Avery v. I. Popper & Bro.

49 S.W. 219, 92 Tex. 337, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 206
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1898
DocketNo. 654.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 49 S.W. 219 (Avery v. I. Popper & Bro.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Avery v. I. Popper & Bro., 49 S.W. 219, 92 Tex. 337, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 206 (Tex. 1898).

Opinions

I. Popper Bro. filed suit in the District Court of Hunt County on June 29, 1893, against J.H. and M.E. Cooke, W.W. Avery, and John M. Avery, to recover $775 of a note made by J.H. and M.E. Cooke to T.H. King, dated on May 26, 1891, due on the 1st of November, 1891, and interest thereon; and R. R. Neyland Co., consisting of R.R. Neyland, filed suit in the same court on the same day against the said parties to recover of the said M.E. Cooke and J.H. Cooke the balance of the same note, and in each case the plaintiff sought to foreclose a mortgage upon property hereinafter described which was alleged to be in the possession of W.W. and J.M. Avery. The two suits, were consolidated and the case tried before the judge without a jury, who rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs each for his proportion of the note and interest against J.H. and M.E. Cooke, and against J.M. Avery and his sureties on a replevy bond for the value of fifty cows, one bay mare colt, one bay horse colt, and one black mule colt. Upon appeal, the judgment was reformed and rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the amount adjudged by the court below and for the further sum of $534.

We copy the conclusions of fact of the Court of Civil Appeals as follows: "On May 26, 1891, J.H. Cooke and his wife, M.E. Cooke, executed and delivered to T.H. King their joint and several promissory notes for $1940, payable on the 1st day of November thereafter, with interest from January 1, 1891, at the rate of 12 per cent per annum. The note provided for 10 per cent attorney's fee, if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. On the 10th day of April, 1892, the payee, T.H. King, transferred without recourse to I. Popper Bro. an interest of $775 in said note, with interest thereon at the rate expressed in the note from its date. At the same time, said payee transferred without recourse the balance of said note, principal and interest, to R.R. Neyland, under the firm name of R. R. Neyland Co. To secure the payment of said note, the makers thereof on May 26, 1891, executed and delivered to T.H. King their chattel mortgage, whereby they conveyed to him, among other property, fifty cows, with their spring calves (spring of 1891), cows branded 'COOK' on the left side and 'AK' on left hip, the calves at the time not branded; also one bay mare colt, one bay horse colt, and one black mule colt. This instrument was filed and duly registered as a chattel mortgage in the chattel mortgage register of Hunt County, Texas, in which the mortgagors resided and the property was situated, on May 30, 1891. On June 14, 1893, the United States marshal, by virtue of an execution issued on June 9, 1893, out of the United. States Circuit Court of Dallas, on a judgment therein rendered in favor of W.W. Avery and against J.M. Cooke and sureties on his sequestration bond, but not against his wife, said sureties being O. Hail and William Hodges and J.M. Johnston, levied upon the property above described. The levy was made in Hunt County by direction of J.M. Avery, the attorney of W.W. Avery. All of said property was on June 28, 1893, by virtue of said execution, sold by the United States marshal in Hunt County, Texas, at public outcry, and was bid in by J.M. Avery in the *Page 340 name of W.W. Avery, the amount of the bid being credited upon the execution, and all of the property was then delivered by the marshal to J.M. Avery, the attorney of W.W. Avery. Oil June 29, 1893, 1. Popper Bro. and R. R. Neyland Co. filed separate suits against J.H. and M.E. Cooke and W.W. and J.M. Avery to recover of the makers of the note above described the amounts respectively due them by reason of the transfer of said note by the payee, and to foreclose the mortgage given to secure the note upon the property above described. The property was seized, while in possession of J.M. Avery, by virtue of writs of sequestration issued in these suits. After such seizure J.M. Avery replevied and resumed possession of the property, Charles C. Cobb and H.I. Phillips being the sureties on his replevy bond. After J.M. Avery replevied the property, he drove it out of Hunt County, Texas, and within a short time thereafter sold and disposed of all of it. He had none of said property on hand when this suit was tried in the court below, and would have been wholly unable to produce said property, or any part thereof, in satisfaction or partial satisfaction of the judgment rendered in said court. At the time the mortgage was executed to secure the note there were many more animals of the same description mingled with those upon which the mortgage was given, but the evidence is sufficient to show that just prior to the execution of the mortgage the animals embraced in it were pointed out to Mr. Neyland, who represented King in taking the mortgage security and drafting the mortgage. But the animals covered by the mortgage were not separated from the others of the same description with which they were mingled, nor was there such separation when the execution in favor of Neyland (Avery) was levied upon the property in controversy. The evidence is reasonably sufficient to show that the fifty head of cows described in the mortgage, as well as all others of like description mingled with them, were the separate property of Mrs. M.E. Cooke at the time the mortgage was executed, and continued to be her separate property until disposed of by Mr. Avery. The fifty calves were calved during the marriage of J.H. Cooke and wife, after the cows became the separate property of Mrs. M.E. Cooke, and were therefore when the mortgage was given, and the execution in favor of Avery levied, community property of J.H. and M.E. Cooke. The horses and mules involved in this suit were the offspring of the separate property of M.E. Cooke during her marriage with J.H. Cooke, and were likewise the community property of J.H. Cooke and wife at the time the mortgage was given and the writ of execution in favor of Avery levied upon same. From the view we take of the case, which will be shown in our conclusions of law, we do not deem it necessary to pass upon the question as to whether or not the deed of trust made on the 15th day of November, 1889, by J.H. Cooke to J.E. Steger, through which Mrs. M.E. Cooke claims the property mortgaged to secure the debt sued on, was fraudulent; but, if we deemed the question essential to a proper disposition of this case, we should find that the testimony is reasonably sufficient to show that such deed of trust was made by J.H. Cooke for the *Page 341 purpose of securing his creditors, among whom was his wife, M.E. Cooke, and that the value of the property did not exceed the indebtedness it was transferred to secure. The finding of the trial court, which is sustained by the evidence, as to the value of the property in controversy, is as follows: 'Cows, $13 per head; horses, $50 per head; mules, $75 per head; seventeen 2-year-old past steers, $12 per head; and thirty-three 2-year-old past heifers, $10 per head' — aggregating $1384. Excluding the property sequestrated upon which the mortgage is sought to be foreclosed, the remainder of the property covered by the King mortgage was in June or July, 1893, worth $700. Since that time some of the stock not sequestrated have died and some strayed, so that those left on hand when the suit was tried in the court below did not exceed in value the sum of $200. When the suits which were consolidated were instituted, the appellant J.M. Avery resided in Dallas Count and has resided in that county continuously ever since that time. The evidence is insufficient to show the mortgage given to secure the note sued on was fraudulent, or that the property exceeded in value the debt it was mortgaged to secure."

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Highland Park State Bank v. Continental National Bank of Fort Worth
300 S.W.2d 304 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1957)
Estrada v. Reed
98 S.W.2d 1042 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)
Dallas Joint Stock Land Bank v. Henry
78 S.W.2d 725 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1935)
Wilson Co. v. Russell
1930 OK 127 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)
Bluitt v. Pearson
7 S.W.2d 524 (Texas Supreme Court, 1928)
Citizens' Nat. Bank of Ennis v. First Guaranty State Bank of Palmer
275 S.W. 860 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)
Griffin v. Mangrum
267 S.W. 279 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)
Mobley v. Robertson
266 S.W. 516 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)
Colley v. H. L. Edwards & Co.
258 S.W. 191 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1924)
Commercial Acceptance Trust v. Parmer
241 S.W. 586 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)
Walker v. Garland
235 S.W. 1078 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1922)
American Nat. Bank of Oklahoma v. Garland
235 S.W. 562 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1921)
Watson v. D. A. Paddleford & Son
221 S.W. 569 (Texas Supreme Court, 1920)
Gonzales v. Flores
200 S.W. 851 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1918)
McCaslin v. Veasy
199 S.W. 1173 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1917)
City of San Antonio v. Reed
192 S.W. 549 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1917)
Cooney v. Van Deren
182 S.W. 1190 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1916)
South Omaha National Bank v. McGillin
108 N.W. 257 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1906)
Avery v. Popper
179 U.S. 305 (Supreme Court, 1900)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 S.W. 219, 92 Tex. 337, 1898 Tex. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avery-v-i-popper-bro-tex-1898.