Turner v. Bank of Avera

104 So. 455, 140 Miss. 1, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 234
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1925
DocketNo. 24342.
StatusPublished

This text of 104 So. 455 (Turner v. Bank of Avera) 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
Turner v. Bank of Avera, 104 So. 455, 140 Miss. 1, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 234 (Mich. 1925).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the chancery court of Greene county, rendered in a suit of appellant against C. C. Harvey and in the receivership proceedings involved in said suit; said decree allowing the claims of appellees filed in said receivership proceedings, and allowing the claim of appellant in such proceedings, but denying him a paramount lien on the funds in the hands of the receiver, and directing that all creditors.who had validly propounded their claims in said proceeding should share ratably in such funds. . '

The facts involved in this litigation are substantially as follows: C. C. Harvey, a citizen of Greene county, purchased certain sawmill property, including a mer *11 cantile business and standing timber. Being in need of funds to pay a part of the purchase price and to meet outstanding obligations, he applied to Horace S. Turner for a loan of twenty-one thousand dollars. He represented to Turner that this sum would pay up all his debts, and he furnished a timber estimate showing a total of three million three hundred 'and fifty thousand feet of stumpage owned by him. Horace Turner arranged with his brother, J. Tyler Turner, of Mobile, Ala., appellant herein, to make the loan tó Harvey, and, in order to secure the payment of the loan, it was agreed that Harvey should convey to the appellant all the properties connected with the said sawmill and mercantile business, while the appellant would execute a contract to resell to Harvey the same properties for a sum equal to the amount of the loan and an extra charge of three thousand three hundred and twenty-five dollars, making a total sum of twenty-four thousand three hundred and twenty-five dollars. These papers were duly executed; the contract providing that the consideration for this resale should be evidenced by ten promissory notes, including a note for this extra charge of three thousand three hundred and twenty-five dollars, all the notes being payable to the appellant at the Merchants’ Bank of Mobile. There was a conflict in the evidence as to what this extra charge represented. The defendant, Harvey, contended that it was in the nature of a charge for the use of the money and therefore interest, while Horace Turner contended that this charge was understood between the parties to cover services which he himself was to perform for Harvey in the supervision of Harvey’s mill operations and lumber sales, and in the furnishing of orders for lumber from the files of the Turner Timber Company, then operating at Avera, and of which Horace Turner was the principal owner and manager.

The record shows that, at the time of these transactions between Harvey and the Turners, Harvey was largely indebted to the appellees herein, and that no. part *12 of this indebtedness to these appellees has been paid. The contract provided that all invoices for lumber sold by ITarvey should be assigned to and deposited with the Bank of Avera, and when collected that eight dollars per thousand feet should be deposited to the credit of appellant for credit on the notes due by Harvey to appellant. Harvey operated the business for several months and paid to the appellant the sum of about seven thousand dollars, when it developed that the amount of the standing timber involved had been overestimated to the extent of a million or more feet, and that it would be impossible to pay the amount due the appellant out of the sawmill operation. Thereupon Harvey absconded, leaving the business without any one in charge thereof. The appellant then filed his bill of complaint in the chancery court of Greene county, setting up the contract existing between him and the said Harvey, alleging that Harvey was in default on one or more payments, had breached his contract in other respects, had absconded to parts unknown, and left the properties in incompetent hands and going to waste, that he was insolvent, and that the complainant was entitled to the possession of the property or to a paramount lien thereon. The bill was framed upon the idea that this contract between the parties was a conditional sale, and that complainant was entitled to the possession of the property, but prayed in the alternative that he be decreed to have a paramount lien upon the property, and that it be sold to satisfy complainant’s claim for the unpaid balance due on said notes, and also prayed that a receiver be appointed to take charge of the property and preserve the same until further order of the court. Upon the bill of complaint a receiver was appointed without notice and authorized to take charge of all the properties described in the bill of complaint and covered by appellant’s said contract. This receiver, Horace Turner, brother of the appellant, and, as the record shows, the owner of the three thousand three hundred and twenty-five dollar note already referred to, qualified and took charge of the properties.

*13 Thereafter the receiver applied to the court for authority to sell the properties^ in his hands, and was authorized by appropriate decree to sell for cash all properties in his hands or under his control. Early in the proceedings, upon application of the receiver, an order was entered by the court directing that notice be given to all creditors of the estate of C. • C. Harvey, and ail persons having any claims or liens in and to the property described in the bill of complaint, or to any funds in the hands of the receiver, to file said claims with the chancery clerk on or before the second Monday of January, 1923, and advising such creditors that all claims not filed on or before said date would be disallowed and barred from participating in any of the assets or property. ' Due notice of this order was given by publication, and at the January, 1923, term of the court a decree was entered granting extensions of time for filing answers and claims, etc., which is not here material.

The defendant, Harvey, appeared and filed an answer and cross-bill, averring, among other things, that the said nóte for three thousand three hundred and twenty-five dollars was an interest charge, and that this interest, in connection with the six per cent, interest borne on the face of the notes, amounted to more than twenty per cent., thereby rendering the contract illegal and forfeiting the principal. The several appellees filed, within the time allowed by the court, petitions presenting their claims for allowance, and in addition thereto adopting the allegations of the defendant’s answer charging that the complainant’s claim was usurious and asking its dis-allowance. These petitions further set up that all the properties of the defendant had been taken into the possession of the court through the receiver, sold and converted into cash, and that therefore the creditors were without remedy, except as against the funds in the hands of the receiver, and charging the' insolvency of the defendant and their right to participate in the funds in the hands of the receivers as creditors of the defendant. *14

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Related

Crystal Springs Bank v. New Orleans Cattle Loan Co.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 So. 455, 140 Miss. 1, 1925 Miss. LEXIS 234, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-bank-of-avera-miss-1925.