Bank v. Chattanooga Pulley Co.
Bank v. Chattanooga Pulley Co.
Opinion of the Court
Suit was brought by the bank to collect a note for $850 and interest from the defendant company. This note was made by the Chattanooga Wood Split Pulley Company to Willing-ham, and by him indorsed to complainant. The defendant company took the assets of the Split Pulley Company, and agreed to pay, in consideration, certain debts of the old company. At the same time the note was delivered to the bank, collaterals to the amount of the note were also handed to it. These collaterals were the notes of the Muskegon Lumber Company, payable to the old company.
Upon the hearing, the Chancellor held that complainant was entitled to recover the amount of the note and interest, and gave judgment therefor, and respondent appealed and assigned errors. The cause has been heard by the Court of Chancery Appeals, and that Court was of opinion that the course of dealing between the parties had been such that it would be inequitable to allow complainant to recover the full amount of its debt and interest, unless it should be charged with the value of certain personal property replevied in Florida, by virtue of and in a suit upon the collaterals held by it, and which it appears had never been disposed of. It directed that after credit should be entered for this value, the defendant should account to complainant for the balance of the debt, on the basis of an estimation of said debt in connection with all other debts taken up and canceled by the defendant, at the amount at which
Complainant appealed from so much of the decree as charged it with the value of the property re-plevied in Florida, and defendant from all the rest of the decree, and specially so much as fixed the value of the machinery to be credited as of the date of reference instead of the date when possession was taken under the replevin proceedings.
Both parties appealing, both have assigned errors and filed briefs supporting their contentions. The theory of the complainant bank is that it only held the notes of the old company as collateral, and while the old company was entitled, because of their notes, to recover the property replevied in Florida to secure their payment, the legal title of the property having been retained for this purpose, still the bank was not obliged to pursue and take possession of this property, but only to exercise due diligence to collect the collateral notes, which it did by suit and judgment; that, while the property was replevied
It appears that, when the property was recovered under the replevin suit in the name of the bank, but at the instance and real suit of the old company, there- was an attorney’s fee of $50, which had to be paid before the property could be shipped, and it would have been shipped upon the payment of this fee, but the fee was not paid by either party, and, hence, the property was not shipped, but is still in Florida.
The Court of Chancery Appeals found that it was not the duty of the complainant bank to pay the fee, and also that the old company agreed to pay it; therefore, the Court was unwilling to charge complainant with the property, and unwilling to charge defendant with the whole debt, and hence the reference to ascertain the present value of the prop
The defendant contends, however, that the bank should be charged with the value of the property when it was replevied, and not its present value. Unquestionably this would be true if the bank, of its own motion, had undertaken to bring this suit and replevy this property, or if it had been its legal duty so to do. In that event, it must, at its peril, have proceeded to take the property into actual possession, and realize whatever it could from it, and credit the defendant therewith, and to have done everything necessary and made all proper advances and paid all proper expenses, to realize the value of the property.
But the Court of Chancery Appeals finds that the suit was brought not by the complainant on its own motion, and in discharge of a duty it owed as holder of the collateral, but at the request of the old company, and for its benefit and accommodation, and that after the property was replevied the old company could have caused its delivery by advancing the $50 attorney’s fee, and forebore to do so, although it promised to pay it through Mr. Patton, its agent and officer, who was also secretary and general manager of defendant company. The Court of Chancery Appeals has tried, in view of all these facts, to do equity between the parties by its decree and reference.
It is next insisted that the Court of Chancery
The contention is that the complainant should have no benefit from the compromise which the other creditors had made, inasmuch as the old company was hopelessly insolvent.
We are of opinion that, under the facts as found by the Court of Chancery Appeals, there is error in the conclusion to which they have come, and in the decree rendered by them.
If the complainant bank did all that the law required as to the collection of the collaterals, it cannot be charged with anything on that account unless it actually collected them or something upon them. We think the Court is correct in holding that they were under no legal obligation to bring the suit to recover this property which was bound for the notes.
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