Beaumont Rice Mills v. Dishman

72 S.W.2d 365, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 573
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 30, 1934
DocketNo. 2552.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 72 S.W.2d 365 (Beaumont Rice Mills v. Dishman) 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
Beaumont Rice Mills v. Dishman, 72 S.W.2d 365, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 573 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

O’QUINN, Justice.

Appellee J. A. Dishman brought this suit against Geo. A. Dishman and J. C. Dishman to recover upon a past due promissory note in the sum of $4,000, payable to his order, and for foreclosure of a duly registered chattel mortgage upon a certain rice crop and certain personal property given to secure the payment of said note.

In the manner provided by statute, he caused the levy of a writ of sequestration upon 5,070 bags of rice covered by said mortgage, which rice was at the time of the levy of the sequestration writ stored with and in the possession of the American Rice Growers’ Association, which association was made a party defendant for the purpose of the foreclosure. Dishman later replevied the rice, but it was left in the possession of the agent of said association, A. H. Boyt.

Appellant, Beaumont Rice Mills, filed a plea- of intervention to recover the rice so mortgaged to appellee Dishman, alleging that, on May 5, 1933, it had purchased said rice, at the then market price of $2 per barrel from A. H. Boyt, agent of the defendant American Rice Growers’ Association, which was in possession of the rice, and which had authority to sell same, and which was the sales agent of the defendants Geo. A. Dish-man and J. O. Dishman, the owners and growers of the rice, under a contract with said American Rice Growers’ Association, which was known to appellee J. A. Dishman before the execution and registration of his chattel mortgage. That by reason of said purchase the title to said rice passed to it, intervener. That in order to carry the sale *366 through to full execution it was necessary that the rice be weighed and delivered to intervener; that said association and its said agent, A. H. Boyt, were ready to deliver said rice to intervener, and it was ready to receive same and to pay the agreed price therefor, and offered to pay into court the sum of money necessary to cover the weights of said rice, and offered to take all of same that conformed to the sample exhibited by said association, at said agreed price.

It further alleged that said J. A. Dish-man and his sons Geo. A. Dishman and J. O. Dishman. became disappointed with the sale of said rice so made to intervener and conceived the design of instituting this suit in order to deprive, intervener of its bargain, and said J. A. Dishman, in collusion with his said sons, did institute the suit and sequestrate the rice and thereby prevented delivery of the rice to intervener to its great damage. That at the time of such interference with the sale of the rice by said association to it, said rice was of the value of about $2.75 per barrel, wherefore intervener was damaged in the form of lost profits to the amount of $4,110, and that intervener was entitled either to the delivery of the rice in kind, or to damages in the amount of the difference between the price at which it was bought by intervener and the price at which the rice may or would be salable at any time before the termination of this suit.

It further alleged that the sequestration of said rice by said J. A. Dishman was void because: (a) Said J. A. Dishman, the father of the defendants Geo. A. Dishman and J. O. Dishman, brought suit against them and the American Rice Growers’ Association, only, alleging that his sons owed him the sum evidenced by said $4,000 note, and that the note was secured by a mortgage upon said rice, but that said claim was fictitious -and unjust, in that said Dishman», father and sons, had colluded together in bringing the suit wherefore said Geo. A. and J. O. Dish-man could not be counted upon to adequately defend against their father’s said suit; (b) that said J. A. Dishman admits in his petition that M. P, Yount, as landlord, and the Gulf Coast Agricultural Credit Corporation, and the Texas Public Service Company, each have prior .and superior liens on said rice, and did not make them parties to the suit, although they were necessary parties to his suit to foreclose his asserted lien; and the Dishmans all knew of the rights and claims of intervener to said rice, but instituted the suit and failed to make it, or the landlord, Yount, or the credit corporation, or the service company, a party, but through such proceedings attempted to take possession of said rice and to sell same in fraud .of the intervener and said lien-holders ; (c) that Dishman, in collusion with his said .sons, caused a sequestration bond to be accepted for the sum of $25,000 with only A. E. Dishman and E. W. Ephlin as sureties when such bond was wholly insufficient, such bondsmen not having property exempt from execution and free from prior liens sufficient to satisfy liability on said bond in such amount, or to satisfy a judgment for the value of the rice; (d) that said J. A. Dishman caused said writ of sequestration to be levied on said rice by the constable of Jefferson county, and had induced said constable to accept a replevy bond with the same sureties as signed the sequestration bond, and had caused the constable to consent to the delivery of said rice to-said Dishman, and was, according to the information and belief of intervener, attempting to sell said rice without an order of the court and without giving the interested parties an opportunity to replevy same; (e) that it was unjust, inequitable, and fraudulent for said Dishman to interfere with and prevent the execution of said sale of said rice to intervener because, if said Dish-man’s claim was valid, it was secured not only by a lien on the proceeds of sale of the-rice, but also by a lien upon other property belonging to defendants Geo. A. and J. O. Dishman of the value of not less than $1,200, which, with the proceeds of sale of the rice at $2 per barrel, was sufficient to satisfy all prior liens as well as Dishman’s claim (describing the personal property alluded to) ;• (f) that said Dishman had nothing more than a lien on the rice, and no just or reasonable right to possession and sale of same, where bona fide admitted prior lienholders-were not made parties to the suit and given opportunity to replevy; and (g) that in view of intervener’s rights in and to said rice, Dishman’s writ of sequestration on same-was wrongful, and that said Dishman, his sequestration bondsmen, and his sons, defendants Geo. A. and J. O. Dishman, having conspired and colluded with said J. A. Dish-man to prevent the delivery of said rice to intervener, were liable to it in damages for-said wrongful acts.

It further alleged (a) that if it be mistaken.' in its allegations that the contract between the owners of the rice and the American Rice-Growers’ Association authorized said association to sell the rice free of liens acquired, subsequent thereto; or in its allegations that *367 J. A.

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72 S.W.2d 365, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaumont-rice-mills-v-dishman-texapp-1934.