Abbott v. First Nat. Bank of Canyon

155 S.W. 321, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 366
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 321 (Abbott v. First Nat. Bank of Canyon) 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
Abbott v. First Nat. Bank of Canyon, 155 S.W. 321, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 366 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

J. H. Hall and G. L. ■Abbott were the owners of survey No. 9S, in block B — 5; Randall county, Tex., and also the owners of lots Nos. 14 and 15, in block 40, in the town of Canyon, Randall county, Tex., and the following liens, affecting the property, were effectuated upon the same in chronological order, and the First National Bank of Canyon, appellee herein, became the owner of said liens to secure certain indebtedness; upon the 9th day of May, 1908, said Hall and Abbott executed and delivered a mortgage to the said bank on the section 98 (except a small part constituting some railroad right of way) to secure a note of even date with said deed in trust, executed and delivered'to said bank, for the principal sum of $4,114. That on April 5, 1909, the same parties executed and delivered another deed in trust to the said lots 14 and 15, in block No. 40, to secure a $3,000 note of that date, payable to certain parties who indorsed the note without ‘ recourse, and transferred the lien in writing to William Gray of Donley county, Tex., and in October, 1911, J. L. Lof-tin, who had acquired Hall’s half interest in the lots, and who had assumed the payment of one-half of the $3,000 note, paid one-half of the amount due on the note to the said William Gray, and the appellee bank, who held a junior lien to that of Gray upon the same lots, at the same time paid the other half of said note and obtained a transfer of one half of the debt and lien to it. For that dpon the 5th day of October, 1909, the said Hall, and Abbott had executed another deed in .'trust to the said bank on the same lots to secure it in the payment of the note of •$4,114, executed the 9th of May, 1908 (which also ha.d been secured by a deed in trust upon the section of land already mentioned), and the mortgage of the 5th of October, 1909,-upon the two lots herein mentioned, secured the payment of another note of even date with said latter mortgage for the sum of $6,-847. That on January 20, 1910, G. L. Abbott executed individually another deed in trust in favor of the appellee bank herein, upon his undivided one-half interest in survey No. 98, mentioned above, and also upon his undivided one-half interest in the same lots, 14 and 15; in block 40, to secure another note for $4,000 of that date, payable to the said bank "and executed by E. F. Brown, A. E. Brown, and G. L. Abbott, with reference to which A. E.’Brown was a principal on the note in so far as the. appellee bank is concerned, as was the said ’ Abbott and the other Brown, although the said Abbott never signed the said note; but, as between A. E. Brown and the said Abbott, appellants herein, the said Brown was a surety upon said note, and the said Abbott was as to him a principal. “That on September 19, 1910, survey No. 98 was sold by J. H. Hall and G. L. Abbott at private sale, and the same paid for to the First National Bank of Canyon, plaintiff herein, and that $11,264 of the cash proceeds of said sale was deposited in' said bank, and that said bank paid out of said proceeds the sum of $655, principal and interest, to the state of Texas on said land, and secured a patent therefor, and paid off said $4,114 note, amounting to the sum of $4,281.68, leaving the sum of $6,327.32, one-half of which, $3,163.66, .belonged to each J. H. Hall and G. L. Abbott,” and the trial court further finds that the said Abbott obtained and delivered to said bank two vendor’s lien notes, each for $1,250, which is a second lien on the land, and delivered these notes to the bank as security for a debt due to the Platter Tobacco Company on a judgment lien against said section 98, which the said bank agreed to pay off for the purpose of clearing the title to the land, and which we find from this record was necessary for that purpose, to permit the consummation of the trade and to collect the proceeds of said sale. The appellee bank in handling the cash proceeds of the sale of said land to the amount of $11,264 applied a sufficient amount on the $4,114 note to cancel the same with interest, and made an application of credit on the $6,-847 note of $3,245.79, and exhausted the balance by application of payments to other notes in said bank, executed and delivered by the said Hall and Abbott, with the exception of the sum of $655, paid to the state of Texas, for the purpose of paténting the said survey 98, which seems to have been a. prerequisite for the consummation of the sale.

The appellant A. E. Brown assigns error because the $4,000 note, on which he was sued, was a debt of C. L. Brown and G. ■ L. Abbott, with himself as surety, and that as said note was secured by a second deed of trust on Abbott’s half interest in survey 98; that Abbott’s half interest in the balance of the cash proceeds, arising from the sale of said land, after the payment and cancellation of the $4,114 note, and the application of the money to patent the land, should have been applied upon said $4,000 note; and that the trial court erred in crediting only $1,200 of said amount in his favor, and also erred in making said credit as of the date of the judgment. He also insists that he was entitled to a credit for the value of G. L. Abbott’s interest in the two $1,250 vendor’s lien notes, and that the court should have ascertained the value of the same, and orj dered said notes sold, and the proceeds credited on the said $4,000 note, the plaintiff hay *323 ing released all deed of trust liens from said section of land.

[1] 1. It will be borne in mind that tbe two Browns and Abbott, wbo esecuted tbe $4,000 note, were principal co-obligors to tbe bank, although Abbott never signed tbe paper, though as between Abbott and A. E. Brown, appellants herein, the latter was a surety and the former a principal, as to their mutual obligations upon .the paper, and. the finding of the trial court and the evidence establish that the bank was without knowledge of the suretyship of A. E. Brown; hence the status of the paper in regard to the rights of the bank, with reference to the matter of the application of payments and marshaling of assets at the time when the payment should have been made or assets marshaled will, to a considerable extent, determine the rights of the parties. We are unable to ascertain why the appellee bank can deny the right of A. E. Brown to an application of a partial credit upon the $4,000 note at the time the land was sold and the cash delivered to the bank. It is true that the first lien by Hall and Abbott upon the whole section to secure the $4,114 note, and the lien upon the undivided half of the land by Abbott to secure the $4,000 note, were primarily for the benefit of the bank, but the money paid into the bank represented the principal proceeds of the sale of the land, and the liability to the bank by Abbott as a principal upon the $4,000 note was just as much a liability as upon the other note, and, if the bank released all liens upon the land and with proceeds in its hands directly proceeding from the sale, it would certainly be inequitable to divert the balance, after its first lien upon the whole land had been satisfied, and apply said balance upon different indebtedness, disregarding entirely the second lien securing the $4,000 note, and make no application of payment whatever upon the same, and then sue A. E. Brown, the appellant herein, and obtain judgment against him for the whole principal, interest, and attorney’s fees.

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155 S.W. 321, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbott-v-first-nat-bank-of-canyon-texapp-1913.