Beeler v. Terrell

245 S.W. 459, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1430
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1922
DocketNo. 2018.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 245 S.W. 459 (Beeler v. Terrell) 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
Beeler v. Terrell, 245 S.W. 459, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1430 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

HALE, J.

J. F. Beeler, one of the appellants, instituted this suit in the district court of Childress county, against his eoappellant C. H. Morris, A. P. Minchew, Mrs. Mattie H. Minchew, W. D. Smiley, R. M. Bell, Claude Terrell, and Henry Hankins, to recover upon ten notes and to foreclose vendors’ liens securing them upon certain lands in Childress county; eight of the first series of nine notes being for $500 and the other for $658.30, the tenth note being for the sum of $2,658.70. The facts out of which this suit originated are substantially these: One H. Smiley, on October 20, 1917, conveyed the lands in controversy to appellee, W. D. Smiley, taking as part payment the first nine notes above mentioned. Thereafter, on November 17, 1919, W. D. Smiley and wife conveyed the property to A. P. Minchew and R. M. Bell, and as part consideration they assumed payment of said nine notes and in addition executed and delivered to W. D. Smiley the tenth note above described in the sum of $2,658.70. On February 26, 1920, Bell and wife conveyed their interest in the land to Mrs. Mattie H. Minchew, the wife of A. P. Minehew. On February 16, 1920, A. P. Minchew conveyed his interest in the property to Mattie Minchew. Thereafter, on February 27, 1920, Mattie Minehew reconveyed the whole interest held by her to A. P. Min-chew Prior to these conveyances and on January 7, 1920, W. D. Smiley transferred and assigned to A. P. Minchew the above-named note for $2,658.70, which had been given him by Minchew and Bell, and on February 4,1920, H. Smiley also transferred and assigned to A. P. Minchew the nine notes given to him by W. B. Smiley. On June 1, 1020, A. P. Minchew, who was then the owner of all the lands mentioned and who also held all ten of the above-described notes, transferred and assigned them to appellant Beeler and at the same time by the writing, which assigned and transferred all of said notes to Beeler, he conveyed all his right, title, and interest in and to the land to secure the payment of the notes thereby assigned. This assignment was filed and recorded on July 5, 1921. The ten notes were assigned by Minchew to Beeler as collateral security to certain indebtedness due from Minchew to Beeler, evidenced by Minehew’s note for $6,000.

The appellees, Claude Terrell and Henry Hankins, filed a suit, numbered 1086, upon the district court docket of Childress county, on July 31,1920, against A. P. Minchew, upon a moneyed demand, and at the same time issued and had levied a writ of attachment upon the premises involved in this suit. They recovered a judgment in that suit against Minchew on May 11,1921, and at execution sale under said judgment purchased the land in question on July 5, 1921. Prior to the purchase of this property by Terrell and Hankins, at execution sale, Beeler, on July 5, 1921, had filed and recorded a notice of lis pendens of this suit, which is (numbered 1139 on said docket,' for foreclosure of the vendor’s lien'retained in his ten notes. The lis pendens notice was filed on June 30, 1921.

On the 6th day of August, 1920, A. P. Min-chew conveyed the lands in question to C. H. Morris, in consideration of which Morris assumed payment of the ten notes sued upon and certain other indebtedness, and the payment of a stated cash consideration. No notice of lis pendens in suit No. 1086, aboVe referred to, was ever filed or recorded in Childress county by Terrell or Hankins. The defendants, A. P. Minchew and C. H. Morris, answered, admitting their liability upon the notes. Beeler dismissed his suit as to Mattie Minchew, R. M. Bell, and W. D. Smiley. The appellees Terrell and Hankins answered, alleging that the notes had been paid; that they were purchased by Beeler for the purpose of hindering, delaying, and defrauding the creditors of Minchew, and especially these defendants. By cross-action they sued Morris for the land, charging that he had purchased the same from Minchew in fraud of Minehew’s creditors, and to aid and abet Minchew in his fraudulent attempt to transfer his property beyond the reach of his creditors.

Morris answered this cross-action, denying their allegations and alleging specially that he was a purchaser of the property for a good, sufficient, and valuable consideration, and without any notice, actukl, or constructive, of their claim, and prayed that he be quieted in his title and for possession. By a supplemental answer Terrell and Hankins alleged that-in the purchase of said notes, if in fact Beeler had purchased them, the same was for the purpose of hindering and delaying the creditors of Minchew and especially these defendants; that it did have that effect; that Beeler had notice of the fraudulent intent and purpose of Minchew and knowledge and notice of such facts at and before the time he purchased the notes, which if reasonably pursued by him he would have ascertained the full purpose, intent, and effect of the transfer of said notes. In the same pleading, replying to the answer of Morris, they allege that he aided and abetted Minchew in his fraudulent attempt to transfer his property beyond the reach of his creditors for the purpose of hindering and delaying said creditors, and that he knew of such fraudulent purpose prior to the time the transfer of the land was made to him, or that *461 lie was acquainted with such facts and had notice of such circumstances, which, if reasonably pursued, would have given him knowledge of Minehew’s fraudulent purpose.

Appellant Beeler, as his first proposition, insists that, since he acquired the notes sued upon from Minehew, with a transfer of the lien upon the land to secure the payment, and paid a valuable consideration therefor, before Terrell and Hankins had acquired any title under their attachment, foreclosure proceeding, and judgment, and they having notice of such ownership of the notes and lien, and of the suit by lis pendens, and having also received actual notice when they purchased the land under the judgment of foreclosure, the court should have rendered judgment for him. In reply appellees insist that when Mrs. Mattie Minehew, on February 27, 1920, conveyed the land to her husband, A. P. Minehew, at which time he held all the notes, there was a merger of the notes and lien in the fee, effecting a cancellation of the notes and extinguishment of the lien, and that the transfer of the notes and land was in fraud of creditors.

The only testimony, aside from the written assignments, in this case bearing upon the issue of merger is the statement by Minehew that he did not intend to pay off the notes, but that through third parties he purchased them. At that time he did not own all the land. He purchased the nine notes February 4, 1920, and note No. 10, January 7, 1920. On February 26, 1920, Bell and wife conveyed their interest in the land to Mrs. Mattie Minehew, and on February 16, 1920, A. P. Minehew conveyed his interest therein to his wife. Afterwards, on February 27, Mrs. Minehew reconveyed the whole interest to A. P. Minehew. The question of merger, where the owner of the fee acquires the charge, is generally one of intent. This question was discussed by Huff, O. J., in Smith v. Cooley, 164 S. W. 1050, where it is said it becomes a question of intention in the person in whom the two interests are invested. West v. McCelvey Loan & Investment Co., 229 S. W. 913; Southern Commercial & Savings Bank v. Combs (Tex. Civ. App.) 203 S. W. 1169. This being the only evidence from which the intent of Minehew can be ascertained, we muqt hold that the lesser did not merge in the greater title.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 S.W. 459, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beeler-v-terrell-texapp-1922.