Sweetwater Bank & Trust Co. v. Howard

13 Tenn. App. 592, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 101
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 27, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 592 (Sweetwater Bank & Trust Co. v. Howard) 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
Sweetwater Bank & Trust Co. v. Howard, 13 Tenn. App. 592, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 101 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

The bill in this cause purports to be a general creditors’ bill, filed by the Sweetwater Bank & Trust Company and the First National Bank of Sweetwater, against Joe J. Howard and his wife, Sarah Howard. N;o other person was made a party as a creditor. The bill alleges that the Sweetwater Bank & Trust Company was a creditor of the defendants by note in the total sum of $2242.85; that the First National Bank of Sweetwater holds a note signed by Joe J. Howard for the sum of $1,066.67, and this note provides for ten per cent attorneys’ fees; that the defendant, Joe J. Howard, is also indebted to one, S. L. Hunt in the principal sum of approximately $3,500, and that said amount is in judgment in the chancery court of Monroe County, Tennessee; and that the defendants are also indebted to other banks, within the knowledge of complainants, in a sum in excess of $1,000; and that the defendants are also indebted to divers and various persons unknown to your complainant and in amount unknown to your complainant, and some of said creditors have brought suit and others are threatening to bring suits against these defendants, especially against the defendant Joe J. Howard, and that a great part of the assets of the defendants would likely be consumed by costs and expenses incidental to the multiplicity of suits. It is to be noted that none of these creditors are named notwithstanding the bill alleges some of them are known.

The bill further alleges, that:

“Complainant further avers that defendants are in an insolvent condition, unable to meet their bills as they become due in the ordinary course of business, and that the said defendant, Joe J. Howard, has repeatedly admitted his said inability to meet his debts especially the debt herein sued on. Complainants are informed and believe, and on that information and behalf charge that the liabilities of said defendants will far exceed their assets.”
“That, as hereinbefore stated, one S. L. Hunt has a judgment in the chancery court of Monroe County, Tennessee, on the docket of said court, in the sum of approximately $3500, and that your complainants are informed and believe that said S. L. Hunt is threatening to levy an execution upon the farm of the defendants, which farm is hereinafter described, and that he will levy such an execution if not restrained by injunction of this honorable court, and that if said farm is sold under execution it will not bring anything like its real worth and the other creditors of the said defendant will suffer thereby.
*594 “That the principal asset of the defendants is a farm comprising about 265 acres, and more particularly described as follows: . . . and a small amount of farming tools and live stock now on said farm; also one Ford sedan automobile. So far as complainants can discover defendants own no other personal property, nor property of any kind.
“Complainants aver that unless given relief by this honorable court that all the assets of the defendants will be sold at a sacrifice and creditors will be deprived of any means of collecting their debts, and that if one creditor should be allowed a preference or full satisfaction of his claim, leaving nothing upon which other creditors can rely for satisfaction of their claims, that to prevent such an inequitable situation complainants are advised that they are entitled to come into this Court and ask for an injunction to issue upqn this and other grounds herein alleged, restraining all creditors from prosecuting other suits or seeking to have any judgments satisfied, requiring them to come into this cause and file their claims and demands herein,, to the end that all creditors may receive an equitable distribution from the assets of said defendants. Complainants will, in the prayer of this bill, pray for such relief.
“That complainants are informed and believe that the defendant, Joe J. Howard, tried in vain to place a loan or mortgage upon his said farm and that he is now attempting to procure a sale for said farm, to the endangerment of complainants ’ debt, and that the defendants are about to fraudulently dispose of their property, real and personal.”

Thq prayer of the bill was that it be sustained as a general creditors’ bill, and that all creditors be required to come into court and establish their claims therein. That judgment be rendered upon the complainants’ claims in their favor. That an attachment issue and be served upon the defendants’ entire estate. That all creditors be enjoined from prosecuting their suits or claims in any other cause except this one. That a receiver be appointed to take possession of all the property of the defendants of every sort and description, be the same real, personal or mixed. That the receiver be empowered and directed to convert all of said property into money as well as is practicable. That a decree be had for a pro rata distribution of the defendants’ assets.

The defendant, Joe J. Howard, did not demur to the attachment, but was willing to wait the contest upon the merits. He filed a plea in abatement to the attachment. He and his wife filed answers denying each of the material allegations of the bill; and he filed notice, and a motion to dissolve the injunction and attachment, and dismiss the bill, to be acted upon at a hearing in chambers before the chancellor. The defendants filed notice of an applica *595 tion to the chancellor to sustain the bill as a general creditors’ bill, and appoint a receiver. These motions were heard by the chancellor, who was not satisfied that the defendants were insolvent. He deferred final action until the master could report upon this question, which was referred to him. However, the extraordinary processes were left in force until the hearing. Proof was taken and the master reported that the defendants were solvent; the motions were again called up for argument, and the complainants’ exceptions to the master’s report. One of the exceptions was that the master failed to take into consideration the homestead and dower rights of the .wife; the chancellor was of the opinion that if an exemption was deducted from the value of the farm then the defendants were insolvent. He was also of the opinion that the case was properly filed as a general creditors’ bill, and he sustained it as such and the attachment, and he made the injunction perpetual. He then ordered the appointment of a receiver to take charge of all the property of the defendants and dispose of it in a manner to be hereafter referred to. In his opinion he says:

“In the ease at bar and now under consideration judgment had been rendered against the defendant Howard at a former term of this Court. A lien therefore existed under statute on this land, no execution was issued thereon and its issuance was enjoined by the bill in this cause.
“The Court is therefore of the opinion that, there being a fixed lien upon defendants’ land which affects the legal title to the land, that whatever remains therein to defendant, Howard, was subject to said lien, therefore not subject to execution, but being an equitable interest which might be reached in a proceeding of this character, as if any other character of lien such as a. mortgage or vendor’s lien; that such a lien is an obstacle or impediment which is not the subject of enforcement by execution and is not levyable at law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 592, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweetwater-bank-trust-co-v-howard-tennctapp-1931.