Wrenne v. American Nat. Bank

191 S.W.2d 547, 183 Tenn. 247, 19 Beeler 247, 1946 Tenn. LEXIS 208
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 191 S.W.2d 547 (Wrenne v. American Nat. Bank) 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
Wrenne v. American Nat. Bank, 191 S.W.2d 547, 183 Tenn. 247, 19 Beeler 247, 1946 Tenn. LEXIS 208 (Tenn. 1946).

Opinion

*249 Me. Justice Gailoe

delivered tlie opinion of the Court.

This appeal presents a contest between the bank as creditor of D. P. Wrenne, deceased, and his widow, who with others, filed the bill to wind up the estate as. insolvent and assert her right to homestead and dower. The chancellor decreed that she should be allowed dower and homestead, and the bank appealed. The Court of Appeals reversed and the widow filed petition for cer- tiorari, which we granted and on which we have heard argument.

D. P. Wrenne died on August 6, 1928, survived by his widow, Fannie T. Wrenne, his two children by her, and his five children by his first marriage. He -left a will disposing of all of his estate and naming his widow, Fannie R. Wrenne, and his eldest son, D. P. Wrenne, Jr., as executors without bond, and he named his executors and his son Thomas W. Wrenne, trustees under the will. The will was probated and the exeieutors qualified on August 13,1928.

At the time of his death, the deceased owned all but three shares of stock in the banking corporation of Thomas W. Wrenne & Company. It was then very valuable, and some time during the year after D. P. Wrenne’s death, an offer of $250,000 for this stock was refused. He also owned a fire insurance business which was conducted at his bank under the name of D. P. Wrenne & Company, some stock in the Nashville Gras Company, and other miscellaneous personalty. The chancellor found that at the time of the death of D. P. Wrenne the assets of his estate were $120,267.35, and his debts somewhat more than $46,000.

On November 21, 1928, the. executors filed an inventory in the county court, alleging the par value of the stock *250 in Thomas W. Wrenne & Company at $24,700, the valne of the insurance business of D. P. Wrenne & Company at $9,559.91, the value of the stock in the Nashville Gras Company at $2',750‘. The cash on hand was $359.44, and the stock of the General Trading Company $500. The assessed value of the real estate, including the home place, was $19,700. After filing the inventory, the executors took no further steps and filed no other papers in the county court to show their administration of the estate. Their further conduct of the estate was without any court sanction, whatever.

The principal debts of D. P. Wrenne at the time of his death were — a note to his bank of about $12,275, a note to the Fourth & First National Bank of $23,000, a mortgage on one parcel of real estate of $1,500, and a note due Thomas W. Wrenne & Company of some $9,000'.

By consent of all parties, executors, beneficiaries and creditors, the banking business and the insurance business • were not liquidated but were continued in operation after D. P. Wrenne’s death. As a result of the operation of the business all of the debts were paid except the debt of Thomas W. Wrenne & Company and a balance of $11,500 to the Fourth & First National Bank. This indebtedness was evidenced by a note which was acquired in 1930 by the American National Bank, and secured by stock in Thomas W. Wrenne & Company. Annual dividends for as much 'as $12,000 per year were declared from the operation of Thomas W. Wrenne & Company, and the Nashville Gas Company stock was sold for $5,000. The executors make no accounting for these amounts.

After the bank holiday in 1933, the banking corporation of Thomas W. Wrenne & Company was unable to resume business. It was taken in charge by the superintendent *251 of banks for liquidation. All assets of the bank were nsed to pay creditors and nothing was left for the stockholders. The balance of the note of D. P. Wrenne to Thomas W. Wrenne & Company was taken over by the superintendent of banks as one of the assets of the corporation, but is long since barred by the statute of limitations. In April 1934, after the failure of Thomas W. Wrenne & Company, the American National Bank sued the executors on the balance of the note it held against them in the sum of $11,500. Prom the death of Wrenne,' the Fourth & First National Bank, and later its transferee, the American National Bank, had been renewing this note and accepting small reductions of principal and the payment of current interest. There is no doubt but that the bank was thoroughly familiar with all the details of the situation, and of the fact that no final settlement of the estate had been made. The renewal notes on the indebtedness were taken as an obligation of the estate and' signed by the executors. Apparently the shares of stock which were held by the bank as collateral were never transferred on the company’s books after the death of Wrenne, and remained as they had been originally issued and endorsed by him.

The executors met the suit of the bank on the balance of the indebtedness by a plea of the statute of limitations. The chancellor overruled the plea on the ground that the delay had been at the special request of the executors for delay of a definite time and that, therefore, the delay should not be charged against the bank in applying the statute of limitations. He rendered judgment against the executors for $14,739.58 and on appeal, his decree was affirmed by the Court of Appeals and_ certiorari denied by this Court on June 11, 1938.

*252 After this adverse decree became final, Fannie T. Wrenne, as widow and as executor; D. P. Wrenne, Jr., both individually and as executor, and the other children of D. P. Wrenne filed the original bill in this cause against the American National Bank to have the estate administered as an insolvent estate; to have the widow’s homestead and dower set apart to her out of the real estate; to obtain subrogation against the real estate for her year’s support; for reimbursement for taxes and insurance; and for all exempt personal property. The American National Bank filed an answer and crossbill denying her right to this relief and seeking an accounting by the executors and the sale of the land to pay its debt. The chancellor denied all other relief in the original bill, but granted the widow’s prayer for homestead and dower, and dismissed the crossbill.

From so much of the decree as was adverse, the American National Bank perfected an appeal to the Court of Appeals and that court reversed the chancellor and denied the widow’s right to dower and homestead. We granted certiorari and have heard argument.

It is unnecessary to copy the assignments of error presented by the petition for certiorari, at length. Alleging that there was a concurrent finding of fact by the master and the chancellor that the whole of the personal estate of D. P. Wrenne had been exhausted in the payment of his debts, it is insisted that the widow is entitled to dower and homestead under Code, section 8358 (2), and the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the burden of proof was on the widow to show that the whole of the estate had been so exhausted; that this was error because no such question had been raised by the bank, appellant, and because the concurrence foreclosed the question in the Court of Appeals.

*253

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Bluebook (online)
191 S.W.2d 547, 183 Tenn. 247, 19 Beeler 247, 1946 Tenn. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wrenne-v-american-nat-bank-tenn-1946.