Shacklett v. Polk

51 Tenn. 104, 4 Heisk. 104, 1871 Tenn. LEXIS 141
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 51 Tenn. 104 (Shacklett v. Polk) 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
Shacklett v. Polk, 51 Tenn. 104, 4 Heisk. 104, 1871 Tenn. LEXIS 141 (Tenn. 1871).

Opinion

Sneed, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Court is of opinion that the decree of his Honor, the Chancellor, dismissing the bill and discharging' the .attachment in this canse is correct, and the same must be affirmed. It is an effort on the part of the complainant to subject the separate estate of the defendant — a feme covert — to the satisfaction of an alleged contract to pay him ten thousand dollars, evidenced by a promissory note in the words and figures following:

“ Columbia, Sept. 17th, 1864.
“On or before the' 17th September, 1865, we promise to pay Abner Shaeldett, or ordef, ten thou[106]*106sand dollars for value received, with, interest from date.
“Rebecca Polk.
“ Geo. W. Polk.

The defendant, Rebecca, was the wife of Andrew J. Polk, and, by deed of gift from her father, was the owner of a separate and independent life estate in certain plantations in Maury county, Tennessee, and in Tunica county, Mississippi, and was managing the same as a feme .sole, and enjoying the incomes and profits thereof.

On the 20th September, 1865, she was in Europe, whither she had gone, as she alleges, for a temporary sojourn, accompanied by her husband and her children. On that day this hill was filed in the Chancery Court at Columbia, charging the indebtedness aforesaid, and praying an attachment against the 'said separate estate, alleging non-residence as the ground of said attachment. The alleged ground of the attachment is not otherwise traversed than by a positive denial of the permanent non-residence in the answer. The bill charges that the said promissory note was given for ten thousand dollars loaned .by the complainant to the defendant to enable her to carry on her plantations and to buy supplies for her laborers — and to he expended for the general benefit of said separate estate — that the same was loaned at the request of defendant, and upon her express promise, and undertaking that the same should he paid out of the incomes of 1864,- and that the separate estate should [107]*107be bound absolutely for Ms indemnity. Tbe complainant filed two amended and supplemental bills, in wbicb, reiterating tbe general charges of tbe original bill, be explains tbe circumstances under wbicb tbe name of Geo. W. Polk appears as a joint maker of said promissory note, stating tbat it was done at tbe suggestion of tbe defendant, Rebecca, and witb no purpose on tbe part of complainant to look to the said Geo. ~W. Polk as security — or indeed to any other indemnity but tbe separate estate and its incomes, according to tbe pledges of tbe defendant Rebecca. He makes no direct charge of fraud against defendant, but seems in bis first amended bill to impute a wrong to her in tbe fact, tbat by a written agreement between them, be, as her agent, bad undertaken to save and ship to Hew York her cotton crop of 1864 — . eighty-five bales of wbicb bad been actually shipped to tbat market where tbe understanding was tbat be was to sell it and re-imburse himself to tbe extent of bis loan and tbe commissions of bis agency— but tbat tbe defendant bad caused tbe same to be shipped to Liverpool, where she followed it, and got tbe exclusive benefit of its proceeds; but in bis second amended bill this transaction is fully explained.

Tbe answer admits tbe loan and tbe execution of tbe note, and tbat said loan was contracted “for tbe purpose of supplying respondent’s farm in Mississippi, and of getting tbe crop thereon gathered and carried to market” — and tbat tbe said amount [108]*108was furnished, in the' main, by the complainant in supplies' bought by him, as her agent, for the Mississippi farm for 1864. The answer positively denies that the defendant suggested the name of Geo. W. Polk as security — but asserts that the complainant made the suretyship of Geo. "W. Polk an express condition of said loan, and that no reference whatever was made in the negotiations either by the complainant or the defendant to the liability of her separate estate or its incomes for the amount of said loan. The answer thus disposes of these averments of the bill. “In answer to the several allegations in complainant’s bill, in which he charges that the respondent borrowed or proposed to' borrow the money aforesaid upon the credit of her separate estate, or. that she pledged or ever proposed to pledge her separate estate, or any portion thereof, or its incomes, respondent interposes a positive, unqualified, unequivocal, flat denial. She denies that her separate estate was ever alluded to during this negotiation, and so far as respondent is concerned, never thought of, nor does she believe that complainant, during the negotiations for the lending, ever thought of her separate estate, or its income, as indemnity. Respondent repeats that each and every allegation in the bill which charges that there was any contract agreement oy understanding, whether expressed or implied, by which the separate estate of respondent, or its income, was to be pledged, bound, or in any way held responsible for the payment of said debt, is absolutely and unqualifiedly [109]*109false in all its length and breadth,, whether such charge is’ made in the original bill, or- whether it is made in express terms, or by implication, or innuendo. She asked for the loan in full confidence of her ability to repay it — and she expected and intended to repay it out of her own means — but complainant did not require her to make any such promise or agreement, verbal or written. But he trusted alone to the promise of this resjmndent to pay — secured by the suretyship of Q-eo. W.. Polk.” She admits that-the eighty-five-bales of cotton were, by her order, shipped to Liverpool, whither she was about to embark — but avers that it was not so ordered until she had told the complainant that she was willing that he should then sell the cotton and dispose of the proceeds according to the writing between them, and he had declined to do so, assuring her that she might have another year’s credit on his debt, he, “the complainant, well knowing that she was on the eve of her embarkation for a temporary sojourn in Europe.”

It is shown in proof that said loan, or the larger portion of it, was expended by the complainant under his agency in the purchase of supplies and in the erection of improvements upon the Tunica plantation', and in expenses about the gathering, baling and shipment of the crop of 1864, raised upon said Tunica plantation. But there is no evidence whatever tending to show an agreement on the part of the respondent, either verbal or written, that her separate estate or any incomes thereof, should [110]*110be pledged or bound for the payment of said debt of ten thousand dollars. The decree was for the defendant “without prejudice to any rights complainant may have for relief against the separate estate of defendant Rebecca in Mississippi, for any moneys advanced and expended, by complainant for the benefit and preservation of said separate estate.” It does not appear that any portion of said loan of ten thousand dollars was expended in the preservation of, or for the benefit of that part of the separate estate lying within the jurisdiction of the Courts of this State, and which has been attached in this cause.

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Related

City Lumber Co. v. Barnhill
129 Tenn. 676 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1914)
Brown v. Bigley
3 Tenn. Ch. R. 618 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1878)
Chatterton v. Young
2 Tenn. Ch. R. 768 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1877)
Shacklett v. Polk
51 Miss. 378 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1875)
Chadwell v. McCall
1 Tenn. Ch. R. 640 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1874)
Pennebaker v. Tomlinson
1 Tenn. Ch. R. 594 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1874)

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Bluebook (online)
51 Tenn. 104, 4 Heisk. 104, 1871 Tenn. LEXIS 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shacklett-v-polk-tenn-1871.