Taylor v. Goodrich Tire & Rubber Co.

98 S.W.2d 1094, 20 Tenn. App. 352, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 20, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 98 S.W.2d 1094 (Taylor v. Goodrich Tire & Rubber Co.) 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
Taylor v. Goodrich Tire & Rubber Co., 98 S.W.2d 1094, 20 Tenn. App. 352, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

PAW, P. J.

The original bill in this case was filed on October 9, 1931, and on October 10, 1931, it was sustained by the chancery *355 court as a general creditors’ bill to inure to the benefit of all creditors of Fry Brothers (an insolvent corporation), “who may claim its benefits or come in under it.”

A receiver of the assets of the insolvent corporation was appointed, and the usual order appropriate to such cases was made, enjoining the institution of separate suits against the insolvent corporation, ordering publication for creditors to file their claims on or before a named date, and directing that the master, after the time for filing claims had expired, “state an account showing who are the bona fide creditors, the amounts of their respective debts, and any liens or priorities that may exist in favor of any of the creditors. ’ ’

Among the defendants named in the original bill as creditors of Fry Brothers were the Universal Credit Company (hereinafter sometimes called Credit Company), a “non-resident” corporation, and Maury National Bank (hereinafter sometimes called the Bank), a corporation with its principal place of business at Columbia, Tenn., both of whom filed petitions in the cause, and this appeal involves a controversy between these two petitioners as to which of them “has a prior and superior right and title to a fund of $970 now in the hands of Mora B. Farris, receiver in this cause,” which fund was realized from the sale by the receiver, under the orders of the court below, of five automobiles described in the record. The chancellor adjudged that the claims of the Bank to said fund were prior and superior to those of the Credit Company to the extent of $852.40, and that the Credit Company was entitled to the remainder of said fund, viz., $117.60; and upon this finding the chancellor decreed as follows:

“It is therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the Court that the contestant Maury National Bank have and recover a judgment for the sum of $852.40, which is the amount of their prior or superior indebtedness, and that the Universal Credit Company have and recover judgment for the excess of $117.60 and the Receiver in this cause, Mora B. Fariss, is hereby directed to first deduct the proportionate part of the costs incident and alone to the contestants of this special fund pro rata the said costs in proportion to the amount received by each contestant and then he will pay the balance of the said fund on hand to the Maury National Bank and the Universal Credit Company, or their attorneys of record, as hereinbefore ordered and directed.”

From the aforesaid judgment the Credit Company appealed to this court and has assigned errors here.

Presumably there was much of the record in the general creditors’ suit that was not pertinent to the controversy between the Credit Company and the Bank involved in this appeal, and the clerk and master certified that the transcript sent to this court is “a true *356 and perfect transcript of the record designated by the attorneys in the above styled cause to be made np as the record to be passed upon by the court of appeals as the same appears of record and on file”.in his office, “together with the original exhibits thereto.”

A “written designation of each or all of the parties or solicitor's” is not “transcribed as a part of the record” filed in this court, as provided by the Code (section 9058), but no complaint is made here by appellant or appellee that any “designated” part of the record is omitted; hence we will assume that all parts of the record relating to the issues of fact and law presented by the assignments of error in this court are included in the transcript filed here.

Fry Brothers (a corporation) was, for a number of years prior to and until October 9, 1931 (when the aforesaid general creditors’ bill was filed), a dealer in automobiles, with its place of business in Columbia, Tenn. It had a deposit account with the Maury National Bank, and it is evident from the record that it transacted much of its banking business through that Bank.

The Credit Company is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Delaware and authorized to do business in Tennessee, but with a “branch office” in the city of Louisville, Ky. All contracts made by the Credit Company, so far as such contracts are involved in this case, were made by and through its said branch office in Louisville, and all of its transactions growing out of or relating to said contracts were conducted either by its officers and agents at Louisville, or by its representatives at Columbia, acting under authority of said branch office at Louisville.

The full scope of the business of the Credit Company is not shown by the record, but it appears that it was engaged in the purchase from retail automobile dealers of “conditional sales contracts” executed by the sellers and purchasers of automobiles, and in doing the things incident to the collection of “deferred payments” due from the purchasers of such automobiles.

We see no occasion to extend this opinion by making a detailed statement of the proceedings below which resulted in the afore-stated decree of the chancellor ordering the sale of the five automobiles in controversy. No one is here challenging the validity or propriety of the sale of said five automobiles by the receiver, and the fund of $970 realized from the sale remains in the registry of the court in lieu of the automobiles, and the question for decision here is, whether the Credit Company or the Bank had the better right and title thereto. It may be necessary to refer further to some parts of the pleadings in disposing of certain assignments of error.

The Credit Company claims the superior right and title to each of said five cars by virtue of the retention of title thereto to secure *357 certain specified “deferred payments” in a “conditional sale contract,” executed by Fry Brothers, as the “seller,” and by another, as the purchaser, and the assignment of said contract, for value, by Fry Brothers to the Credit Company.

The Bank claims the superior right and title to each of said five cars by virtue of the retention of title thereto in a note (or, in some instances, more than 1 note) executed by the purchaser of the car to Fry Brothers and transferred by Fry Brothers to the Maury National Bank by endorsement and delivery, and each of which notes recites among other things, in substance, that the maker is purchasing from Fry Brothers a described automobile, and that the title thereto “is and remains in said Fry Brothers until said unpaid part of the purchase price ... is paid in full.”

As each of the aforesaid five cars was the subject matter of a separate series of transactions, and the facts of each series of transactions are not in all respects parallel it will'be necessary to make a separate statement with respect to the sale of each of the five cars by Fry Brothers and the subsequent transactions based, or purporting to be based, on such sale.

Bach of the cars here in question was a “new” Ford car when sold by Fry Brothers and is identified in the record by the motor ■number. As a convenient means of identification they are frequently designated in the record and briefs by the respective names of the purchasers from Fry Brothers.

Hardison Car — -Motor No.

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.W.2d 1094, 20 Tenn. App. 352, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-goodrich-tire-rubber-co-tennctapp-1935.