Theus v. Dugger

23 S.W. 135, 93 Tenn. 41
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 23 S.W. 135 (Theus v. Dugger) 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
Theus v. Dugger, 23 S.W. 135, 93 Tenn. 41 (Tenn. 1893).

Opinions

Wilkes, J.

The bill is filed by John W. Theus, 'trustee of the Bank of Madison, which failed September 27, 1890, to collect a note of $2,230.25, ■executed by the late firm of W. A. Dugger & Co., ■composed of W. A. Dugger and Sallie T. Dugger, wife of A. D. Dugger, to the Bank of Madison, -and also against Jesse A. Thompson, to set aside, .as fraudulent, an alleged sale of the interest of W. A. Dugger in. said firm, to Jesse A. Thompson, on the ground that it was made to hinder, delay, defraud, and defeat complainant and the other creditors of the firm of W. A. Dugger ■& Co. in the collection of their debts.

The note sued on is an ordinary promissory ■note, providing for the payment of reasonable at'torney’s fees in case of suit, and is signed “W. A. Dugger & Co.”

An attachment was issued, commanding the Sheriff “to attach as much of the estate and interest of the said S. T. Dugger in said partner; ship property, consisting of a stock of groceries,” etc., as would satisfy complainant’s debt and costs; and- the attachment was levied upon the “entire undivided interest of the defendant, S. T. Dugger, in the stock of goods in possession of J. A. Thompson & Co.” A replevy bond was executed.

[43]*43The firm of W. A. Dugger & Co. was dissolved October 8, 1892, W. A. Lugger selling his entire interest to his co-defendant and partner, Sallie T. Lugger, notice of the dissolution being published in the Jacksou papers; and, thereupon, Sallie T. Lugger formed a partnership with Jesse A. Thompson, under the style of J. A. Thompson & Co., the said Thompson buying an undivided half-interest iu the stock of goods, but no interest in the notes, accounts, and choses in action of the late firm of W. A. Dugger & Co. The trade thus made had been in negotiation for six months before the bank failui’e, and the president of the Lank of Madison had been advised with concerning the same.

A motion to quash the attachment was made, ■on the hearing, first, because there is no valid or legal ground for the issuance of the same stated or set forth in the bill; second, because there is no allegation in the bill of any legal or.valid or subsisting lien, in complainant’s favor, upon the stock ■of goods of said J. A. Thompson & Co., or the interest of S. T. Lugger therein; third, because no» valid or sufficient grounds for an attachment .are stated, set forth, or shown in the bill. This motion was overruled.

A demurrer was interposed by defendants, Sallie T. Lugger and husband, A. L. Lugger, upon the following grounds:

1. The bill does not state a case that entitles •complainant to the relief prayed.

[44]*442. The defendant, S. T. Dugger, as shown by the bill, is a married woman, under the disability of coverture, and, as such, is not liable on the promissory note sued on, and she sets up her cov-erture as a complete defense against liability on said note.

3. To the part of the bill which seeks a personal recovery against defendant, S. T. Dugger, she demurs on the following ground: She is, as shown by the bill, under the disability of cov-erture, and is not liable on the said note, as the-same is stated and alleged in the bill, because it is not shown to have been executed by her with express reference to her separate estate, or that,, in fact, she has any separate estate.

' 4. To so much and such parts of the bill as allege her ownership in the stock of goods sought to be attached by the bill, and seeks to reach the same for the satisfaction of the debt sued on, she demurs on the following ground: She, as shown by the bill, is a married woman; not shown to-have any separate estate in the goods, nor to have-contracted the alleged indebtedness with express reference thereto; wherefore, her interest in the-same cannot, in the manner sought by the bill, be -sold or made liable for the said indebtedness.

The first ground of demurrer was overruled, and the second and third grounds, to the effect that S. T. Dugger, as shown by the bill to be a married woman, under the disability of coverture, and,. [45]*45as such, not liable on the promissory note sued on, was allowed so as to prevent any decree on said note against said S. T. Dugger personally.

Answers were filed by defendants denying all fraud in the sale and purchase of the stock of goods, and alleging that, while W. A. Dugger sold out his entire interest in the stock, notes, accounts, choses in action, fixtures, delivery-wagon and horse to his co-defendant, S. T. Dugger, that có defendant J. A. Thompson only bought an interest in the stock and fixtures.

Proof was taken and decree rendered, in which it was adjudged that there was 'no fraud in the sale of the goods to J. A., Thompson, and that no personal decree could be entered against Mrs. Dugger on said note, but that the interest of said S. T. Dugger acquired by the investment of her separate estate in said1 firm is 'liable to complainant, on account of said indebtedness* and should be subjected to its payment;” and thereupon the Court proceeded to render a'personal decree against her and her sureties upon the re-plevin bond for the sum of $4,46.0.50, being double the penalty thereof, but to be discharged by. the payment of the sum of $1,815.36, the balance due on the note sued on.

The question of the allegted fraudulent sale of the stock of goods, and its purchase by J. A. Thompson, and which was the ground laid in the bill for the issuance of the attachment, was abandoned when complainant had the attachment is[46]*46sued, it being only issued against the “undivided interest of. the defendant, S. T. Dugger, in the-stock of goods,” and the Chancellor found as a fact, and so adjudged in the decree, “that the allegations of fraud in purchasing the stock of goods on the part of J. A. Thompson, and the sale thereof hjr the said S. T. Dugger, had not been proven, but disproved,” and there is no appeal by complainants from this portion of the-decree.

Several errors are assigned, only one of which we deem it necessary to notice, as it disposes of' the entire matters in controversy.

The question raised by this assignment is in suostance this: Is a married woman, owning a. separate estate, which she has put into a mercantile .business, as a partner with another person,, bound by a note executed for partnership purposes-in the name of the firm, so that a personal judgment can be rendered against her on such note,, or so that the stock of goods belonging to the firm in which she is interested as a partner, can be-subjected to the payment of such firm note in the absence of an express agreement on the part of the married woman that the stock of goods in which her separate estate is invested shall be bound for the same ?

It has been held that when a married woman engages in business, if she fails to pay a debt incurred by her in that business, the creditor may seize and reclaim such goods as he has sold to» [47]*47her as may remain'in her possession, provided the--, same can he identified. Federlicht v. Glass and wife., 13 Lea, 487, 488.

It also has been held that land purchased by a married woman, in which her separate estate has. been invested, leaving a portion of the purchase-money unpaid, may be sold to enforce collection, of that portion of the purchase-money remaining unpaid. Jackson v. Rutledge, 3 Lea, 626, 629, 631.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Levy v. Davis
125 Tenn. 342 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1911)
In re Day
176 F. 377 (M.D. Tennessee, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 S.W. 135, 93 Tenn. 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/theus-v-dugger-tenn-1893.