Tenny v. Porter

33 S.W. 211, 61 Ark. 329, 1895 Ark. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 30, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 33 S.W. 211 (Tenny v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tenny v. Porter, 33 S.W. 211, 61 Ark. 329, 1895 Ark. LEXIS 113 (Ark. 1895).

Opinion

BaTTEE, J.

This is the second time this action has beeq, in this court on appeal. It appears the first time as Porter, Taylor & Co. v. Hanson, 36 Ark. 591.

J. M. Narrow brought an action in the St. Nrancis circuit court against John Parham to foreclose a vendor’s lien on certain lands, and obtained a decree against him for $6,037, which was declared a lien on the lands, and they were sold by a commissioner of the court, and purchased by Narrow at the price of $4,800. The court confirmed- the sale, but postponed the execution of the deed, holding that Parham was entitled to one year in which to redeem.

Narrow, being indebted to Porter, Taylor & Co. in the sum of $3,188, and to Newton, Nord & Co. in the sum of $3,050.20, and thinking that Parham might redeem the lands, executed to them am.instrument of writing, empowering them to collect and receive the redemption money from Parham, and apply it to the payment of their debts pro rata, and providing that, if Par-ham failed to redeem, one John B. Cummins should, as trustee, sell the lands, and appropriate the proceeds to the payment of the debts.

Before the expiration of one year after the sale under the decree of the court, Narrow died, and the lands, not having been redeemed, were conveyed by a commissioner, under an order of the court, to his heirs.

In August, 1877, Hanson, Weatherford & Bstes, a firm of lawyers, instituted an action in the St. Francis circuit court against the heirs of Farrow, and D. T. Porter, W. F. Taylor and G. W. McCrae, as .partners composing the firm of Porter, Taylor & Co. and the first two as surviving partners of the late firm of Newton, Ford & Co., to enforce a lien upon the lands for professional services rendered by them in the suit instituted by Farrow against Parham. The lands were again sold, the last time under a decree rendered in the last mentioned, suit, and were purchased by the creditors, who were parties thereto. But they refused to comply with their bid, and tendered an answer and cross-bill instead, in which they asserted rights in the lands, or the proceeds of the last sale, under the instrument of writing executed to them by Farrow, superior to all others, and appealed from an adverse decree.

This court held that they were bound by their purchase, and that Hanson, Weatherford & Bstes had the superior lien, but expressed the opinion that the instrument of writing created a lien in their favor, and remanded the cause with the direction that the heirs of Farrow be brought in by new service “for all matters connected with the cross bill, and have day in court.”

The attorney’s 'lien was subsequently discharged, and the creditors, Porter, Taylor & Co. (now .Porter & McCrae), and the Narrow heirs, the appellants, were left to litigate.

At the October term, 1881, the St. Francis circuit court directed a warning order to be published, requiring the Farrow heirs to answer Porter, Taylor & Co.’s cross-bill. On the 18th of February, 1882, they filed an answer, and alleged that, within the year allowed for the redemption of the lands from the first sale, J. M. Farrow died, and the St. Francis circuit court, at its October term, 1876, vested the title to the lands in them, and that more than five years had elapsed before the cross action was commenced against them.

They denied that the creditors were entitled to any relief under the instrument of writing executed by J. M. Farrow, and averred that the debts secured thereby were illegal and usurious ; that, on the 1st of April, 1871, J. J. Farrow executed to said creditors a note for $3,951.94, which was due on the 1st of December, 1871, and on the 19th of December, 1871, together with J. M. Farrow, their father, executed a note in renewal of the first, which was due on the 1st of January, 1873, for $4,428.72, including $474.52 interest for thirteen months, —more than 12 per cent, per annum, — and this was part of the note secured by the instrument of writing sued on.

By the way of counter claim, they alleged that their father, J. M. Farrow, had, on the 20th of June, 1871, in his possession, as their trustee, $9,500, belonging to them, which he, on that day, delivered tó said creditors, he being individually indebted to them as Newton, Ford & Co. in the sum of $1,838.69, which they retained out of the $9,500, and appropriated the remainder, according ■to his directions, to the payment of his individual account with them.

And they filed with their answer interrogatories which they propounded to the cross-complainants, and asked that they be required to answer them, which was done.

Upon a final hearing upon the merits the court found that the cross-action was not barred by the statutes of limitation ; that J. M. Farrow, the father of the defendants in the cross-complaint, collected in 1871 $10,-000 of the St. Uouis Mutual Life Insurance Company, which was a trust fund in his hands for them ; that on the 20th of June, 1871, he deposited of this fund $9,500 with Porter, Taylor & Co., which they received, and credited him therewith as his fund, and on the same day appropriated $1,838.69 thereof to the payment of an indebtedness of J. M. Farrow to them, but that it does not appear that they had notice of the trust at the time of the deposit and appropriation ; that the indebtedness of J. M. Farrow to the cross-complainants, as evidenced by his notes to them, was contracted in Tennessee, and was usurious, but that in Tennessee a usurious contract may be purged of usury, and the principal and six per cent, per annum interest thereon can be collected ; that the note executed by J. M. Farrow in payment of the indebtedness of J. J. Farrow was based on a .valuable consideration received by the former from the latter, and was, therefore, valid as to principal and interest ; and that, purging the indebtedness of J. M. Farrow, except the last mentioned note, of usury, he was indebted to cross-complainants in a sum larger than the amount of the proceeds of the second sale under the decree of the St. Francis circuit court and interest thereon ; and decreed that they retain in their hands such proceeds, they having purchased the lands at the second sale, and still owing for the purchase money at the rendition of the decree.

tAs*£ ictiom

The finding of the court as to the statute of limitation is correct. The cross-action of Porter & McCrae was not an action to recover’ lands within the meaning of the five years’ statute pleaded by the defendants ; and the plaintiffs and defendants therein claimed under the same judicial sale. Duke v. State, 56 Ark. 485; and Phelps v. Jackson, 31 Ark. 272.

iaawiityof trust funds,

The-allegations of the Narrow heirs as to the $9,500 were denied by the plaintiffs in the cross-action. evidence as to their truth or falsity appears in the record, except an answer filed by them in an action instituted by the Narrow heirs, or a part of them, against the. plaintiffs in this action in a Tennessee court. In that answer they admitted that J. M. Narrow deposited with Nord, Porter & Co.. $9,500, but denied that there was paid out of that sum an indebtedness of J. M. Narrow to the late firm of Newton, Nord & Co. of which they had been members, and in which they were then interested ; and alleged that, three days before the receipt of the $9,500, J. M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 S.W. 211, 61 Ark. 329, 1895 Ark. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tenny-v-porter-ark-1895.