American National Bank of Paris v. First National Bank of Clarksville

114 S.W. 176, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 519, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 409
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 114 S.W. 176 (American National Bank of Paris v. First National Bank of Clarksville) 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
American National Bank of Paris v. First National Bank of Clarksville, 114 S.W. 176, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 519, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 409 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

HODGES, Associate Justice.

— John M. Mims, .who resided in Bed Biver County, Texas, died on or about the 25th day of January, 1907. Prior to his death, some time during the year 1901, he bought a tract of land, consisting of about 357 acres, from Daisy Connor Pierce, and gave his note for $500, in which a vendor’s lien was retained, as a part of the consideration. Some time thereafter, and before his death, Mims contracted various other debts to different parties, among whom was the First National Bank of Clarksville, Texas. The Clarksville bank became the owner of the Pierce note and some other outstanding debts and liens against Mims, which, together with Mims’ personal indebtedness to it, amounted to several thousand dollars at the time of his death. All of the debts left by Mims were community obligations, and the 357-acre tract of land before mentioned was the community property of Mims and wife. At the time of his death he left but one surviving heir, a daughter, Mrs. Gertrude Allen, the wife of W. B. Allen, one of the defendants in this suit. After the death of Mims, W. B. Allen, the husband of Gertrude Allen, appears to have taken charge of a sawmill plant previously owned by Mims and situated on the tract of land before mentioned, and began to operate it, to cut timber, saw lumber, and to sell the lumber indiscriminately. About the last of April, 1907, W. B. Allen borrowed $2,053.35 from the American National Bank of Paris, Texas, and gave as a security for its payment a mortgage, or what purports to be a mortgage, on lumber on the yards at the Mims sawmill, in Bed Biver County, Texas. This mortgage was duly *522 registered in the office of the county clerk of Bed Biver County, Texas. On the 15th day of May, 1907, Mrs. Mims, the survivor of the community of herself and John M. Mims, conveyed the tract of land and other property belonging to the Mims estate, with ’ the exception of the homestead and some personal property, to W. B. Allen, in consideration of $125 in cash and the assumption and agreement by Allen to pay all of the debts against the estate of John M. Mims. In August, 1907, J. F. McBeynolds, the president of the American Kational Bank of Paris, one of the parties to this suit, visited the Mims mill and there interviewed W. B. Allen concerning the security which had theretofore been pledged to the American national Bank to secure the payment of -his note, and requested Allen to point out the lumber which he had mortgaged to that bank. McBeynolds was acting for and in behalf of the American national Bank. Allen thereupon designated sixty stacks of lumber situated in the yards of the mill as the lumber upon which the American national Bank had its mortgage; and at the request of McBeynolds that he designate those stacks in some way so that they could be identified and that others would have notice of the mortgage, Allen put a placard or label upon each, bearing the following: “Mortgaged to the American national Bank.” Some time thereafter, about the 1st of September, when the note from Allen to the American national Bank became due, McBeynolds again visited Allen at the mill and demanded a settlement, and, according to his testimony, Allen declared that he was unable to meet the note except with the lumber, and told Mc-Beynolds to take possession of the lumber and sell it under the mortgage. This McBeynolds proceeded to do; and after having advertised the lumber for the requisite time, sold it at public outcry at the courthouse door in Clarksville, Bed Biver County, and purchased it for the American national Bank for the sum of $750, which amount was entered as a credit on Allen’s note. H. H. Lennox, attorney for the First national Bank of Clarksville, was present at the sale, and in behalf of the First national Bank of Clarksville gave notice that that bank claimed a mortgage upon the property sold and would, in course of time, expect to foreclose its lien. On the 11th day of September, 1907, this suit was filed by the First national Bank of Clarksville, making Jdella Davis and her husband, the Corinth Engine & Boiler Works, the First national Bank of Enloe, the American national Bank of Paris, the First State Bank of Klondike, and W. B. Allen and wife, Gertrude Allen, defendants. All of the other parties except the American national Bank and W. B. Allen and wife claimed to be creditors and to have some liens against the estate of John M. Mims and W. B. Allen. It appears that afterwards Mrs. Mims intervened in the suit and set up the vendor’s lien which she held against W. B. Allen reserved in the sale of the Mims estate to him for the consideration herein-before stated.

Insofar as the questions raised by this appeal are concerned, the material allegations of the plaintiff’s original petition set out the various debts held by it against the estate of John M. Mims, and liens upon the 357 acres of land before mentioned. It sets out the *523 fact that Mrs. Martha Mims, in her own right and as the survivor of the community of herself and John M. Mims, did, on the 15 th day of May, convey the land above mentioned to W. B. Allen for the considerations stated; that Allen accepted the deed according to its terms and conditions, and agreed to pay said indebtedness. It alleges that since the purchase of the 357 acres of land and the creation of its lien thereon, Mims made permanent and valuable improvements, consisting of the purchase and location of a certain sawmill and appurtenances; that at the time said liens were created there was standing and growing upon the land a large amount of valuable timber, and that the material value of said land was on account of that timber, and that since the death of Mims, Allen, without the consent of plaintiff or the owners of the vendor’s lien note, had cut and removed from the said tract of land the growing timber thereon to the amount of one million feet, of the value of $3,000 as it stood in the trees, and that said security has been depreciated to that amount; that there is now located upon said land and within the mill yard of the said W. B. Allen sixty-two stacks of yellow pine lumber, one stack of kiln-dried lumber, a large amount of dressed lumber and various other small piles of lumber, and also a certain quantity of logs unsawed. The lumber is estimated to be worth about $2,000 and the logs $500. It is further alleged that the timber cut and removed from the said land was a material part of the plaintiff’s security. Plaintiff prayed, among other things, that its deed of trust and vendor’s lien be established and foreclosed upon the land, machinery, lumber and logs mentioned and described in the petition.

It is unnecessary to mention the answers filed by any of the defendants except that of the American National Bank, inasmuch as it is the only one which has complained of the judgment of the court. On December 27, 1907, the American National Bank filed its first amended original answer, claiming an indebtedness against Allen by note for the sum of $2053.35, with interest from the 30th day of August, 1907, and attorney’s fees. It acknowledged the payment of two credits amounting in the aggregate to $1358.12. It set out its mortgage executed by Allen, as before mentioned, and the further fact that thereafter Allen had delivered "the lumber to it and the lumber had been sold under the terms of the deed of trust, and that the credit of $750 had been placed upon the back of the note as the result of the proceeds of that sale. It also alleged that it remained in possession of said stacks of lumber continuously from the time it was delivered to it by W. B.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W. 176, 52 Tex. Civ. App. 519, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-national-bank-of-paris-v-first-national-bank-of-clarksville-texapp-1908.