78 So. 3 | Miss. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
Appellee, Louis Cohn, assignee of the Commercial Bank & Trust Company, filed a petition in the chancery court of Lincoln county to require J. B. Nalty, appellant, to perform a certain agreement outlined in the petition. The cause of action arises out of the following state of facts: At the time the Commercial Bank & Trust Company went into the hands of a receiver, the East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company, a corporation engaged in the manufacture and sale of lumber, was indebted to the insolvent bank in a sum approximately twenty-nine thousand dollars evidenced by two notes. To secure these notes the lumber company had assigned and deposited with the bank a list of its accounts against various parties to whom ship- • ments of lumber Avere consigned. When the receivers took charge of the bank it was ascertained that the lumber company owed the bank a large balance, that many of the accounts pledged to the bank had been collected direct by officers of the lumber company, and that the state of the security was uncertain. Thereupon the receivers negotiated with the officers of the lumber company for an adjustment of the indebtedness and
*200 “This cause coming on to be heard on the petition of the assignees and the East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company, setting forth an agreement entered into between them, to the effect that-the said East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company, being indebted to the Commercial Bank & Trust Company, and having transferred and assigned certain accounts to said bank and to said assignees, and having transferred and set aside by bill of sale certain lumber to secure indebtedness mentioned and set forth at length in said petition; that said accounts were to be turned over to Louis Nalty and collected for the assignees through the organization and collecting department of the East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company, and the proceeds thereof paid over to the assignees; that said lumber transferred was to be kept intact, and so much thereof as might be necessary for the use of the East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company was to be released to said company upon payment of the value agreed upon, said payment to be promptly turned over to said assignees; that said Louis Nalty was to give bond in the penalty of the value of the property turned over to -him to faithfully carry out the agreement and account for all moneys coming into his hands, and pay the same over to the assignees, said bond with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company as surety in the sum of thirty thousand dollars, being hereby approved; that all of said lumber was to be sold within a reasonable- time, said petition being referred to for the details, and the court having heard the same and being of the opinion that said agreement is lawful, and the carrying out thereof will be for the best interest of the estate and all parties concerned — it is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that said agreement be and the same is hereby allowed, ratified, and confirmed, all parties thereto to be accountable to the court for its faithful performance. The premium on the bond to be paid equally*201 by said East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company and assignees.
“Ordered, adjudged, and decreed tbis January 26, 1914.”
Following this petition and decree, comes the present petition, representing briefly and in general terms that John B. Nalty, the president of the company, “acting for himself and the East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company, by virtue of the agreements and representations made at the time to the assignees,” promised to substitute other accounts for the accounts which had been,, collected and to pay a difference in value of one thousand dollars in cash and to execute a mortgage on real estate owned by J. B. Nalty personally and situated in Hammond, La., represented to be worth five thousand dollars to secure the sum of three thousand nine hundred and one dollars and seventy-seven cents. It is stated that the lumber company delivered and properly transferred other accounts in the place of the worthless accounts, and also that some lumber pledged to the bank had been turned over to Louis D. Nalty for salej but that the defendant J. B. Nalty “promised and agreed that he would personally pay the said one thousand dollars and execute and deliver the mortgage-for three thousand nine hundred and one dollars and seventy-seven cents, which said agreement was the consideration for securing him from then and there paying over said amounts collected as aforesaid,” and that the defendant has wholly neglected and refused to pay the said sum or execute and deliver the said mortgage. The prayer of the petition is that the defendant be cited to show cause why he should not account to the estate for a total sum of four, thousand nine hundred and one dollars and seventy-seven cents and interest, and that on final hearing should be required to pay this sum into court for the use of the insolvent bank. There is also a prayer for general relief. This petition is met by general demurrer, the grounds of
We are of the opinion that the bill is insufficient, and that the demurrer should have been sustained. The bill is brief, and the general statements that the defendant Nalty agreed to pay a thousand dollars in cash and to execute a mortgage upon his individual lands in Louisiana are not supported by the exhibits. The joint petition of the assignees and the East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company outlining their agreemént for handling the accounts pledged to the bank, etc., nowhere shows that J. B. Nalty agreed to pay one thousand dollars in cash, and the whole record fails to show any reasonable hypothesis for the individual liability of J. B. Nalty for one thousand dollars or any other sum. The indebtedness held by the failed bank was against the East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company, and any accounts pledged to the bank and collected by J. B. Nalty had been collected for the lumber company, and nowhere does the record show that J. B. Nalty had appropriated to his own use any of these accounts or the proceeds arising therefrom. It affirmatively shows that all things done by J. B. Nalty in the business referred to were done and performed by him as the president or' officer of the East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company, and, in the absence of a showing to the contrary, it is to be presumed that his acts were in good faith. In fact the very petition relied on shows a custom whereby the officers of the lumber company adjusted any accounts in dispute, and when the accounts were adjusted and collections
The exhibits affirmatively show that J. B. Nalty agreed to indorse his company’s note for three thousand nine hundred and one dollars and seventy-seven cents. He did not agree to execute this note as his primary obligation, and the record does not show that he agreed to execute any mortgage upon his individual lands. From the petition it would appear that the lumber company agreed to execute the note and to execute the mortgage upon the company’s lands. In the petition relied on, the sole undertaking of J. B. Nalty in reference to the sum of three thousand nine hundred and one dollars and seventy-seven cents was merely to indorse his company’s note for that amount, payable in ninety days, and bearing interest. The East Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company is not a party defendant to this proceeding, and even though we treat the present case as one for a specific performance, the court has not jurisdiction of both parties in a way to compel the execution and delivery of the promissory note. If the bill is to be treated as one for a specific performance, there is a further difficulty. The lands upon which a mortgage is to be given are nowhere described. Neither the acreage nor the value is given, but it only shows that they are “certain.lands,” and that these lands are beyond the jurisdiction of this court and situated “in Louisiana.” The agreement of Nalty to indorse a promissory note for his company, or even to execute a rportgage on his own lands, could not be construed as the undertaking of
In our consideration of this case it is unnecessary to decide whether the signature of the Bast Union Lumber & Manufacturing Company, by J. M. Nalty, president, would be sufficient under the statute of frauds to bind Mr. Nalty personally. The whole proceeding is a strained effort to impose personal liability upon J. B. Nalty as an officer of his company without sufficient legal grounds.
The decree appealed from will be reversed, the demurrer sustained, and the bill dismissed.
jReversed, sustained and dismissed.