Newman v. Bank of Greenville
Newman v. Bank of Greenville
Opinion of the Court
delivered .the opinion of the court.
The consideration and determination of the three substantial questions presented by the appeal and cross-appeal herein will finally settle the rights and liabilities of the several parties to this proceeding.
1. Did the court below err in refusing to charge the defendants with the proceeds of nine bales of cotton, and $270 in money, received from and on account of Satterwhite ?
The evidence shows that Moyses, in order to secure certain advances from appellants, in the year 1887, agreed to and actually did deposit certain collaterals with appellants, among which was a note given by Satterwhite for $250, which note was endorsed by Moyses in blank at or before its deposit with appellants. It appears to us quite satisfactorily, from all the pleadings of appellants and the proofs submitted, that the deposit of Satterwhite’s deed of trust with appellants, by which the $250 note was secured, as well as other sums to be advanced thereafter by Moyses to Satterwhite, was designed only as security for the payment by Moyses of the amount of the note. Collaterals to the amount of $2000 were to be deposited by Moyses with appellants, and were in fact so deposited; and this Satterwhite note was one of the collaterals going to make up the $2000. Satterwhite’s deed of trust secured to appellants the sum named in the note, to wit, $250; and to that extent appellants were entitled to assert all the rights of the beneficiary in the deed of trust, but no further. Appellants cannot be heard to maintain that Satterwhite’s note having been fully paid off, the security of his trust-deed shall be used to satisfy any part of the $2000, agreed to be secured by collaterals remaining unpaid, or any other balance due from Moyses to them.
The action of the chancery court in refusing to charge defendants below with Satterwhite’s nine bales of cotton, and the $270 in money dérived from Satterwhite, meets our approbation.
2. Was the court below correct in decreeing payment by the Goldsmith Cotton & Provision Company of the value of the three bales of cotton marked “Sam D. W.,” amounting to $117?
The evidence raises a suspicion as to these three bales, but it is
3. Was the refusal of the court below to charge the Goldsmith Cotton & Provision Company with $277.96, the proceeds of the seven bales of cotton sold by said company on January 5,1887, erroneous ? This cotton was in the hands of said company on December 29, when one of complainant’s solicitors gave notice of complainant’s lien upon all Sligo cotton. It remained in said company’s possession until the 5th day of January following, on which day the writ of injunction sued out by complainant was executed on said company. Whether said seven bales of cotton were in the hands of the said company at the time of the execution of the injunction writ, appears to be left in doubt. Goldsmith, the president or manager of the company, testifies to his inability to say whether this cotton was sold before the injunction writ was executed or afterward, and there is no other evidence on this point. This branch of the case is readily resolvable by a well-known elementary rule of evidence, viz; the legal presumption of the continuance of a state of things, once established by proof, as at first, mitil the contrary is shown, or until a different presumption is raised from the nature of the subject in question. Manifestly, the rule may be easily pressed beyond reasonable limits, and the presumption of such continuance will depend largely upon the nature of the subject and circumstances to which it may be desired to be applied. In this case the seven bales of cotton were in this defendant’s possession on December 29, when he had notice given of complainant’s lien, and they so continued until January 5 following, on which day the injunction writ was served. In the absence of any evidence from the Goldsmith Company as to
Decree of the court beloio reversed, and final decree here, in accordance with this opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- H. & C. Newman v. Bank of Greenville
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Trust-Deed to secure Note and Account. Assignment of note as collateral. Where a debtor, under agreement to furnish his creditor with collateral for $2000, deposits with him notes to that amount, and among them a note for $250, endorsed in blank, and the trust-deed which secures it and also other sums to be advanced, the creditor receiving the collaterals does not thereby acquire any interest in the trust-deed beyond the amount of the $250 note; and after payment of the note he cannot as against a purchaser from the debtor of property embraced in the trust-deed claim the further security of the trust-deed to satisfy the balance remaining due by the debtor upon the $2000, to secure which the collaterals were given. 2. Agreement oe Attorneys. Will prevail over evidence. In a controversy involving the issue whether certain cotton in controversy was a part of a crop grown on a certain place and shipped to defendant, an agreement in the record signed by attorneys on both sides, giving what purports to be a true exhibit of all the cotton so grown and shipped, will control, notwithstanding there is evidence tending to show that the cotton in controversy, which is omitted in the exhibit, was also part of such crop and shipment. 3. Notice. Status presumed to continue. Service of writ. Where one, who has for five or six days been in possession of cotton which is subject to a landlord’s lien, sells it on the very day he is served with a writ enjoining the sale, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, it will be presumed that the writ was served before the sale, in accordance with the rule of evidence that a state of things once shown to exist (in this case possession) will be presumed to continue until a change is shown, or a different presumption arises.