Avery Sons v. Waples

49 S.W. 151, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 672, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 337
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 49 S.W. 151 (Avery Sons v. Waples) 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
Avery Sons v. Waples, 49 S.W. 151, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 672, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 337 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

RAINEY, Associate Justice.

B. F. Avery & Sons, appellants, brought suit against Deeper Hardware Company, a private corporation, on four certain promissory notes executed by said company to said Avery & Sons. A foreclosure of a chattel mortgage was sought against certain property alleged to belong to said company, and said property caused to be sequestered. John G. Waples was made a party defendant, it being alleged that said hardware company had made a general deed of assignment for the benefit of creditors with said Waples as assignee. That said Waples had duly qualified as such assignee and refused to recognize appellant’s rights in the goods mortgaged.

The hardware company made default.

Waples defended as assignee, and pleaded that said mortgage was void, being upon goods which constituted a part of a general stock of hardware and agricultural implements. That said mortgaged goods were allowed to remain in possession of said hardware company, and same daily exposed to sale in parcels in due course of trade. He further alleged the *673 insolvency of said hardware company, and prayed judgment against appellant and sureties on sequestration bond.

A recovery was had by Waples, assignee, and appellant appealed.

Conclusions of Fact.—The following conclusions of fact of the trial court'are not challenged and the same are adopted by this court, to wit:

"1. The court finds that the notes and contract of lien or chattel mortgage as set out in plaintiff’s pleadings herein were made and entered into between plaintiff and defendant, Leeper Hardware Company, as alleged by plaintiff.

“2. That upon said notes there is now due the sum of $2447.90, justly due from defendant, Leeper Hardware Company, to plaintiff, B. F. Avery & Sons.

“3. That the goods and property described in the sheriff’s return upon the writ of sequestration herein issued were goods and property covered by and included in the contract of lien or chattel mortgage set forth and sued upon by the plaintiff in its pleading herein, and that the value of each article of said property was as stated opposite same in the sheriff’s return, aggregating in amount $1054.25.

“4. The court further finds that defendant, Leeper Hardware Company, on the 13th day of November, 1896, duly executed and delivered to defendant, John G-. Waples, its deed of general assignment, under the statutes of Texas, conveying to him all of its property as statutory assignee, which deed of assignment was on the same date accepted by the said John G. Waples, who immediately qualified as such assignee, and the said property so sequestrated came into his possession and was held by him in his possession when same was taken from him by the writ of sequestration aforesaid.

"5. That no creditor of the Leeper Hardware Company had accepted under said deed of assignment prior to the date of the levy of the said sequestration and the seizure thereby of the property involved herein, said seizure being on November 25, 1896, but that numerous creditors of Leeper Hardware Company have since said seizure duly accepted under said deed of assignment.

“6. That after the seizure under sequestration of said property, the said defendant Waples, declining to replevy, the said property was duly replevied by plaintiff, upon whose bond of replevy H. E. Hamilton and J. C. O’Connor are its sureties, and upon execution and delivery of said bond to the sheriff of Grayson County the said property described in sheriff’s return on said writ was delivered into the possession of plaintiff.

“7. The court finds that the contract lien or chattel mortgage set out in plaintiff’s pleading and sued upon herein was executed and delivered by the Leeper Hardware Company to plaintiff, and was accepted by plaintiff on the 16th day of September, 1896, and that plaintiff received and took said contract lien upon a consideration, to wit, the extension of time upon its indebtedness against Leeper Hardware Company, all as set forth *674 and agreed upon in the said contract lien, and that plaintiff has performed and has always been ready, and has tendered performance of its part of said contract to defendant. That thereunder it renewed its note against Leeper Hardware Company, maturing October 15, 1896, in accordance with the contract, and it renewed its notes maturing November 15, 1896, in accordance with the contract, receiving at each time from Leeper Hardware Company new or renewal notes as provided for in said contract, and that thereafterward, at times designated in the contract, plaintiff was ready to carry out its part of said contract, and tendered to Leeper Hardware Company performance thereof; but that after November 15, 1896, defendant, Leeper Hardware Company, failed to carry out its part of said contract.

"8. That when said contract lien or chattel mortgage was taken by plaintiff it relied upon the statements therein made by Leeper Hardware Company through E. D. Leeper, its president, as to the financial condition, assets, and resources, etc., of the Leeper Hardware Company.

"9. The court finds that on September 16, 1896, however, the said Leeper Hardware Company was then insolvent, and that fact was known to its president, E. D. Leeper, but said Leeper Hardware Company was. then conducting its business in the ordinary way, and was a going business.

"10. The court finds, however, that it is neither alleged by defendants nor proved that on September 16, 1896, the said Leeper Hardware-Company was in contemplation of making a general assignment under the statutes of Texas.

"11. The court finds that plaintiff was on September —, 1896, and still is, a wholesale mercantile house, domiciled in Louisville, Ky., and the Leeper Hardware Company was in September, 1896, a retail mercantile house, located at Denison, Texas, and at the time of the giving of the contract lien or chattel mortgage described in plaintiff’s pleading and sued upon herein, the property covered thereby was located in the storehouse of Leeper Hardware Company, and it was intended and contemplated by the plaintiff and Leeper Hardware Company that the said property should be kept in the continuous possession of Leeper Hardware Company, defendant, to be daily exposed to sale as merchandise in parcels in the regular course of business of such merchandise, and the control of' such business by the sale of such goods by Leeper Hardware Company, but with the understanding that any proceeds from said sales of said security goods should at all times be held as the property of and subject to the order of B. F. Avery & Sons.

"And the court further finds that the said property was daily exposed to sale in parcels in the regular course of business of such merchandise by the Leeper Hardware Company, and was being so sold at the time of its assignment to defendant, John G. Waples, and that said property was mingled with all the other goods which said defendant had and was- *675 offering for sale, and so remained until the date of the seizure under plaintiff’s writ.

“12.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W. 151, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 672, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avery-sons-v-waples-texapp-1898.