J.P. Browder & Co. v. Hill

Decision Date14 April 1905
Docket Number1,371.
Citation136 F. 821
PartiesJ. P. BROWDER & CO. v. HILL.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Sixth Circuit

Robert Pritchard and J. B. Sizer, for appellants.

Wm. L Frierson (Lewis Shepherd, of counsel), for appellee.

Before LURTON, SEVERENS, and RICHARDS, Circuit Judges.

LURTON Circuit Judge.

The appellants constitute a partnership which was engaged in selling groceries and other merchandise at Chattanooga. The appellee is the trustee in bankruptcy of a corporation engaged in making iron at the same place. Appellants supplied goods to workmen in the employment of the furnace company upon orders of the company, and for the amount of such orders supplied within three months prior to adjudication in bankruptcy, remaining unpaid, filed a claim in their own name, and asserted a laborer's lien upon the property of said bankrupt under a Tennessee statute giving a lien to workmen employed by such corporations. The claim was allowed as an unsecured claim. Because the lien claimed was disallowed, the creditor has appealed.

The evidence shows that from time to time the furnace company gave to its workmen, on account of current wages, orders upon the appellants for goods and merchandise. These orders were charged up against the men receiving them, and at the end of each month appellants would present the orders received and paid during the month, and receive a credit for the total amount on the books of the company, less 5 per cent. deducted from the face of the orders by an arrangement between the parties. Upon some occasions only partial payments were made and notes given for the balance, and for the two months immediately preceding bankruptcy no payments at all were made to appellants on account of such orders. The aggregate of appellants' claim is $2,265.85, of which $750 is represented by a promissory note for that amount. The workmen themselves received such orders as payments, and neither made any assignment of them, nor of their claim for wages, nor agreed to any substitution of appellants to any lien in their favor as laborers. Such orders rarely, if ever, equaled the amount due to the receiver as wages, and only from 40 to 60 per cent. of their monthly wages were paid in such orders. For the rest they received or expected to receive money upon the next pay day. It is inferable that the workmen who accepted such orders for part of their wages are themselves claiming, for the balance due them, priority out of the bankrupt estate, either as lienors under the Tennessee labor lien statute, or under the priority accorded by the bankrupt law.

The stipulated facts include a statement that, 'if the priority claimed by Browder & Co. is allowed, the assets (of the bankrupt estate) will not be sufficient to pay labor claims in full after paying expenses of administration.'

By the Tennessee act of 1897, p. 222, c. 78, a lien is given in behalf of the employes and laborers of any corporation doing business within the state, upon corporate property, 'for any sums due them for their labor and service. ' By the second section of this act it is provided, that the lien so created 'shall only extend to and protect such claims as may have accrued within three months of the beginning of any suit for the enforcement thereof, and shall continue during the pendency of any suit brought for its enforcement. ' Assuming that this Tennessee statute creates a specific lien, and not a mere right of priority in distribution, the question we have to decide is whether the lien which once existed in behalf of the respective laborers survives in behalf of appellants under the circumstances of this case. Appellants do not claim in their petition or assignment of error or briefs that there has been any assignment of the labor claims pro tanto by consent or knowledge of the laborers themselves. In the absence of evidence that the owners of such lien claims intended to sell, and agreed that the lien should be kept alive for the benefit of the purchaser, payment, and not an assignment, will be presumed. Venner v. F.L. & T. Co., 90 F. 349, 33 C.C.A. 95. There is therefore no foundation for any claim that appellants are assignees of the claims or lien in behalf of labor claims under any agreement, express or implied, with the creditors themselves. What they do claim is that there existed an express agreement with the debtor, the furnace company, that such claims, when paid off by them, 'should stand against the furnace company in the same attitude as if held by the original wage earners.'

The mere fact that one pays off a debt at the instance of the debtor, or lends money to pay off such debt, does not entitle him to subrogation to the liens of the creditors so paid off. McDonald, Shea &...

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12 cases
  • Martin v. Hickenlooper
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • August 4, 1936
    ... ... volunteer. See infra ... In ... Hill v. Ritchie (1916) 90 Vt. 318, 98 A ... 497, at page 498, L. R. A. 1917 A, 731, it was stated: ... volunteer.'" ... In ... Browder & Co. v. Hill (C. C. A. 1905) 136 ... F. 821, 823, it is stated: ... [59 P.2d 1149] ... ...
  • French v. Grand Beach Co.
    • United States
    • Michigan Supreme Court
    • July 29, 1927
    ...Miller, 15 Wis. 677 (original edition, 612); Commercial & Farmers' Bank v. Scotland Neck Bank, 158 N. C. 238, 73 S. E. 157;Browder & Co. v. Hill (C. C. A.) 136 F. 821;Warford v. Hankins, 150 Ind. 489, 50 N. E. 468;Manilla Anchor Brewing Co. v. Raw Silk Co., 163 App. Div. 30, 148 N. Y. S. 11......
  • Morris v. Twichell
    • United States
    • North Dakota Supreme Court
    • August 10, 1933
    ... ... parties. 37 Cyc. 369, 371, 373, 375, 474; Browden v ... Hill, 136 F. 821; Anderson v. Kain, 40 N.D ... 632, 169 N.W. 501; Norris v. German American State ... ...
  • Citizens' Mercantile Co. v. Easom
    • United States
    • Georgia Supreme Court
    • July 19, 1924
    ... ... thereof; thence north to the land of the estate of J. J ... Hill; thence east 76 3/4 yards; thence north 115 yards, to ... line of Ben Easom; thence east 143 1/2 ... 1, 1 ... N.E. 485, 53 Am.Rep. 474; Demourelle v. Piazza, 77 ... Miss. 433, 27 So. 623; Browder v. Hill, 136 F. 821, ... 69 C.C.A. 499; 27 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) 236; Witt ... v. Rice, 90 ... ...
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