Trenton Lumber Co. v. Boling

92 So. 2d 440, 230 Miss. 233, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 363
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1957
DocketNo. 40283
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 So. 2d 440 (Trenton Lumber Co. v. Boling) 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
Trenton Lumber Co. v. Boling, 92 So. 2d 440, 230 Miss. 233, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 363 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

Kyle, J.

This appeal involves three separate suits filed by J. B. Boling and others in the Circuit Court of Rankin County on September 22, 1952, for the enforcement of purchase money liens on undressed pine lumber and poplar lumber, which had been delivered by the plaintiffs to J. M. Holmes, Jr., the principal defendant, at his planing mill yard in the Town of Brandon.

The suits were begun by affidavits filed under Section 341, Code of 1942; and in their affidavits the affiants alleged that the lumber was in the possession of J. M. Holmes, Jr., at his planer mill site in the Town of Brandon, and that a portion of the lumber was stacked at the east end of the dry kiln building, located on said premises, and a portion thereof inside the dry kiln building. The affiants claimed a lien upon the lumber for the unpaid purchase price thereof in the amounts stated in the affidavits. The affiants also alleged in their affidavits that the Trenton Lumber Company, a corporation, domiciled in Hinds County, was asserting some sort of claim to the lumber, the basis of such claim being unknown to the affiants.

The plaintiff, J. B. Boling, in his affidavit claimed a lien on 7,160 board feet, lumber scale, of undressed pine lumber, and 3,691 board feet of poplar lumber, for the sum of. $631.54. The plaintiffs, R. M. Hogan and C. E. Vance, doing business as Hogan’s Sawmill, in their affidavit, claimed a lien of 4,097 board feet of undressed pine lumber, for the sum of $245. The plaintiffs, R. L. Harpe and W. F. Harpe, doing* business as Harpe Brothers, claimed a lien on 20,538 board feet of undressed pine lumber and 598 board feet of poplar lumber, for the sum of $1,300.34. All of the above mentioned lumber ex[237]*237cept-a small amount included in the claim of J. B. Boling; had been delivered to the Holmes Planer Mill during the week immediately preceding the date of the filing of the affidavits.

The Trenton Lumber Company filed an answer to each of the affidavits, and in its answers denied that the plaintiffs had sold and delivered to the defendant, J. M. Holmes, Jr., lumber in the amounts stated in the- plaintiffs’ affidavits. The Trenton Lumber Company admitted that some lumber had been sold to Holmes, but denied that it had any knowledge of what the plaintiffs had sold to him; and the company demanded strict proof of the amount sold by the plaintiffs. The Trenton Lumber Company then averred in its answer that it was the holder of a mortgage deed of trust executed by Holmes on May 21,1952, to secure an indebtedness due and owing by Holmes to the Trenton Lumber Company at that time, and also future advancements; that said deed of trust covered all lumber or logs stacked on the Holmes planing-mill yard and such lumber or logs as might be placed thereon during a period of three years from the date of said instrument; that the deed of trust had been duly-recorded; and that the plaintiffs’ claims, if proved, were subordinate to the Trenton Lumber Company’s deed- of trust lien on said lumber. A copy of the deed of trust and an itemized statement of the account secured thereby were attached to the answer. The Trenton Lumber Company also averred in its answer that it had purchased from certain laborers, who had performed labor on said lumber, their liens, which were prior to the plaintiffs ’ purchase money liens, and, in the event it should be found that the plaintiffs had a lien on said lumber, the Trenton Lumber Company was entitled to have the lien of the laborers in its hands adjudged to be prior to the plaintiffs’ purchase money liens.

J. M. Holmes, Jr., filed answers to the plaintiffs’ affidavits, and in said answers stated that he was in[238]*238debted to the plaintiff in the amounts alleged to be due in the plaintiffs’ affidavits, and that he was. also indebted to the Trenton Lumber Company as alleged in its answer; that he was without knowledge of the respective rights of the parties; and he therefore asked that the court adjudicate the issue between the parties as to the order of priority of their respective liens.

The three cases were consolidated and tried before the circuit judge without a jury at the July 1955 term of the court. The cases were submitted upon an agreed stipulation or statement of facts, which showed that the plaintiffs had sold and delivered to J. M. Holmes, Jr., during the week ending September 20, 1952, the lumber described in the plaintiffs’ affidavits, and that the lumber stacked outside the dry kiln and levied upon by the sheriff was the lumber delivered by the plaintiffs to Holmes. It wras also shown that the lumber involved in the three suits had been sold by the sheriff sometime during the month of February 1953 under an order of the court, and that the gross proceeds received from the sale amounted to $1,624.03. It was also shown in the agreed statement of facts that, prior to May 21, 1952, the Trenton Lumber Company had advanced funds to J. M. Holmes, Jr., for the purchase of lumber and the payment of the expenses of his mill operations; and that Holmes had executed a mortgage deed of trust on May 21, 1952, in favor of the Trenton Lumber Company to secure the payment of the indebtedness then existing, which amounted to $22,000, and also “future advances not to exceed an outstanding balance of $25,000 at any time.” It was also shown that the amount due by Holmes to the Trenton Lumber Company on May 21, 1952, was $23,597.54, and that additional funds were advanced to Holmes thereafter as shown on the account filed with the Trenton Lumber Company’s answer for the purchase of lumber, and for the payment of employees and other operating expenses.

[239]*239It "was further stipulated, “that the Trenton Lumber Company did not have notice that the lumber delivered by the plaintiffs in these three suits had not been paid for until the suits were filed on the 22nd day of September 1952. However, it is the general custom in the trade, in making purchases from sawmill operators,-that the lumber delivered during the week is paid for at the end of each week and not customarily paid for at the time of actual delivery to the purchasing point.” It was also stipulated that at the end of the week beginning Monday, September 15, 1952, Holmes was in the hospital and could not pay off his employees, and that the Trenton Lumber Company, through its subsidiary, A. Tindall, Inc,, advanced to Holmes’ wife the sum of $951.63 to enable her to pay off the employees; and that the Trenton Lumber Company took from each employee an assignment of his lien on account of labor and services rendered prior to September 20, 1952; that the assignments were made first to A. Tindall, Inc., and were then assigned by Tindall to the Trenton Lumber Company.

The court found that the lumber stacked outside the dry kiln was the lumber which had been delivered by the plaintiffs to J. M. Holmes, Jr., as alleged in the plaintiffs’ affidavits, and that the lumber had not been paid for. The court found that the Trenton Lumber Company had been doing business with J. M. Holmes, Jr., for a long period of time, and was charged with notice of the general custom in the lumber trade, that when rough lumber is delivered to the planing mill by small mill operators, the lumber delivered each week is paid for at the end of the week and is not customarily paid for at the time of the actual delivery. The court found that the plaintiffs had purchase money liens on the lumber seized under the writs issued after the filing of the plaintiffs’ affidavits, and that the plaintiffs’ purchase money liens were superior to the deed of trust lien of [240]*240the Trenton Lumber Company.

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

Related

Paper Products Co. of Laurel v. Mississippi State Tax Commission
206 So. 2d 635 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1968)
Murdock Acceptance Corp. v. Woodham
208 So. 2d 56 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 So. 2d 440, 230 Miss. 233, 1957 Miss. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trenton-lumber-co-v-boling-miss-1957.