Stirling v. Logue

123 So. 825, 154 Miss. 812, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 178
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1929
DocketNo. 27953.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 123 So. 825 (Stirling v. Logue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stirling v. Logue, 123 So. 825, 154 Miss. 812, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 178 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This record presents two separate appeals from interlocutory decrees, one of which overruled a motion for the discharge of a receiver, and the other authorized the receiver to lease a portion of the real property in his hands for the year 1929.

The appellees, who are husband and wife, were the complainants in the court below, and the bill of complaint alleges, in substance:

*818 That they were the owners of a large amount of real property, and some personalty, situated in Mississippi and Tennessee, part of the Mississippi property being two plantations in the delta portion of the state, both of which are heavily mortgaged. That J. As. Logue, the husband, became indebted to the First National Bank of.. Jackson, Miss., in the sum of one hundred thirty-six thousand dollars. (How this indebtedness arose does not appear from the bill, but it is spoken of therein as his shortage to the bank.) That “said complainant (J. A. Logue), being unable to replace said money because of inability to re-sell certain properties which he had acquired, and being desirous of atoning and making full restitution to the full extent of his ability, . . . made a full disclosure to said bank of the amount due said bank, and to all other persons, and then and there offered to deed and turn over to said bank all of the property of every kind and character which he, the said J. A. Logue, then owned or had an interest, in; that the said. J: A. Logue then and there stated to said directors, at said meeting that he also owed other indebtednesses, some of which were not secured, and that he desired to turn all of his said property over to said bank, so that all of his creditors who had security should be paid in proportion of their priority, and that the balance of his said property should be applied to all of his-other indebtednesses; and that any balance that then remained should be returned to him, or his wife; that the said directors of the said First National Bank, and the said J. B. Stirling, president of said bank, then and there agreed by and with the said J. A. Logue, complainant, that if he would transfer, assign and convey all of his property to the said J. B. Stirling as trustee, on the express understanding and agreement that said property was to be administered in a businesslike way, so as to net as much as possible, not only for the purpose of satisfying all of the creditors of the said *819 J. A. Logue, but so as to preserve as much of the equity therein to him as possible.”

That Mrs. Logue also agreed to transfer to Stirling her interest in the property for the same purpose, and that pursuant to this agreement the complainants conveyed the real property owned by them, the value of which is alleged to be six hundred eighty-five thousand dollars on which there were incumbrances to the amount of four hundred seventy-five thousand dollars, to Stirling by straight warranty deeds. That afterwards J. A. Logue also assigned to Stirling, as security for all of the debt due by him, personal property to the value of several thousand dollars. That Stirling now denies that the conveyances were made to him in trust for the benefit of all of J. A. Logue’s creditors, and states that he will deal therewith only as security for the debt due by Logue to the bank, accounting to the complainants for any surplus that may remain after the bank had been paid.

That “complainant, J. A. Logue, will show that this bill is filed by himself and his wife in an honest effort on their part to see that all creditors of J. A. Logue are paid in full, and inasmuch as all of the creditors of J. A. Logue are interested in this suit, and would have a right to participate in the proceeds of all of the said property, complainants charge that it will be necessary for each and all of said creditors to be given an opportunity to. enter into this court and propound their claims to said property, to the end that they might be paid in full.

“Complainants will show that the very purpose for which these conveyances and agreements were entered into by complainant J. A. Logue and his wife was • in order that he might relieve himself from misdeeds and, so far as he could, make full and complete restitution to everybody, and if J. B. Stirling, defendant herein, and _ the First National Bank, are allowed and permitted to the exclusion of other persons just as entitled to be paid *820 as said bank to appropriate all of his assets and apply the same to their personal benefit, and to administer same outside of the jurisdiction of this court, it will be possible for said Stirling- and said bank to greatly enrich themselves out of these complainants’ property, and to 'deprive and deny to complainant, J. A. Logue, the privilege of full and complete restitution to all of his creditors; that many of said creditors at this time are threatening to bring suit, and intend to do so in a very short timé, and if allowed and permitted to bring such suits the estate will be entirely dissipated, and all the creditors will be irreparably injured and damaged thereby.

“Complainants bring this suit for the benefit and on behalf of all creditors and parties having an interest in said property, whether specificalty made defendants herein or not.

. “Complainants would further show that the said J. B. Stirling, although he received said conveyances of said property heretofore mentioned or assigned for the benefit of the creditors of the said J. A. Logue, has failed, neglected and refused to carry out said trust by filing petition in this court, or bond as such assignee, or list of creditors, or inventories, as required by the statute, but is asserting an exclusive right to administer said properties and assets exclusively for the benefit of the said bánk, and to the exclusion of all other creditors.”

A number of Logue’s creditors, probably all of them, were made defendants to the bill. The prayer of the bill is for process, for the appointment of a receiver for the-property without notice, for the cancellation of the conveyances executed by the complainants to Stirling, for the administration of the property by the receiver for the'benefit of all of Logue’s creditors, and for the application of the husband’s'interest -in-the property to the' paymept of his debts before the interest of the wife therein is resorted to for that purpose.

*821 It will be observed tliat no fraud is alleged in the procurement of the conveyances to Stirling, nor any mistake in their execution.

On the filing of this bill a receiver was appointed pursuant to the prayer thereof without notice to any of the defendants therein. The bill was answered only by Stirling and the First National Bank wherein any agreement or understanding relative to the property other than as set forth in the instruments by which the property was conveyed to Stirling is denied, and it was alleged therein, that the only agreements entered into between Stirling or the bank and the complainants are such as are set forth in the conveyances from the' complainants to Stirling, and in the separate written instrument executed contemporaneously with the deeds to the real property which reads as follows:

“We the undersigned J. A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 So. 825, 154 Miss. 812, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stirling-v-logue-miss-1929.