Wrought Iron Range Co. v. Devault

6 Tenn. App. 513, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 176
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 18, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 Tenn. App. 513 (Wrought Iron Range Co. v. Devault) 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
Wrought Iron Range Co. v. Devault, 6 Tenn. App. 513, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 176 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

SNODGRASS, J.

This bill is by a foreign corporation, to replevy an automobile from the officer, Richardson, belonging to the company, which said officer had levied upon under the authority of an execution issuing upon a judgment which the defendant DeVault had obtained against the complainant before a Justice of the Peace of Hamblen county in the sum of $343.10. The claim of the bill was that the judgment was void, and that the execution issuing thereon was likewise void, because it was said that no process had been served upon the corporation, either actual or in any way provided by the statute, and upon the alleged fact that even if process had' been served originally on an agent sufficiently representative under the statute, that the plaintiff had not pursued the statute so as to perfect jurisdiction to render the judgment, and that, therefore, it was void and the execution unauthorized. It was insisted (1) that there was never mailed to complainant a certified copy of the warrant by registered letter; (2) that there was no entry made upon the docket of E. T. Bettis,’the Justice of the Peace; and (3) no certificate was filed with the papers. In addition it was claimed that the statute provided that no judgment should be taken in the case until after thirty days had elapsed from the mailing of a certified copy to the home office of the defendant, which it Avas insisted' was not done. It Avas also claimed that the provisions of the statute under AA'hich jurisdiction AA'as claimed as justifying the judgment did hot apply to Justice of the Peace; that it was only clerks of courts of record that Avas to do the filing, etc., etc. It AA'as prayed that oii the hearing the judgment and' execution be declared A'oid; that a Avrit of.replevin issue and be served upon the deputy sheriff, D. F. Richardson; that the automobile be taken out of his hands and the possession thereof turned over to complainant, asking that it be decreed the lawful owner thereof and that the automobile was not subject to leA'y under such execution; and the complainant prayed for general relief.

A fiat was obtained for the writ of replevin, which Avas directed' to be issued upon the execution by complainant of a replevin bond in the sum of $700, conditioned as required by law. Bond was executed and presumably the property turned' OA'er to the complainant, but no formal writ appears.

*515 The deputy sheriff answered that he knew nothing about the controversies between complainant and the defendant DeYault; that he was a deputy sheriff of Hamblen county, and was at the time of the proceedings before the Justice of the Peace, and served the warrant upon J. M. Phillips as Assistant General Division Superintendent of complainant; that later, and after the judgment in question had been rendered in said cause, an execution on said judgment had been placed in his hands against complainant, which execution was levied by him on the automobile this defendant had authorized for sale under said levy at the time the bill in this cause was filed and said automobile taken out of his hands; that this defendant had no interest in the cause further than to perform his official duty as sheriff, etc.

The answer of the defendant DeYault admitted that he had obtained the judgment complained of before E. T. Bettis, Justice of the Peace, as alleged in complainant’s bill, maintained the validity of the judgment and the proceedings, and insisted that while it may be time as alleged in the bill that in writing the continuance of the case from April 25, 1924 to May 2, 1924 the Justice of the Peace inadvertently wrote May 2, 1923; that if so this was only a clerical error, harmless and immaterial, and that it was corrected by the Justice of the Peace on his own motion when counsel for complainant called his attention to it. The answer after enumerating numerous instances of employment in Tennessee of the defendant by the complainant through its agency and work performed thereunder in the same line which antedated the last employment, averred that in October of 1922 respondent met complainant’s general superintendent in Knoxville, Tenn., by appointment, where he was by complainant employed to return to work for complainant as travelling collector, and worked in that capacity until about December, when he was sent to Mountain City, Tenn. to work with a crew of salesmen under Assistant Division Superintendent Entrekin, and worked under him until about March, 1923, at which time he was transferred back to the sales crew working under Assistant Division Superintendent Gibson, and worked under him until about May of same year. It was further averred that the account sued on before the Justice of the Peace was for money due this defendant from complainant for services rendered, and for money advanced for travelling and other expenses, a statement of which had repeatedly been furnished to complainant through its general superintendent and payment demanded, which had been refused'.

Accompanying the warrant, which with the return thereon was set out in the original bill, was a statement of the account, setting out the items as follows: •

"To commission on the sale of 137 wrought iron ranges, sold partly in Tennessee, and partly in other states more than two years prior to March 1, 1924, and due on March 1, 1924,
$274.00
*516 To railroad fare, Atlanta, Ga., to Knoxville, Tenn., on November 12th, 1921, CO i> CD
To lodging in Knoxville, o o CQ
To railroad fare, Knoxville to Morristown, w to r-i
13.65 To railroad fare, Paintsville, Ky., to Lebanon, Ky., July —, 1922,
To commission on cash sales made near Pineville, Ky., which debtor refused to deliver according to contract, M cn o o
To commission on good sales which debtor rejected, to co o o
$343.10”
The return on the warrant as to service was as follows:
“Came to hand same day issued, and executed by reading the within warrant to one of the general officers of the defendant, company, to be found in my county J. M. Phillips, Assistant Superintendent for the Wrought Iron Range Company, and’ citing him to appear before E. T. Bettis, Esq., for trial the 25th day of April, 1924, at one o’clock p. m. D. F. Richardson, D. S.”
The warrant also contained the following endorsements:
“This cause continued on application of defendant with plaintiff consent until May 2ndff 1 p. m. 1923. E. T. Bettis.”
“D. W. DeYault v. Wrought Iron Range Co. In this cause I render judgment for plaintiff and against the defendant for $343.10, and all the costs of suit, for which execution may issue. This 2nd day of May, 1924, E. T. Bettis, Justice of the Peace.”

The remaining history of the case up to the filing of the bill, etc., has been stated.

The answer further averred that at the time the sixit was taken before the Justice of the Peace, complainant was doing business in the State of Tennessee; that it had a crew of salesmen in Hamblen county working under an assistant division superintendent by the name of J. M.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Tenn. App. 513, 1927 Tenn. App. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wrought-iron-range-co-v-devault-tennctapp-1927.