Beauchamp v. Zellmer

227 S.W. 965, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 25, 1920
DocketNo. 6336.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 227 S.W. 965 (Beauchamp v. Zellmer) 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
Beauchamp v. Zellmer, 227 S.W. 965, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1251 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

We adopt appellants’ statement of the case:

“This suit was originally instituted in Seventy-Third judicial district on April 4, 1913, by L. Lasater and L. Beauchamp, plaintiffs, against C. J. Zellmer, B. L. Herring, and R. H. Miller, defendants,, to cancel a certain alleged vendor’s lien note for $3,000, purporting to have been executed by B. L. Herring in favor of C. J. Zellmer, as part of the consideration and purchase price of certain lots situated in San Antonio, Tex., fully described in plaintiff’s petition. And it was alleged that *966 said note was fraudulent and fictitious, and not a lien upon the property, and that B. L. Herring, the purchaser of said property and maker of said note, had made a fraudulent and fictitious transfer of same to R. H. Miller, and that all defendants were in. collusion in the perpetration of said fraudulent note; that plaintiff L. Easater was the owner of said land by purchase from B. L. Herring and L. Beau-champ, the holder of notes secured by deed of trust executed by. Herring to Sidney Lansford before Herring transferred said notes to R. H. Miller. Thereafter, during June term, 1913, L. Easater was, by order of court, dismissed from the case, and L. Beauchamp became sole and only plaintiff.
“The Bank of Minden intervened in said suit, and claimed to be the owner of the $3,000 note purporting to have been executed by B. E. Herring to O. J. Zellmer, and prayed for judgment against B. L. Herring, as maker, and O. J. Zellmer, indorser, for principal, interest, and attorney’s fees, and foreclosure of vendor’s lien upon the property, as against plaintiff, and all defendants and interveners.” It denied all fraud in the purchase of the note. It averred that Zellmer, by executing the transfer of the note in blank, enabled B. L. Herring, as Ms agent, to sell and dispose of it for its full value, and by reason of his indorsement of the note guaranteed its payment, and by reason of which Zellmer is personally liable for its payment. It further pleaded under oath that the transfer of the Lansford indebtedness of $7,500 from B. E. Herring to L. Beauchamp was without consideration and void.
“And further, intervener says, if required to further answer, that the said O. J. Zellmer is estopped from denying the execution of the $3,000 note held by this intervener, and the said L. Beauchamp is estopped from denying the validity of said note or his liability thereunder or the liability of the land and improvements herein involved thereunder because the transfer from Herring to Lasater, and from Easater to E. Beauchamp, and from L. Beau-champ to J. R. Beauchamp, of the equitable title to said property and improvements, was subject to the lien of the said $3,000 note, and was and became a part of the purchase money therefor, and the said E. Beauchamp is especially estopped from claiming any indebtedness under the said $7,500 Lansford note because the same was delivered to him for destruction and cancellation, without consideration, and came into his possession while he was the owner of the equitable title of the property, and by virtue thereof the said lien, even if it had a consideration, became null and void.” It prayed for all relief, general and special.
“B. E. Herring answered by general exceptions and general denial.
“O. J. Zellmer filed original and numerous amended answers in which he pleaded that the $3,000 was fictitious and fraudulent, no part of the consideration for sale of his property to B. L. Herring; that same was without consideration, and hisindorsement on said notes was obtained through fraud and misrepresentation, as was also a blank transfer of same.
“Chas. Glenk intervened, and claimed abstract of judgment lien, upon the property, said judgment against B. E. Herring, and also made J. R. Beauchamp a party, as the owner of $7,500 note executed by B. E. Herring to Sidney Lansford, dated February 4, 1913, and secured by mortgage or deed of trust upon the lots conveyed by Zellmer to Herring. J. R. Beauchamp filed his answer, * * * and claimed to be the owner of first lien upon said property by virtue of his ownership of the three notes aggregating $7,500, secured by deed of trust upon said property to secure said notes, and executed by B. L. Herring to Sidney Lansford, assigned by Sidney Lansford to L. Beauchamp, and by L. Beauchamp to J. R. Beauchamp for valuable consideration before maturity, and without notice of any prior lien.
“The case was tried at June term, 1919. Chas. Glenk went out of the case upon exclusion of his alleged abstract of judgment, the objection of counsel for J. R. Beauchamp thereto being sustained. Herring made no defense. Before trial was finished, C. J. Zellmer, by consent and agreement of counsel and court, withdrew, and made no defense. The controversy narrowed down to the respective claims of the Bank of Minden to prior lien to secure the $3,000 note, and J. R. Beauchamp’s claim to prior lien to secure his $7,500 note.”

The case was tried by a jury, and the court instructed a verdict in favor of the Bank of Minden against B. L. Herring in the sum of $3,000, interest and attorney’s fees, with foreclosure of its lien on the property against B. E. Herring, L. Beauchamp, and J. R. Beau-champ, and in favor of J. R. Beauchamp against B. L. Herring in the sum of $7,500, interest and attorney’s fees, and in favor of said J. R. Beauchamp against B. E. Herring and L. Beauchamp on the property in controversy, subject to the lien of the bank of Minden to foreclose on the property in controversy. J. R. Beauchamp requested a special charge directing verdict in his favor, which was refused, and E. Beauchamp requested special charge, which was refused.

Assignments 1, 2, and 3 challenge the priority and validity of the $3,000 note held by the Bank of Minden for the reason that the note .was'executed by B. L. Herring in favor of O. J. Zellmer, and immediately indorsed by O. J. Zellmer back to the maker, B. L. Herring, and delivered to him with an assignment in blank, had the effect to discharge the note by merger, and alleging the Bank of Minden purchased said note from the maker, B. E. Herring, with full notice that said note was in the hands of the maker, which discharged and extinguished it as a matter of law.

It is shown by the evidence that J. H. Berry was the agent to sell the land in controversy for G. J. Zellmer. He negotiated a sale to B. L. Herring for the exchange of property between them. Zellmer took, in exchange for this land, notes and other land from Herring. On- one piece of the land he was receiving there was a lien of $449 that Herring was to discharge, and there was on his land a lien of $1.000 due the State Bank & Trust Company, .which Herring assumed. *967 Berry, representing Zellmer, arranged tlae trade in the following manner: A note was to he. executed hy Herring to Zellmer for $3,000, secured by a vendor’s lien on the land, and that note was to he negotiated and out of the proceeds pay $449 cash to Zellmer to discharge a lien on some of the land Herring was selling him, and pay $1,000 to release the lien on the land securing $1,000 due State Bank & Trust Company on Zellmer’s land. The note was indorsed hy Zellmer, and a transfer of the lien was signed in blank by Zellmer.

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426 B.R. 653 (S.D. Texas, 2010)
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Bluebook (online)
227 S.W. 965, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beauchamp-v-zellmer-texapp-1920.