ala. 1895).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

The action is founded on two promissory notes made by appellee, payable to the order of Hinton E. Carr, at the Tuscumbia Banking Company, Tuscumbia, Alabama; the one of date September 5th, 1892, for the payment of one hundred dollars, thirty days after date ; the other of like tenor, of date November 28'th, 1892, for the payment of ’ three hundred and six dollars, sixty days after date. The first note contains a clause in these words, after the words value received: 1 ‘having deposited or pledged as collateral for the payment of this pote, pledging as collateral security for same, my account against Tuscumbia Electric Light and Water Co., showing a balance due of $409.22. And I hereby give to the holder full power and authority to sell or collect, at my expense, all or any portion thereof, at any place, either in the city, of Tuscumbia, or elsewhere, at public or private sale, at his option, on nonperformance of above promise, and at any time thereafter, and without advertising the same, or otherwise, [666]*666giving five days notice, in case of public sale ; the holder may purchase, without being liable to account for more than the net proceeds of sale.” The second note contains a clause in all respects similar, except that the collaterial is described as “all of my claim against the old Electric Light & Water Co.”

The defendant pleaded the general issue, nil debet, and four special pleas. The first special plea was payment to Carr, at maturity of notes, and before they were transferred to plaintiff. The second was of payment by the transfer of the collateral to Carr, on the maturity of the notes. ■ The third and fourth purport to be pleas of set off, and in substance allege the transfer and pledge of the collateral, the negligence of Carr, and of the Banking Company, in its collection, whereby the same was lost to the defendaut.

The issues were, by the consent of the parties, tried by the court, without the intervention of a jury.' The plaintiff read the notes in evidence, and proved that they belonged to and were assets of the Tuscumbia Banking Company, a partnership composed of Hinton E. Carr and Emma Carr, which failed on the 8th day of June, 1893, and on the 10th June, 1893, made to the plaintiff a general assignment of all its assets. The plaintiff produced the collateral in court, and offered to surrender it. The collateral were accounts due from the Electric Light & Water Company, a corporation ; and plaintiff proved that on the 20th of September, 1892, the said coporation sold and transferred all of its property to a new company, called the Tuscumbia Water Company, and thereafter the former company ceased to exist.

The defendant was examined by deposition in his own behalf, and testified that, when the first note was made, Carr who was president of the Ice Factory, and also of the Tuscumbia Banking Company, said to him that there would be a consolidation of the Tuscumbia Light & Water Company and the Tuscumbia Ice Factory. At that time he got from Ross, the treasurer of the Electric Light & Water Company, a statement of the amount due him from the Company, carried it to Carr, and on it as collateral Carr loaned him $100. In the following November he borrowed from Carr $300, “or in other words he gave me $300, and I assigned him over [667]*667my claim for $400, or maybe a little over $400, on the Tus-cumbia Water Company consolidated, and Mr. Carr told - me to assign him my claim, and in 30 days he would have the bonds of the Consolidated Company sold, and have the money, and he would then cancel my notes, and send them to me ; he took my claim in payment of my two notes to the bank.” Further he testified: “I made the transfer of my claim against the Tuscumbia Light & Water Company to the Banking Compny, H. E. Carr, at the time and date, simultaneously with the date of my last note of $300 to the bank, and delivery to me of the money, at which time he agreed to take the claim and pay my two notes.” Further, he. testified: “Then after, or about two or three months afterwards, I had a conversation with Mr. H. E. Carr, at the bank. I asked him if he had ever sold the bonds ; that I did not want the interest on the two notes to be accumlating against me. He then said ,to me, ‘you need not give yourself any uneasiness,’ as my claim that I had transferred to him was quite sufficient, and he would and had taken that in payment of my two notes to the bank.” Further, he testified : ‘ ‘H.E.Carr was president of the Tuscumbia Banking Company. He was president, superintendent, and general manager of the Tuscumbia Water Company ; and he said they, the two Companies, would be consolidated in a few days. He said he owned two-thirds of the Tuscumbia Water Company, and he wanted enough claims and stock to continue him in the control of the consolidated company, and in the consolidation, or agreement of consolidation, he had agreed to pay my claim, and the claim of Thompson & Houston Company, of Atlanta, Ga. He had given his individual notes for the Thompson ' & Houston Company and, if not mistaken, my claim.” He further testified that neither the bank or its officers had returned or offered to return his claim against the Tuscumbia Light & Water Company, and that it could have been collected by the use of due diligence. That the company at the time the notes fell due was solvent.

R. L. Ross, a witness for defendant, testified that the Tuscumbia Water Company was formed as a coporation the 18th or 20th of September, 1892. The Electric Light & Water Company owed the defendant about $400, and owned the electric light plant and arc lights, and [668]*668liad a franchise for a water company. It sold all of its property to the Tuscumbia Water Company, and had no property of any kind left. Carr was not a stockholder in the Electric Light & Water Company ; nor was the Tuscumbia Banking Company. He was the principal stockholder in the Tuscumbia Water Company, and made an offer to buy all the property of the Electric Light & Water Company, and the property was sold about the 18th ' or 20th September, 1892.; the Water Company assuming to pay the debts, (including the debt due the defendant), of the Electric Light & Water Company; the company then owing 'about $3,500. The property of the Water Company can not be sold for more than $4,000. Charles Womble, a witness for defendant, testified that he was secretary, treasurer and general manager of the Tuscumbia Water Company, of which Carr is the president and principal stockholder. That the Water Company has not paid, as it assumed to pay, any of the debts of the Electric Light Company. That it owes in addition fifteen or sixteen hundred dollars ; “and its bonds, to the amount of $7,000, are out, and in the hands of Armstrong, cashier of a bank at Memphis, and there is a mortgage on its property to the 'amount of twenty-five thousand dollars.” Carr, as a witness for the plaintiff, testified that ho had not, nor had the Tuscumbia Banking Company, ever collected any part of the collateral mentioned in the notes. That he had made no agreement with respect to the collateral, except that stated in the notos. That he (had never said to tlio defendant to assign him the collateral, and in 30 days he would have the bonds of the consolidated'company sold, and have the money, and he would then caucel the notes,' and send them to the defendant. That he did not take the collateral in payment of the notes. That it was taken as collateral security, and has not been paid.

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Bluebook (online)
109 Ala. 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sampson-v-fox-ala-1895.