Weaver v. Ogle

2 Tenn. App. 563, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 22, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 Tenn. App. 563 (Weaver v. Ogle) 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
Weaver v. Ogle, 2 Tenn. App. 563, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 57 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

Appellants, the defendants, make a fair statement of the case in their brief, as follows:

“The original bill was filed in this cause by Charles A. Weaver and A. J. Dunn as a co-partnership. It alleged that the principal defendants, A. R. and S. M. Ogle, doing business under the name of Ogle Brothers, as General Building Contractors, had been employed by the defendant, J. Harry Price and wife by special contract to build a dwelling house on a certain lot in Knox county, Tennessee, and that said Ogle Brothers had in turn employed the complainants to furnish the brick, sand, lime, cement, etc., and to do all of the brick work on said building, and that the complainants did said work under said contract, and that there is a balance due to the complainant for said work of eight hundred and ninety dollars and fifty-eight cents, ($890.58) for which they are entitled to a money judgment recovery, and, as it was alleged, to a lien upon the property of Mr. and Mrs. Price, which was duly described in the original bill. It was further alleged that the complainants had given Mr. and Mrs. Price, owners of said property, a written notice that they claimed a lien, within the time prescribed by the statutes of Tennessee, and had filed a copy of said lien in the office of the Register of Deeds for Knox county, Tennessee.

The principal defendants, Ogle Brothers, filed an answer to said bill in which they admitted the several contracts, but they denied *565 that the sum of eight hundred and ninety dollars and fifty-eight cents ($890.58) was due to Weaver and Dunn upon said contract. On the contrary they alleged that on October 3, 1914, they, the Ogle Brothers, had paid to the complainants the sum of five hundred dollars ($500) upon the claim of Weaver and Dunn, for which sum credit did not appear upon- the statement filed with the original bill by Weaver and Dunn, and that they, Ogle Brothers, directed at the time of making such payment, that this payment should be applied and credited upon the work or material done and furnished upon the J. Harry Price house, or in other words, to use contractors’ parlance, “upon the Price job.” And it was alleged that said credit of five hundred dollars ($500) had in fact been entered upon the Price job, but that at a later period, as these defendants were informed, the complainants, ‘ ‘ for some reason known to themselves, but unknown to these respondents, endeavored to remove and erase this credit of and covering this payment of five hundred dollars ($500) from the Price job, and to apply this payment to other and different amounts alleged to be due to complainants from said Ogle Brothers, upon other jobs.” It was thereupon further averred by Ogle Brothers that the utmost sum due from them to Weaver and Dunn upon the Price Job or for which a lien could be asserted, was the sum of three hundred and ninety dollars and fifty-eight cents ($390.58). Ogle Brothers further denied that the necessary steps had been taken by the complainants to give the requisite notice for and to set up and establish the asserted lien upon the Price property.

The property owners, J. Harry Price and wife, also filed their answer to said bill, in which answer they denied in turn that the necessary steps as prescribed by the Tennessee statutes had been taken by the complainants to give the requisite notice for and to establish the asserted lien.

They further averred, as had the principal defendants, that the sum of five hundred dollars ($500) had been paid by the Ogle Brothers to Weaver and Dunn upon the Price job, and that this sum had been credited to the Price job by Weaver and Dunn, and that, as these respondents were informed, at a later period, and without the consent of either Ogle Brothers or Mr. and Mrs. Price, the said Weaver and Dunn had for some unknown reason assumed to take said credit of five hundred dollars ($500) away from the Price job and to enter it as a credit on some other job in which Mr. and Mrs. Price were not interested. It was specifically asserted that this was done without the knowledge or consent of either the principal contractors, Ogle Brothers, or the property owners, Mr. and Mrs. Price, and that said transfer “had never been accepted, approved or ratified by Ogle Brothers” nor by Mr. and Mrs. Price. It *566 was further asserted that this sum of five hundred dollars ($500) was gotten by Ogle Brothers from Mr. Price for the purpose of being paid to Weaver and Dunn and that the complainants, Weaver and Dunn, knew that fact, and knew when they received said payment of five hundred dollars ($500) it was to be and was in fact a credit upon the amount that Mr. and Mrs. Price owed to Ogle Brothers, and upon the amount that Ogle Brothers owed to Weaver and Dunn upon the Price job. It was asserted that upon such payment being made and credits given, as aforesaid, the rights of the parties became absolutely fixed and determined, and no right remained in Weaver and Dunn to change such credit or to remove said amount from the account to which it had been credited, and that the only amount remaining due to Weaver and Dunn from Ogle Brothers upon the Price job was the balance of three hundred and ninety dollars and fifty-eight cents ($390.58), which would remain and did remain after retaining said credit of five hundred dollars ($500) upon said account. ■ -

The property owners, Mr. and Mrs. Price, accordingly tendered into court said sum of three hundred and ninety dollars and fifty-eight cents ($390.58) with interest and costs down to said date, and upon said tender'being made and paid into the Registry of the court, they asserted that their full obligation and liability had terminated, and that there was no right of lien or claim or demand in favor of the complainants, Weaver and Dunn, upon the Price job.

There was then prepared, executed and entered of record a stipulation with regard to the interest in this matter of the American Surety Company of New York. Said stipulation appears on page 21 of the transcript.- It recited that said American Surety Company had signed as surety for Ogle Brothers a contractor’s bond running to Mr. and Mrs. Price for the construction of the buildings upon said property, in the penal sum of thirty-five hundred dollars ($3500). It recited all of the facts as set forth in the pleadings as above shown to the Court, excepting that the amount claimed by Weaver and Dunn to be due was recited as eight hundred and eighty-nine dollars and eighty-three cents ($889.83) in place of eight hundred and ninety dollars and fifty-eight cents ($890.58). It recited in substance that the American Surety Company desired to make good its suretyship, and, accordingly, it entered its appearance as a party defendant to the case upon the terms and conditions that it should have the right to make any and all defenses that either Ogle Brothers or Mr. and Mrs. Price might make, either in its own name or in their name. It stepped into the place and shoes of Mr. and Mrs. Price. It was further provided in and by said stipulation that if upon final hearing it should be found and determined that there was a balance due to the complainants upon *567 the J. Harry Price job of five hundred dollars ($500) after applying the amount tendered into court, judgment should he rendered against said American Surety Company for said amount with interest from March 18, 1915, and such portion of the costs of the cause as the court may adjudge should be paid by the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Tenn. App. 563, 1926 Tenn. App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-ogle-tennctapp-1926.