Vaughn v. Lee

1 Tenn. App. 30, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 28, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Tenn. App. 30 (Vaughn v. Lee) 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
Vaughn v. Lee, 1 Tenn. App. 30, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 6 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

This urns a suit instituted in the Chancery Court of Roane County for the collection of a note of $176.17 executed by the defendants to the complainant. The bill alleged that the note was past due and unpaid, and prayed for the issuance and service of process,- and for a decree for the amount of the note, interest and attorneys’ fees, less credits.

All of the defendants filed separate answers to the bill. The defendant, S. E. Lee, answered and denied that he was indebted to the complainant in the amount alleged in the bill, or in any amount. He 'denied that complainant was entitled to a decree against him for the note and interest thereon, and alleged that his signature to said note was obtained through coercion and by false and fraudiilent representations made by the complainant and his agent, and that he was induced to sign said note by a false and malicious presecution of a son-in-law, defendant C. R. Mitchell, in that said Mitchell had been arrested on a charge of passing worthless checks, which prosecution was false and fraudulent, he not being guilty of any crime; that after Mitchell had been arrested and carried to Livingston, that the complainant and his agents represented to this defendant that the amount of the worthless checks was $176.17, for which amount this defendant was induced to sign a note in order to stop the prosecution, whereas a part of said amount was an open, account for which no checks had been issued, and that he was thus fraudulently induced to sign said note, and that there was no consideration moving to this defendant for the execution of said note.

Defendant, ■ Joel Isham, filed an answer alleging that he had signed said note at the request of defendant, S. E. Lee, and as surety for said Lee, and that he was induced to sign said note through false and fraudulent representations and coercion, and that, therefore, the note was void and should be cancelled for the reasons set out above in the answer of defendant, Lee.

The defendant, Robert E. Lee, who had signed said note answered that he was a minor at the time said note was executed.

The defendant, C. R. Mitchell, answered that he had signed said note while under arrest, and that said note was obtained through *32 false and fraudulent prosecution of the defendant and was void for that reason.

Several depositions were taken and read to the Chancellor at the trial, and during the progress of the trial, the complainant moved the court to be allowed to amend his original bill so as to sue on behalf of himself, and also on behalf of Fleming and Myers, ,a co-partnership composed of Jesse Fleming and James Myers.

During the progress of the trial the defendants S. E. Lee and Joel Isham were permitted to amend their answers so as to ]dead that said note was executed in settlement of the criminal prosecution against C. R. Mitchell, and that said settlement was the compounding of a felony, and that the said note was therefore, void and unenforceable.

The Chancellor dismissed the bill as to the defendant Robert E. Lee, on account of his minority, but rendered a decree against the other three defendants for the sum of $204.60, together with the costs of the cause.

The defendants, S. E. Lee and Joel Isham, excepted to said decree and appealed to this court, and have assigned the following errors:

‘Í (1) The Chancellor erred in rendering judgment against the appellants, S. E. Lee and Joel Isham on said note.
“ (2) The Chancellor erred in not holding that this note wag procured from the appellants S. E. Lee and Joel Isham by fraud, and through false and fraudulent representations made by the complainant and the Sheriff of Overton County acting for him as his agent, and was without consideration and therefore, void.
“(3) The Chancellor erred in failing to hold that this note was secured from the appellants S. E. Lee and Joel Isham, in settlement of a criminal prosecution against C. R. Mitchell, in which Mitchell was charged with a felony, and that the securing' of this note in that way it was secured, amounted to the compounding of a felony on the part of complainant, and that said note was therefore, void.” ✓

The defendant, C. R. Mitchell, had been living in Livingston during the summer of 1921, and he had bfeen buying goods from Vaughn Brothers, merchants at Livingston, and on April 30, he gave them two cheeks for $20,00 each, one dated May 7, 1921, and the other May 14, 1921, signed by himself and payable to the order of Vaughn Brothers, drawn on the Farmers Bank of Livingston, Tennessee.

About this time Mitchell bought a suit of clothes from Fleming & Myers, who were also merchants of Livingston, and, he executed to them one check of $14.50, dated April 30, 1921; another for $16.75, dated May 7, 1921; another for $10.00, dated May 14, 1921, ánd *33 another for $16.75, dated May 21, 1921. All these checks were signed by Mitchell, payable to Fleming & Myers and drawn on the Farmers Bank of Livingston.

Mitchell also owed Vaughn Brothers an open account for groceries amounting to $78.17. Just when this account was made is not shown by the record.

Mitchell failed to deposit money m the bank to cover these checks and they were dishonored. Sometime, after the cheeks were given, Mitchell left Livingston and returned to Harriman, Tennessee. In November, 1921, the complainant, Vaughn, procured a State’s warrant for Mitchell on the charge of obtaining credit on these unpaid checks, and the said warrant was sent to Harriman and placed in the hands of an officer who arrested Mitchell and he was carried back to Livingston and there held under arrest. The defendant, Robert E. Lee, Mitchell’s brother-in-law also accompanied the officer and Mitchell back to Livingston. On the second morning after Mitchell’s arrest, the. defendant, S. E. Lee, called his son, Robert E. Lee, over the telephone to ascertain what had been done, and later he called the Sheriff at Livingston about the matter, and requested the Sheriff to continue the case until the next day, so that he might go up there and investigate the matter. The sheriff told him that he would not do it, that Court was in session, and it required a trial within three days, and whatever he did about the matter had to be done immediately. Lee then inquired as to the amount of the checks. The Sheriff then called Vaughn, and after an examination of a paper, replied that the checks amounted to $176.17. The Sheriff also told Lee over the telephone that if he would pay the indebtedness and the costs, they would' compromise and settle it without going to Court, and Lee agreed to do so. .He telephoned $65.00 in cash to the Sheriff with which to pay the costs and sent the note for $176.17 signed by himself and Isham. The Sheriff also requested Mitchell and Robert E. Lee to sign the note. This $176.17 included said worthless checks and the -account "of $78.17 due Vaughn Brothers. Thereupon, defendant, Mitchell, was released from custody and returned to Harriman.

The costs in the criminal prosecution amounted to $58.00, but defendant, S. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. App. 30, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vaughn-v-lee-tennctapp-1925.