State v. James Sanford Agency

69 S.W.2d 895, 167 Tenn. 339, 3 Beeler 339, 1933 Tenn. LEXIS 46
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 69 S.W.2d 895 (State v. James Sanford Agency) 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
State v. James Sanford Agency, 69 S.W.2d 895, 167 Tenn. 339, 3 Beeler 339, 1933 Tenn. LEXIS 46 (Tenn. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swiggart

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action was prosecuted below under Code, section 9316, to enjoin the James Sanford Agency, a Tennessee corporation, from engaging in the practice of law; and also as a quo warranto proceeding to terminate its corporate existence because its method of transacting the *341 business of a collection agency amounted to an unlawful practice of law.

A temporary injunction was issued by the chancellor which, in general terms, restrained the defendant from engaging in the practice of law. This injunction was made perpetual by final decree, from which the defendant appeals. The chancellor’s decree specifies the mode and manner in which the defendant’s method of business encroached upon the field of the lawyer, and it is to these specific rulings that the defendant’s (appellant’s) assignments of error are directed. The accuracy of the chancellor’s finding of fact is not questioned but is conceded by the defendant.

The business of the James Sanford Agency is of long standing and is quite extensive. It is said on one of the briefs that in 1932 it handled more than 90,000 collection items, 6,849 of which were reduced to judgment in a justice of the peace court.

The agency’s plan of doing business was revised in December, 1931, in an effort to make it conform to the law as interpreted by this court in State ex rel. v. Retail Credit Men’s Association of Chattanooga, 163 Tenn., 450, 43 S. W. (2d), 918. The import of that decision was made known to the agency’s customers or patrons by circular letter, wherein they were informed that no future collections in Nashville and Davidson County would be made except on claims assigned to the agency. The letter described the consideration for such assignments as £<$1.00 and other valuable considerations, the other considerations, of course, being the work put in on them by us, and our checks to be sent you in settlement of the total indebtedness, less the usual collection charges if and when collection is effected.”

*342 From the date of the letter the business of the agency was made to conform to the plan thus proposed. The claims of its customers were assigned to it in unequivocal writing, “For one dollar and other valuable consideration.” The $1.00 was not, however, paid. The assignments expressly bound the agency, as assignee, to bear “costs and expense” of suits to enforce collection. A receipt was given to the assignor, signed by the agency, wherein it did “obligate and bind itself to use all reasonable and diligent effort to collect said claim or claims as promptly as possible,” etc. This paper 'recited that upon making collection, the agency would pay as additional compensation for the assignment of the claim a stipulated proportion of the amount collected. On claims collected by suit the agency’s part of the sum collected is fifty per cent, instead of the usual twenty-five per cent.

We agree with the chancellor that this plan of handling the business of its customers vests the agency with no such title or interest in the claim assigned that an attorney at law, employed by the agency, on salary or fees, to sue to enforce them, can be said to- act exclusively for the agency and not for the assignor. Despite the assignment, the assignor is entitled to the major portion of the net collection, the fifty per centum of the gross collection which the agency is entitled to retain being burdened with the payment of all “costs and expense,” including the lawyer’s compensation. And if the lawyer is the agent of the agency, in such a suit, the agency is nevertheless bound to the assignor for the care and diligence its agent may fail to exercise, under its contract obligation to “use all reasonable and diligent effort to collect said claim.” The assignor is thus directly in *343 terested in the suit which the agency may direct its attorney at law to prosecute, and such attorney at law is representing him without that privity which was held essential in State ex rel. v. Retail Credit Men’s Ass’n, supra.

It is not necessary to the conclusion that such a plan or course of conduct is an unlawful invasion of the reserved field of the practice of law that each such assignment, considered as a separate transaction, he found to transgress the limits of the principle denoted by the phrase “freedom of contract.” In Ingersoll v. Coal Company, 117 Tenn., 263, 303, 98 S. W., 178, 188, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.), 282, 119 Am. St. Rep., 1003, 10 Ann. Cas., 829, wherein it was held that a contract to bring a suit, solicited by a lawyer, was unenforceable, the court said:

“It is insisted that the contracts made are not illegal. This, we think, does not reach the root of the case, as the contracts themselves, abstractly considered, may be legal, and yet there may be circumstances surrounding their making which would deter the courts from enforcing them, or rights based on them, when all the facts are divulged and the nature of the consideration appears.”

The chancellor was of opinion, and so decreed, that the assignments taken by the agency are not taken “for the purpose of acquiring title and ownership to the claims covered thereby, but as a device to evade the provisions of the law relating to practicing law in Tennessee.” In this we concur. No prior investigation of the worth of the claims is made, but the assignment of all claims placed with the agency for collection-is not only invited but required. The recited consideration of one dollar is consistently disregarded, and the agency obligates itself *344 only to exercise diligence in making- the collection. Express authority to enforce collection by suit in the name of the assignee is given by the assignment, and from this it appears that the bringing of necessary or expedient suits is included in the diligence -which the agency binds itself to exercise. If suit is brought, the share of the agency in the collection is greater than otherwise. In the execution of this plan the assignment serves only, in our opinion, to expressly deny or repudiate privity between the assignor and the attorney at law employed by the'agency to prosecute the contemplated suit, and as between the parties it is nothing more or less than an undertaking by the agency to use all reasonable means and diligence, including resort to the processes of the law, to collect the assigned claim. As in the assignment considered in Roy v. Sanford, 140 Tenn., 382, 204 S. W., 1159, the only possible inference is that such of the proceeds as are to be retained by the agency are merely as compensation for its services in making the collection. They are so denominated in the agency’s letter outlining the plan to its customers wherein it stated that the ‘ ‘ other considerations” for the assignments solicited would include checks “in settlement of the total indebtedness, less the usual collection charges if and when collection is effected.”

To the authorities cited in State ex rel. v. Retail Credit Men’s Ass’n, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W.2d 895, 167 Tenn. 339, 3 Beeler 339, 1933 Tenn. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-james-sanford-agency-tenn-1934.