1st Nat. Bk. v. So. Beaumont L. I.

128 S.W. 436, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 315, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 524
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 13, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 128 S.W. 436 (1st Nat. Bk. v. So. Beaumont L. I.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
1st Nat. Bk. v. So. Beaumont L. I., 128 S.W. 436, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 315, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 524 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

The First Notional Bank of Houston, appellant, brought this suit against the South Beaumont Land Improvement Company, appellee, for damages for conversion, alleging that appellant was the owner of certain shares of stock in said company, evidenced by a certificate which had been issued to I. D. Polk, and which had been acquired by appellant, and that it had presented said certificate to said company and demanded that said shares of stock be transferred to it on the books of said company and the issue to appellant of a new stock certificate, but that such company refused to make such transfer, refused to issue the new certificate, and refused to recognize any right of appellant in said *Page 317 company or its stock, wherefore appellant alleged that said company had converted said stock, alleged its value and prayed judgment therefor.

The appellee, South Beaumont Land Improvement Company, answered by general demurrer and general denial, and pleaded specially that the foreclosure judgment rendered in the District Court of Harris County on April 9, 1906, and the sale of the stock thereunder on June 1, 1906, at which appellant purchased it, were irregular and void, or at any rate voidable, for the reasons that the sole citation on which the judgment — which was a judgment by default — was had shows that it was served on the defendant I. D. Polk, in Jefferson County, Texas, by the sheriff of Harris County, Texas, there being no other service, and that the sale of the stock was made without the officer making the same under the order of sale issued upon said judgment having left notice of the levy thereunder with any officer of the South Beaumont Land Improvement Company, and without any notice of the sale mailed or delivered to the said I. D. Polk, and that said stock at said sale sold for a grossly inadequate sum.

On September 8, 1908, the appellee, I. D. Polk, filed a petition of intervention in the suit, in which he set up the same matters pleaded in the answer of the South Beaumont Land Improvement Company, and, in addition thereto, he tendered into court the amount which had been paid for the stock at said sale, and asked that the sale be set aside, and that the title to said stock be decreed to be in him.

The case was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment rendered against appellant that it take nothing by its suit except the amount bid by it at the sale; that the appellee, South Beaumont Land Improvement Company, go hence without day, and that appellee, I. D. Polk, recover of and from appellant the title and possession of said shares of stock, as well as all costs incurred by him herein; from which judgment plaintiff, the First National Bank of Houston, has appealed.

The court filed its findings of fact, and from such findings and from the undisputed evidence in the record we deduce the following conclusions of the facts proven upon the trial, confining ourselves to such only as we deem material in the view we take of the case.

On February 28, 1906, I. D. Polk had pledged with the First National Bank of Houston certificate No. 17 for fifty shares, of the par value of $100 each, of the stock of the South Beaumont Land Improvement Company, to secure an indebtedness evidenced by a promissory note dated August 9, 1905, for $3,658.68, drawing ten percent per annum interest from date and stipulating for ten percent attorney's fees on the amount of the note if sued on or placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. On February 28, 1906, the bank sued Polk in the District Court of Harris County to recover the principal, interest and attorney's fees of said note. A citation was issued in said cause directed to the sheriff or any constable of Jefferson County, Texas, where I. D. Polk resided, and was served on said Polk in said county, and the return of the service is signed thus: "Ras Landry, Sheriff Harris County, Texas. By R. A. McReynolds, Deputy." At the time of the service of said citation Ras Landry was, *Page 318 in fact, the sheriff of Jefferson County, Texas. Polk filed no answer in said cause, and the judgment shows that he failed to appear and answer, but further shows that it was rendered upon evidence, and recites, "and it appearing to the court that said defendant was duly and personally served with a citation herein more than ten days before the first day of this term of the court," etc. The judgment foreclosed the lien of said bank on said stock and ordered the sheriff or any constable of Harris County to sell the same as under execution, and that the sheriff did sell same under order of the court after proper advertisement, but he did not levy on the stock and did not leave any notice of a levy on same with any officer of the South Beaumont Land Improvement Company. The stock so sold under said judgment on June 1, 1906, was bought in by the bank at $100, which sum was credited on the judgment. The stock at said time was of the value of $2,000. The citation issued and served on I. D. Polk in the suit of First National Bank v. Polk was irregular, for the reason that Ras Landry, sheriff of Jefferson County, signed the return as sheriff of Harris County, and with this exception there were no irregularities whatever in the judgment, nor in the order of sale issued thereunder, nor in the advertisement of sale, nor in the sale itself, and all the other proceedings leading up to the sale of the stock of the bank were in all respects regular and proper.

After the sale of the stock the First National Bank of Houston began trying to collect the balance on the judgment, but without success, until it finally made a contract with Fleming Fleming, a firm of lawyers at Beaumont, who undertook to collect the same upon an agreement that they should receive one-third of any sum collected through their efforts. Their activity resulted in the payment of the balance due by Polk on the judgment, through George C. Greer, on April 23, 1907, who, upon making the payment, took an assignment to himself of the judgment, and the payment was made and the assignment taken at the instance and for the benefit of I. D. Polk. Shortly after George C. Greer made this payment I. D. Polk offered and tendered to the bank the sum of $109.15, which was the amount, with interest, bid by the bank for said stock, and equal to the balance due upon the judgment after crediting the portion thereof which the bank had received from George C. Greer. The bank refused to accept said tender and refused to surrender said stock. The said sum was again tendered at the trial of this case and placed in the registry of the court. On July 6, 1906, after the bank purchased the stock at the sale above mentioned, it presented the certificate therefor to I D. Polk, as president, and James V. Polk, as secretary, of the South Beaumont Land Improvement Company, and demanded of them that the said stock be transferred on the books of the company to it, and that a new certificate be issued in lieu of the one presented, and each and both of them refused said demands for the South Beaumont Land Improvement Company, and each and both of them declined to recognize that the bank had any rights whatever in the company. At that time the stock in question was of the value of $2,000. Shortly after George C. Greer paid the balance due the bank on the judgment the bank paid to Fleming Fleming one-third of the *Page 319 amount thereof, under the contract with them, which amounted to $1,513.90.

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W. 436, 60 Tex. Civ. App. 315, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/1st-nat-bk-v-so-beaumont-l-i-texapp-1910.