Bauman v. Jaffray

26 S.W. 260, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 489, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1894
DocketNo. 198.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 26 S.W. 260 (Bauman v. Jaffray) 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
Bauman v. Jaffray, 26 S.W. 260, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 489, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 25 (Tex. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

FINLEY, Associate Justice.

1. On December 7, 1891, E. Bauman executed a chattel mortgage conveying his stocks of goods, situated in Dallas and Fort Worth, to J. B. Simpson and E. M. Reardon as trustees, *492 to secure certain of his creditors, whom he divided into two classes, preferring class A to class B.

2. On December 8,1891, the B. C. Evans Company, a creditor embraced in said mortgage in class B, sued out an attachment against E. Bauman, placed the same in the hands of the sheriff, and he at once levied the same upon a portion of the stock at Fort Worth embraced in the mortgage. On the same day, with full knowledge of the mortgage, having examined it, appellant the Farmers and Mechanics National Bank of Fort Worth, whose-debt was $25,000, a creditor, and which debt was embraced in class A in said mortgage, also sued out an attachment against said Bauman, placed said writ and an indemnity bond in the hands of the sheriff who had made-the levy for the B. C. Evans Company, and was at the time taking an inventory of the goods.

3. The evidence was conflicting as to the instructions given the sheriff by appellant’s attorney at the time the writ was placed in his hands, and the issue was made whether the sheriff actually made a levy upon the stock of goods under appellant’s writ. The evidence was sufficient before the-trial court to warrant the conclusion that appellant’s attorney directed the writ to be levied, and that the sheriff did levy the writ upon said stock of goods; and we feel constrained in support of the judgment to so conclude.

4. Appellees, who were creditors embraced in class B, on learning of the attachment proceeding, regarded it as an election by the Farmers and Mechanics National Bank to reject the terms of the mortgage, and believing that if that debt was left out, there would be sufficient property for them to realize something on their debts, they accepted the mortgage. The property conveyed was not sufficient to pay all the debts secured by the mortgage, but was sufficient to pay a per cent upon appellees’ debts, if appellant be left out.

5. On December 12, 1891, appellant abandoned its attachment, directed the sheriff to return the writ not executed, and for the first time manifested its intention of acceptance of the mortgage by notifying the trustees that it accepted the mortgage.

6. On December 18, 1891, E. S. Jaffray & Co. and others, as plaintiffs, filed their petition in the District Court of Dallas County, Texas, for the removal of the trustees, J. B. Simpson and E. M. Reardon, and for the-appointment of a.receiver to take charge and administer the property conveyed by the deed of trust. The defendants in the suit were E. Bauman, who executed the deed of trust, Simpson and Reardon, the trusteés, and all the creditors named as constituting class A. Aside-from the allegations made by plaintiffs showing their interest in the deed of trust as the owners of the said debts included in class B, as therein set forth, said plaintiffs alleged that they had accepted under the said deed of trust, and set forth various grounds for the removal of the trustees and the appointment of a receiver. Plaintiffs alleged, that since the. *493 •execution of the deed of trust, B. C. Evans Company, a creditor of the said Bauman, secured by said deed of trust in the payment of a debt included in class B, and the Farmers and Mechanics National Bank, appellant, which was secured in the payment of a debt included in class A, had refused to accept under said deed of trust, and had repudiated the same, and had instituted suit against the said Bauman, each for the amount of the debt due it, and had secured the issuance and levy of writs of attachment against the said Bauman; that said writs of attachment had been levied upon a portion of the property conveyed by said deed of trust, and that the said B. C. Evans Company and the Farmers and Mechanics National Bank were causing the said property to be held adversely to the said trustees.

7. The Farmers and Mechanics National Bank filed an answer in said •cause on December 21, 1891. Said bank adopted the demurrer, pleas, and answer of the trustees, J. S. Simpson and E. M. Reardon, its co-defendants, and denied that it had taken possession of any part of the property conveyed in the said deed of trust, or in any way interfered with or molested or hindered the said trustees from carrying out and discharging the trust imposed upon them, and alleged that’it had notified the said trustees of its intention to accept the deed of trust and all benefits accruing under it.

8. On December 23, 1891, the said trustees were removed, and B. Blankenship was appointed receiver, and qualified as required by the •orders of the court.

9. On January 1, 1892, said receiver reported sales of property and receipt of proceeds amounting to about $165,000. The court confirmed the sale, and afterward ordered the receiver to pay 90 per cent of the •debt due each creditor in class A, excepting only the debt due the Farmers and Mechanics National Bank, appellant.

10. On January 11, 1892, appellant filed in said cause its application to the court for an order directing said receiver to pay its proportionate part, or 90 per cent, of the debt due it.

On January 8, 1892, appellant filed its first amended application for the payment of its proportionate part of the fund secured to be paid to it by the said deed of trust. Appellant alleged, that the said Bauman was indebted to it in the sum of $25,000, setting forth the particulars of such indebtedness; that the payment of said indebtedness was secured by the terms and provisions of said deed of trust executed by the said Bauman, as herein before stated; that appellant was and ever had been ready and willing to accept under the terms of the said deed of trust; that under the orders of the court, 90 per cent of all debts included in class A and secured by said deed of trust had been paid, except appellant’s debt, etc. No pleadings in opposition to appellant’s application and amended application were filed in the court below.

*494 11. On January 30, 1892, the court overruled the said application, holding that the same was not well founded in fact and law, and found that appellant had waived all right to any portion of the said trust fund, and had elected not to accept and take under the said deed of trust. From, this judgment this appeal is taken.

Opinion. — It is complained by assignments of error, that the trial court-erred in holding that the issuing and levying of the writ of attachment upon the property conveyed by the mortgage was an election not to take under the mortgage. In support of this assignment, the legal proposition is asserted, that the issuance and levy of a writ of attachment by the mortgagee upon personal property mortgaged to him to secure his debt is not a waiver of his mortgage lien, and he is not estopped to foreclose or claim under his mortgage. Quite a. number of pertinent and respectable authorities are cited in support of the legal proposition announced-Among them is the case of Howard v. Parks, 1 Texas Civil Appeals, 603. These authorities deal with the question only of what constitutes a waiver of a fixed, subsisting contract lien given for the security of a debt, or an estoppel to its enforcement.

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Bluebook (online)
26 S.W. 260, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 489, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bauman-v-jaffray-texapp-1894.