Wade v. Whitsitt

9 Tenn. App. 436, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 249
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 13, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 9 Tenn. App. 436 (Wade v. Whitsitt) 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
Wade v. Whitsitt, 9 Tenn. App. 436, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 249 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.

The bill in this case was filed in the chancery court of Davidson county, Part 2, on December 14, 1925, by Mrs. Georgia R. Wade, Mrs. Edy Dean and Mrs. Annie Holman, executrices of the estate of Mrs. D. A.- Reese, deceased, residents and citizens of Davidson county, Tennessee, as complainants against W. H. Whit-sitt, Jr., a resident of Davidson county, Tennessee, State Bank & Trust Company, a corporation, and Commerce Union Bank, a banking corporation doing business in Davidson county, Tennessee, as defendants.

On final hearing, the Chancellor dismissed complainants’ bill against State Bank & Trust Company and Com'merce Union Bank and granted a. recovery in favor of complainants against W. H. Whitsitt, Jr., for the sum of $3268.65 and the costs of the cause.

The complainants appealed to this court from so much of the Chancellor’s decree as dismissed their bill against the defendant banks and from so much of the decree as disallowed attorney’s fees against defendant, Whitsitt.

The determinative issues of fact and law are stated clearly and concisely in the written “findings and opinion” filed by the Chancellor and made a part of the record, as follows:

“Finding and Opinion.
“This is a suit to recover on an agreement alleged to have been made by the defendant State Bank & Trust Co. acting through *438 its officer and agent, defendant Whitsitt, with complainant, that if she would release and discharge a lien on certain lands in West Nashville the bank would see that she was paid her debt.
“It is in substance averred in the bill that Mrs. Wade, executrix of the- estate of her mother, Mrs. Reese, held a note for $2000, secured by deed of trust on certain lots in West Nashville, which was delivered to the State Bank & Trust Company for collection. The bank held some lien notes or a mortgage on the property which was subordinate to Mrs. Wade’s lien, and, acting through defendant Whitsitt, agreed if Mrs. Wade would release and discharge her lien and put the whole matter in the bank’s hands that it would see that she was paid her debt. This it has failed and refused to do.
“The State Bank & Trust Company was consolidated with the Commerce Union Bank in January, 1924, and these banks deny liability, alleging that the State Bank & Trust Company made no such agreement; that Whitsitt had no authority to enter into such agreement for the State Bank & Trust Company, and that Mrs. Wade, without the knowledge or authority of this bank, cancelled her lien and lost her security.
“The defendant Whitsitt denies that he represented the State Bank & Trust Company in procuring Mrs. Wade to cancel her lien, but alleges that he was representing himself and that it was a purely personal matter between Mrs. Wade and himself.' He avers that Mrs. Wade agreed to accept $1700 for her debt and that he paid her interest thereon. He admits that he is indebted to Mrs. Wade by reason of the transaction involved, which he has been unable to pay.”

The material facts as disclosed 'by the record follow:

“Mrs. Wade is a co-executrix of her mother’s estate, Avhich held a note for $2000 secured by deed of trust on certain lands in the Steger Subdivision of West Nashville. She delivered these papers to the State Bank & Trust Company 'for collection and was given a receipt to which the name of this bank wasl signed by W. IT. Whitsitt, Jr. Sometime after this note was placed with the bank, Mr. Whitsitt informed her that the bank held a second lien on these lots- and that if 'she would release her lien they could sell the property and would pay her note. She communicated this information 'to her attorney, who had an interview with Whitsitt, who confirmed his statement to Mrs. Wade. Thereupon Mrs. Wade’s attorney advised her to make the release ás Whitsitt'had requested and she did so.
“Mrs. Wade was a customer of the bank for some time before and after this transaction took place. She had an account with the bank, both personal and as executrix. The note was *439 left with the bank for collection in September, 1921, and she released the lien at the Register’s Office in April, 1922, but she said nothing to the bank about her mistreatment by Whitsitt and her failure to get her money under the agreement until her attorney, Mr. Cato, mentioned it to the defendant Commerce Union Bank in August or November, 1925. During this period of time she was importuning Whitsitt for a settlement of her debt. She agreed to accept $1700 from Whitsitt in settlement of the debt Avhieh she had lost by reason of the release of the lien, and accepted one interest payment thereon from him of $51 and a check for about $100 for another interest payment, which check ivas dishonored by the bank' upon which it was drawn. She had several business transactions with Whitsitt affecting her mother’s estate, before she turned this note over to the bank for collection, with which the State Bank & Trust Company was in no manner connected. The record does not reveal that the bank had any similar dealings to the one involved with Mrs. Wade ,or any other person through Whitsitt. She did not speak to any other officer of the bank about this transaction although they were accessible to her and she was almost daily in the bank, until several years after the lien had been cancelled and loss had resulted. When she spoke to the bank about this agreement several years after-wards, they disclaimed any liability thereunder or knowledge of it. The State Bank & Trust Company, or its successor, the Commerce Union Bank, had no knowledge of this agreement of Whitsitt’s with Mrs. Wade, and did not profit thereby.
“Whitsitt was about twenty-two or -three years old, and the Auditor of the State Bank & Trust Company, when she placed the note in the bank for collection. He was with the State Bank & Trust Company from 1917 to 1922, first the Book-keeper, then as Teller, and afterwards as Auditor. He resigned as Auditor in June, 1922. He held this position at the time Mrs. Wade claims he agreed, for the bank, that it would pay her debt if she would cancel her lien and permit the bank to sell the property. His duties as Auditor were to see that the bank accounts were properly kept, make releases of real estate notes paid to the bank, and to perform such other duties as might be assigned him by the Board of Directors, but it 'does not appear that any other duties or powers were assigned to him. This authority is in Avriting appearing in the minutes of the Board of Directoi’S. He traded in real estate on his oaaui personal account Avhile he Avorlced for the bank. The bank had not had a real estate department since 1920. The collateral which the bank held and aaTlícIi was a second lien on these lots was attached to *440 a note of Myers to the bank for about three or four hundred dollars, and this collateral was returned by the bank to Myers several days before or the same day Mrs. Wade released her lien.
“ Whitsitt’s power as Auditor did not confer upon him the authority to make this agreement for the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Tenn. App. 436, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-v-whitsitt-tennctapp-1928.