Sanders v. Farmers Union Co.

5 Tenn. App. 560, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 15, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 Tenn. App. 560 (Sanders v. Farmers Union Co.) 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
Sanders v. Farmers Union Co., 5 Tenn. App. 560, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The original bill was filed in this cause by M. J, Sanders on behalf of himself and all other creditors of the defendant Farmers-Union Company, as a general creditors bill; alleging the insolvency of the defendant. The bill prays for the usual process, and for injunction against the prosecution of suits by other creditors, attachment and a receiver, and to the end that all creditors be required to prosecute their claims against the defendant in this cause, and for general relief. The bill was sustained by the Chancellor as a general creditors bill.

In the course of the insolvent proceedings in the cause, the controversy involved on this appeal arose between appellants, who are preferred' creditors of a certain class, and the appellee International Harvester Co. The appeal in this cause is by Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co., Cowetta Fertilizer! Co., Union Guano Co., Federal Chemical Co., and Armour Fertilizer Co. Inc., and is an appeal from the decree of the Chancellor holding that appellee, International Harvester Co., is entitled to preference over appellants in certain assets, or the proceeds thereof, of the defendant Farmers Union Co. No question is made on this appeal as to the matter of the appellants, or either of them, and appellee, being preferred creditors over the general creditors of the insolvent concern, and hence the question presented for determination on this appeal, and under the assignments of error filed by appellants is confined to so much and such parts of the final decree of the Chancellor as adjudges and decrees that the appellee, International Harvester Co., by reason of its notes, contract and agreements with the Farmers Union Co., has a preferential right superior to the claims of appellants to the proceeds realized by the receiver from certain farming machinery which was in the hands of the insolvent concern at the time the general creditors bill was filed, and whether such preferential right was superior to the rights and claims of appellants to the proceeds derived from said machinery, etc.

The assignments of error are six in number, and are as follows:

I.

“The court erred in holding that at the time the receiver took over the affairs of the defendant, Farmers Union Co., there was sufficient machinery on hand, covered by the contract and notes *562 of appellee, International Harvester Company, to satisfy its debt and that under said contract and notes it had a right to insist that the proceeds arising’ from the sale of said property be applied first to the payment of its debt.

II.

“The court erred in holding that appellee, under its contract with the defendant, or under its notes executed by the defendant, had any rights in and to the property in the possession of the defendant at the time of the receivership, and taken over by the receiver.

III.

“The court erred in holding that appellee had preserved its rights under said contract or notes with the defendant and had followed the property through into the hands of the receiver so as to allow it to reach the funds arising from the sale of said property.

IV.

“The court erred in holding that the contract between appellee, Harvester Company, and defendant, Farmers Union Co., taken in connection with the notes executed in accordance with said contract, constituted a retention of title contract of sufficient definiteness to protect the rights of appellee against other creditors.

V.

“The court erred in holding and in ordering that the claim of appellee, as heretofore allowed, be preferred to the extent of the judgment heretofore rendered in this cause over other creditors upon the ground that at the time the receivership took over the affairs of the defendant company, there was sufficient machinery on hand, covered by the contract and notes of appellee, Harvester Company, to satisfy the debt due it, and that it, under said contract and notes, had a right to insist that the proceeds arising from the sale of this property be applied first to the payment of its debt; or upon the ground that the contract existing between appellee, Harvester. Company, and defendant, Farmers Union Company, taken in connection with the notes executed in accordance with same, constituted a retention of title contract of sufficient definiteness to protect the rights of appellee against other creditors; or upon any other grounds.

VI.

“The honorable court should have held that appellee was not entitled to any preference or priority in payment over appellants *563 and that both appellants and appellee were upon the same footing or basis or equality, and that said fund in the hands of the receiver should be pro rated equally among all of them, and in not so holding, it is respectfully submitted that the court erred.”

The question is made by appellee to the effect that, previous to the final decree appealed from in this cause, the preferential rights of appellee in the fund realized from the sale of the farming implements, etc., superior to and over the claims of appellants, had been fully determined and adjudicated by the former decrees of the Chancellor in the cause, and that said former decree was not excepted to or appealed from by appellants; that the final decree appealed from was upon a rehearing by the Chancellor at a term subsequent to said former decree, and the appeal, therefore, came too late. This question will be first disposed of.

It appears that the Clerk and Master, in pursuance of an order of reference, filed a report on December 5, 19241 In paragraph E of said report the master reported “that the claim of the International Harvester Co. by reason of their contract and especially their notes executed to them by the Farmers Union Co., constitutes a prior preferred claim, and the amount found to be due them from the record is $2953.48.” This item as reported by the master in his capacity as receiver, is practically in the same language used by him under items “B,” “C,” “D,” and “F,” which items respectively refer to the claims of these appellants, and in which their claims are also held to be preferred over general creditors.

At this point in the record there appears to be some confusion. On the samé date, and immediately following the report of the master containing the above items, which report appears to have been dated and signed by the master, there is a further report with reference to the International Harvester Company’s claim, which sets out the nature of the claim more in detail; and states: 1 ‘ The master reports the machinery mentioned above was the property of the said International Harvester Co. and that the proceeds thereof, to the extent of their debt, $2953.04, is covered by a lien which is superior to other creditors.”

This report also recites: “I am of the opinion and report that this claim of International Harvester, Co. of America, should be paid in full before other preferred creditors share in the assets of the company.”

There was a decree in the cause of date December 14, 1925, and the portion of said decree made the subject of the controversy between the present litigants is in the following language: “As regards the claim of the International Harvester Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Tenn. App. 560, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-farmers-union-co-tennctapp-1927.