Walker v. Brownsville Cotton Oil & Ice Co.

4 Tenn. App. 104, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 168
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 31, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Tenn. App. 104 (Walker v. Brownsville Cotton Oil & Ice Co.) 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
Walker v. Brownsville Cotton Oil & Ice Co., 4 Tenn. App. 104, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 168 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SENTER, J.

The original bill filed in this cause seeks a recovery against the estate of R. N. Bond and the Brownsville Cotton Oil & lee Company, located at Brownsville, Tennessee, for the sum of $6400 with interest, whieh amount complainant claims is due and owing to him under a certain contract of employment entered into between complainant and R. N. Bond, as an individual and in his capacity as President of the Brownsville Cotton Oil & Ice Company. It is alleged in the original bill that complainant undertook and *105 rendered certain services to tlie defendants R.' N. Bond and the Brownsville Cotton Oil & Ice Company in the sale of the electric light and power plant of said defendants located at Brownsville. Tennessee, in the event the sale was made to Mr. T. H. Tutwiler, representing certain associated interests. The defendants denied liability on the ground that complainant did not render any service to defendants in procuring the sale of the property; that complainant was himself connected with the interests that complainant undertook to sell the property to; and because the complainant could not maintain this action because he had failed to qualify as a real estate agent, or broker, or dealer, under the General Revenue Law of 1923, and especially under the provisions of the Realtors Act of 1919, Chapter 182, and under the provisions of Chapter 98 of the Acts of 1921.

By stipulation of parties the case was tried before the Chancellor on oral evidence without a jury. The Chancellor sustained the bill and decreed a judgment in favor of complainant and against the defendants Brownsville Cotton Oil & lee Company and the Bank of Commerce & Trust Company, administrator of the estate of R. N. Bond, deceased, for the sum of $6,640, with interest from the date of the decree and the costs of the cause. A motion for a new trial was made by defendants, which motion was by the court overruled and disallowed, and the case is now in this court on appeal from the decree of the Chancellor. Several errors have been assigned by appellants, but they may be reduced’ to three questions of law and fact presented on the appeal for the determination of this court.

It is contended for appellants, (a) that the complainant is not entitled to recover against the defendants, or either of them, because complainant was not so situated as to render any real service to the defendants, and that the alleged contract sued’ upon was non-enforci-ble because of a conflict of interests represented by the complainant, in that, at the time the alleged contract of employment was entered into the complainant was a Director in the Memphis Street Railway Company, which company is alleged to have been one of the associated or affiliated corporations which purchased the property, and that complainant could not, therefore, consistently and legally represent as agent the defendants in making a sale of this property to the purchaser because of his official connection as a Director in one of the affiliated companies associated and connected with the purchasing company. And, (b) because complainant had not paid the privilege license required to comply with the provisions of the Realtor’s Acts of 1919, and of 1921.

Before entering upon a discussion of the question above set forth we deem it proper to give a summary of the transaction between the *106 parties as disclosed by the record and the finding of facts by the Chancellor.

The Brownsville Cotton Oil & Ice Company was a corporation with its situs at Brownsville, Tennessee, where it operated a lighting-plant, under a franchise from the city of Brownsville, and in connection with that business it also operated a cotton oil plant and an ice plant. It appears that R. N. Bond owned the major portion of' the stock of this corporation. The beginning of the negotiations out of which this litigation arose was a letter written by complainant ou March 13, 1924, as follows:

“Mr. R. N. Bond,
“Brownsville, Tenn.
“Dear friend:
“I have a matter I would like to talk to you about. Would like for you to telephone me the next time you are in Memphis so that I may have a talk with you.
“With kindest regards to yourself-and family, I am,
“Yours very truly.”

Shortly after the receipt of this letter Mr. R. N. Bond (who died before this suit was tried, and the suit.revived against the administrator) went to Memphis and had a conference with complainant Walker. It developed that the matter which Mr. Walker desired to discuss with Mr. Bond was with reference to the sale of the Brownsville Cotton Oil & Ice Company plant to certain interests represented by Mr. T. II. Tutwiler, and’ to acquaint Mr. Bond with the fact that a group of interests represented by Mr. Tutwiler was buying the municipal lighting plants in West Tennessee, Eastern Arkansas and Northern Mississippi. It does not definitely appear that Mr. Walker disclosed to Mr. Bond in that conversation just what corporation or corporations Mr! Tutwiler was representing. It also appears that Mr. Walker discussed with Mr. Bond in that conference a separate sale of the cotton oil plant and the ice plant from the lighting plant. The details of the conversation between Mr. Walker and Mr. Bond on the occasion of the first conference is not shown by the record. Mr. Walker stated in his examination in chief substance, that about the middle of March, 1924, in response to his letter of March 13th, that Mr. Bond came to his office in Memphis, and that he then told Mr. Bond, “about the utilities being purchased around in this vicinity, and advised him to get into communication with Mr. Tutwiler and Mr. Tutwiler’s affiliated companies. Mr. Bond told me that he also had' a gin and cotton oil mill he wanted to dispose of; in fact, he wanted to sell all of those properties together, if he could. I. told him that Mr. L. P. Brown, a friend of mine, had been purchasing gin and oil mills in various cities surrounding Memphis, and that I thought, if he would talk *107 with Mr. Brown, it might be possible that he could effect a sale of those properties with Mr. Brown. We talked at length regarding this, and Mr. Bond said to me then,why can’t you handle this matter for me? You know Mr. Brown, and you are familiar with the other details.” It appears that shortly after this conversation in Memphis Mr. Walker went to Brownsville to see Mr. Bond and to look over the property, and on one visit it appears that he took an engineer with him to make a general survey of the property. He also wrote Mr. Bond a letter several weeks later dated May 6, 1924, as follows

“Mr. R. N. Bond,
“Brownsville, Tenn.,
“Dear Mr. Bond:
“Would like to have the drawings and data on your properties there not later than Friday of this week as I want to formally present the matter to the people that I hope to interest here.
“As I told yon in my office some time ago I am trying to interest Mr. Palmer Brown in the oil Mill and gin and Mr. T. H. Tutwiler in the other utilities.

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Related

Winn v. Wright
185 S.W.2d 908 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Tenn. App. 104, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-brownsville-cotton-oil-ice-co-tennctapp-1926.