Shea v. Mabry

69 Tenn. 319
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 69 Tenn. 319 (Shea v. Mabry) 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
Shea v. Mabry, 69 Tenn. 319 (Tenn. 1878).

Opinions

H. H. Ingersoll, Sp. J.,

delivered the opinion-of the court.

This cause was before this court in 1873 on appeal from the decree of the Chancellor sustaining the demurrer of defendants and dismissing the bill, the allegations of which are that complainant is a judgment creditor of the Knoxville and Kentucky Bail-road Company for labor done as a contractor in constructing the road, with fi. fa. returned nulla bona, that the defendants were the boárd of directors of said company, Mabry being the president, and as such were the trustees of the funds loaned and paid to-said. road for the purpose of its construction and equipment, of which were more than two and a quarter million dollars of State bonds, and nearly four hundred thousand dollars from other sources; that this was enough to construct and equip said road and leave a large surplus; that nearly all of these funds had come into the hands of defendants, who, instead [323]*323si i aim» thereof complainant took the depositions of thre^ witnesses, Moses, the secretary and treasurer of Snpany, and Sanford and Ludlow, two of the s not sued in the cause, and they were filed w 14, 1874, without cross-examination. After-ate not given, all the respondents, save Mabry, except to them for want of notice, and the master enter® thereon, also without date, Exceptions sustain* . No prayer for an appeal therefrom appears on the deposition or elsewhere in the record, save as hereinafter shown.

On the 16th of January, 1875, by order on the minutes, the cause appears set for hearing on March 16, 1875. On this day an order was made continuing the cause, and complainant, v'ho had probably meanwhile learned of the sustained exceptions to his depositions, is granted leave to retake the same on giving notice to Mabry and two others, which it was ordered should be notice to all. The master was also directed to beep a copy of this order in the file. On the 3d of May following, complainant, on due notice as per order, retook the depositions of said witnesses. Rut instead of re-examining them upon the original interrogatories, or interrogating them anew on subject matter, the following, which is substantially same in each case, is the whole body of the [deposition:

“Question. Please examine the deposition made by you heretofore and filed in the case December 14, 1874, and now shown to you, and say if the same is .lúe in all its statements ? ”
[324]*324“Answer. I have examined the deposition. It is, to the best of my knowledge and belief, true iri all its statements.” W

Some other depositions were taken, and aocuma!-tary evidence filed for complainant, but his ma^Hm-portant proof was contained in the original deposf of Moses, Sanford and Ludlow, without which ms suit must certainly fail.

When the cause was called for hearing at thS October term following, an order was entered therein as follows:

“ It appearing to the court that the defendant (complainant) appealed from the decision of the master sustaining the defendant’s exception to the deposition of John L. Moses, E. J. Sanford, and J. R. Ludlow, taken on behalf of complainant and filed in this-cause on December 14, 1874, that complainant’s said appeal came on to be heard on the — day of March, 1873, and on said hearing it appeared' to the court from inspection” that notice was given as required by said order on the rule docket, and said depositions accordingly taken; “ but because it further appeared that a cony of said order had not been placed among the files as required by the statute in that case made and provided, the court confirmed the master’s . cisión and sustained defendant’s exception to said d] sitions. And it further app' aring that no entry haq been made of record showing the foregoing facts, is now ordered by the Chancellor, on application of] , complainant, that the order be entered now for then.] To all which the defendants except, and tendered theij [325]*325bill of exceptions, which was signed, sealed, and made part of the record in this cause.”

The bill of exceptions shows:

“ That the evidence upon which the entry nunc pro tunc was made, was the verbal representations of the complainant’s solicitor, that the statements in said entry as to what occurred at a previous term of the court are true, and the distinct recollection of the court that the question which said entry states was raised by the exception, . . . was before the court at a former term upon appeal from the action of the master ... in some case, and a strong impression that ... it was in this case; the truth of which statements in said entry nunc pro tunc . . . the solicitors of defendant denied, and their recollection in regard thereto was supported by that of the clerk and master, who stated that the ease in which said question was brought before the court . . . was another case, and that no appeal had ever been taken from his action in sustaining the exceptions of defendants/ in this case.”

The cause was then heard, and on the hearing complainant offered to read said first depositions of Moses, Sanford and Ludlow, “as a part of or exhibits to their depositions, filed May 8, 1875; but on objection being made by defendants upon the ground that said -depositions were not filed with or made part thereof, and could not be read, being no part of the record in this cause, the court sustained said exceptions, and excluded said depsotions of December 14, 1874, as against all the defendants except Joseph A. [326]*326Mabry, ... to all which complainant excepts.” “And defendant Mabry also excepted to those portions-of the deposition of John L. Moses purporting to give extracts from and the contents of the record and minutes of the railroad company, upon the ground that the records were available, and were better evidence; but the court overruled said exceptions, and admitted said evidence, to which defendants excepts.” And thereupon, argument of counsel being heard, and the--court being of opinion that complainant had failed to sustain the allegations of his bill by proof, decreed that it be dismissed, and complainant has appealed.

At a former term the cause was argued, and, on consideration, the Chancellor’s decree was affirmed, but for satisfactory reasons a rehearing was ordered, and re-argument has been made at the present term. Many questions of practice arise in the record, the decision of which is pressed upon us with so much earnestness by counsel that we conceive it proper, if not necessary, to give them consideration.

1. Complainant insists that the exception to - the original depositions of Moses, Sanford, and Ludlow were not well taken, and should not have been allowed.

Section 3850 of the Code provides:

In all cases in which more than one person is-plaintiff or defendant, the court or clerk may determine whether notice shall be given to each person, and if not, to whom notice shall be given, a memorandum of the order being kept among the papers.”' And section 4423 requires the master to give notice-[327]*327to the adverse party or his solicitor of any rule,, order, or proceeding taken at his office affecting such-party.”

Clearly, it was the duty of the master to give-notice to defendants of the order made by him in-this cause to serve notice on only one of them, and also to preserve a memorandum thereof on file.

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Related

Federal Deposit Insurance v. Berry
659 F. Supp. 1475 (E.D. Tennessee, 1987)
Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Butcher
660 F. Supp. 1274 (E.D. Tennessee, 1987)
Kosik v. Hays (In Re Hays)
31 B.R. 285 (E.D. Tennessee, 1983)
Neese v. Brown
405 S.W.2d 577 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1964)
Third Nat. Bank of Nashville v. Keathley
242 S.W.2d 760 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
69 Tenn. 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shea-v-mabry-tenn-1878.