Wharton v. Lavender

82 Tenn. 178
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 82 Tenn. 178 (Wharton v. Lavender) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wharton v. Lavender, 82 Tenn. 178 (Tenn. 1884).

Opinion

Cooper, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Bills filed to wind up the insolvent estate of Geo. W. Lavender, deceased, of which Robert H. Wharton is the administrator. The causes were consolidated and heard together, the decree on the hearing making a reference to the master to take and state an account with the administrator. To the report of the master, made in compliance with the order of reference, the administrator filed two exceptions. The chancellor overruled these exceptions, and confirmed the report. 'From this decree, “in'so far as it overruled the exceptions of defendant, Wharton, to the master’s report, and confirms the same,” Wharton appealed. The Referees have reported that the chancellor’s decree should be affirmed. Wharton excepts.

The creditors of the estate also filed exceptions in the court below to the master’s report, which were overruled by the chancellor. The Referees have considered these exceptions, and reported in favor of affirming the action of the chancellor. 'The creditors have filed exceptions to the report of the Referees On these points. But the creditors did not appeal from the decree below, and the appeal of Wharton is special, not general. Such an appeal only operates to bring up for revision so 'much of the decree as is appealed from: Wood v. Cooper, 2 Heis., 441. And even a general appeal by one party does not necessarily bring up the exceptions of the opposite party to particular and severable items of the master’s report. ' To have this effect the exceptions of the appellee must be so connected with the subject [180]*180matter of the exceptions of the appellant as to require action upoti them to do complete justice, or must go to the principles of the decree on which the report is based. Neither of these conditions exist in this case. The exceptions of the creditors to the report of the Referees must, therefore, be disallowed.

One of the appellant's exceptions only goes to the amount of an item of charge found against him by the master. We concur with the master, the chancellor and the Referees in the conclusion that this •exception is not well taken.

The other exception is to a charge against the appellant, as administrator, of $710, the proceeds of a check on a Nashville bank, drawn by one John Embry, payable to the order of the intestate, George W. Lavender, and found among his papers after his death. This check was applied by the appellant to the payment of a particular debt of the intestate to the Second National Bank of Lebanon, due by note, on which the appellant was liable as surety. The contention of the appellant is that the bank had acquired, in the lifetime of the intestate, under a contract with him, such a right to or lien on the fund evidenced by the check as would entitle it to the fund in preference to other creditors, notwithstanding the insolvency of the estate. This contention is made in the appellant, Wharton’s, answer to the bill of the creditors, as will be seen presently, and is also ■distinctly raised by his exception to the master’s report. That exception is, that the master should not have charged him with the $710, because the proceeds [181]*181of cattle pledged to pay a bank debt, Lavender being the agent of the bank to sell the stock and pay over to the bank, and then adds: “He did sell, and directed the purchaser to pay over the fund to Wharton, who was security on the debt, or to the bank.

The facts are peculiar. In February, 1876, the intestate sold certain cattle which he had bought with money obtained from the Second National Bank of Lebanon, to two Kentuckians. One of these purchasers, with whom the trade was made, paid the purchase price at the time to the intestate/ who immediately used the money in paying his note to the bank. Two days afterwards the other purchaser, upon seeing the cattle, expressed dissatisfaction, and proposed to give the intestate $25 if he would cancel the trade and take the stock back. The intestate was willing to accept the offer if he could make some arrangement with the bank to obtain the money. The bank did let him have $700 upon his note, dated February 14, 1876, at one month, which was also signed a few days afterwards by appellant as a co-maker. The cattle bought back with this money were afterwards, about the latter part of the same month, sold by the intestate to J\ B. Embry for $710. The sale was made at the house of the intestate in Wilson county, the intestate being then sick in bed of the disease of which he died a few days thereafter, on March 2nd. The cattle were sent to Nashville by the intestate’s brother, and delivered to Embry, who drew a check on a bank for the price in favor of the intestate, and sent it to him by his brother. The con[182]*182dition of the intestate when the check’ was brought to him is not shown. It only appears that he died a day or two thereafter, and that the appellant received the check from the intestate’s wife, and used it on March 6, 1876, in paying the note to the bank. The appellant became administrator about the first of April, thereafter.

The creditors, who are the complainants in one of the bills in this cause, aver in their bill that the defendant, Wharton, received as administrator a check in favor of the intestate for $710, and ought to be charged therewith. Wharton, in his answer, after stating the sale of the cattle as above, and the offer to cancel the trade, says: “ The bank agreed to take the title to the cattle, the intestate to hold them and sell to some one else, and turn over the money or proceeds to the Second National Bank, on its debt. This proposition was accepted by both the intestate and the said bank, and under it the said bank was the owner of the cattle, and the intestate had only the power to sell and apply the proceeds to his said debt. Soon after this arrangement was made the intestate sold the said cattle to one John Embry, and directed him to pay the money over to the benefit of the Sécond National Bank in payment of his said debt. The said Embry did pay the said fund, $710, proceeds of said cattle, according to his agreement with the intestate, and did so after the death of the latter.”

The President of the Second National Bank, in his deposition, after stating that the bank had ad[183]*183vanced to the intestate, upon his note with Wharton as endorser, the money used in buying the particular cattle, and that this note was paid with the proceeds of the first sale, says: “ He (Lavender) came to me after the sale, and asked me if I would let him have the money to buy the cattle back. I told him I would do so on condition that he would not keep •the cattle longer than thirty days, and that he would •pledge the cattle for the payment of the note again, and on the strength of this we loaned him the money. The note herewith filed is the note taken by the bank from Lavender and Wharton for this’ second and •last loan. Under the pledge of the stock and the contract, Lavender was to hold the stock and sell the same, and apply the proceeds to the payment of the note. The note was paid off by E. H. Wharton, that is, he brought the check to the bank that paid off the note.” The receipt on the back of the note shows that it was . paid March 6, 1876, by E. H. Wharton, administrator of George W. Lavender. The witness, upon cross-examination, says: “After the note was executed I regarded the cattle as bound for the payment of the note, not the cattle themselves, but the proceeds. It was like any other property pledged to pay a debt.”

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Bluebook (online)
82 Tenn. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wharton-v-lavender-tenn-1884.