Berry v. First Nat. Bank of Dawson

253 S.W. 537, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 358
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 4, 1923
DocketNo. 975.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 537 (Berry v. First Nat. Bank of Dawson) 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
Berry v. First Nat. Bank of Dawson, 253 S.W. 537, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 358 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

O’QUINN, J.

Appellee, First National Bank of Dawson, was first chartered as the Dawson State Bank, and was, by due process of law, changed to the First National Bank’ of Dawson. This is a suit by appellee upon a promissory note for $5,000, less a credit of $2,246.77, executed to the Dawson State Bank by W. E. Berry, Eb Johnson, J. A. Madera, A. Washington and Will Bankston, dated September 23, 1913, and due 90 days after date, brought by appellee, as the legal successor of said Dawson State Bank, against all the makers of said note except Bankston, who died before the filing of the suit. Berry also died while the suit was pending, and the suit was dismissed as to him.

The defendants answered by general demurrer, special exceptions, general denial, and special answers: (1) Denying that they had paid or authorized the payment of any sum on said note; (2) alleging that said note was without consideration, in that it was executed as, and intended to be, collateral security for a line of credit extended by said Dawson State Bank to the receiver of the Hubbard Farmers’ Oil & Gin Company between the time when said advances were made by said bank up to and until receiver’s certifi *538 cates could be issued by the receiver, undér order of the court, and delivered to said bank, at which time the note was to cease to be security for said credit, and that upon the receipt by said bank of the receiver’s certificate,, it should be and was the sole security for said advances so made by said bank; (3) that in August, 1913, in the suit of First State Bank of Hubbard v. Hubbard Farmers’ Oil & Oin Company, then pending in the district court of Hill county, Tex., O. 0. Condor was by said court appointed receiver of said Hubbard Farmers’ Oil & Oin Company, and that, to enable said ..receiver to provide finances for the operation of said property, the court, on September 8, 1913, authorized the receiver to issue his certificate for $5,000 to be used as security in obtaining such funds, and that said Dawson State Bank agreed with the receiver to make a loan to him in the sum of $5,000, and to accept said receiver’s certificate as its security therefor, and that said bank did advance to said receiver sjiid sum, and did accept said certificate as its sole and only security for said loan, and that, in the period of time between the date when the said bank contracted with the receiver to make said loan and when, the receiver’s certificate could be delivered, the said bank, in reliance upon said agreement with the receiver, made advances from time to time to said receiver and carried same as overdrafts, and that-said bank represented to appellants that the bank examiner was making complaints about the overdrafts, and requested the appellants to execute the note in question to be held by it temporarily to satisfy the said .bank authorities, and that there was not to be any liability on said note, but that the purpose of same was to terminate when the receiver’s certificate was delivered to and accepted by the bank, and that at said time appellants, acting under the same agreement as induced the execution and delivery of said note, deposited with said bank $1,000 of their own money for the purpose of enabling the receiver to operate said mill, and that both the execution of said note and the depositing of said money were without any consideration moving to appellants, but were merely for the accommodation of said bank and said receiver; (4) that later, the receiver’s certificate was duly issued and delivered to said bank, and that at said time the said $1,000 was returned to appellants, and it was then agreed and understood that said note was of no further force or effect, and was to be destroyed or surrendered to appellants; (5) that after-wards the said Hubbard Farmers’ Oil & Gin Company’s mill burned, and the receiver collected a large amount of insurance, which was deposited in the registry of the court for distribution among its creditors; that the First State Bank of Hubbard, plaintiff in the suit in which the receiver was appointed, claimed that its judgment and debt was a preference claim to said funds, which, if so allowed, would have practically exhausted •said funds; that appellants and the Dawson State Bank were parties to a suit of the First State Bank of Hubbard v. Hubbard Farmers’ Oil & Gin Company, pending in the district court of Hill county, and that said Dawson State Bank, from whom appellee derived its title, set up its claim upon the receiver’s certificate, which it had acquired from the receiver, and asserted a lien upon the assets of said company by virtue of the advances made upon said receiver’s certificate; that if there was any liability, which they.denied, against them, such liability existed at the time of the litigation over the insurance money in said Hill county district court, and that said liability, if any, was a part of the cause of action asserted by said Dawson State Bank in said cause; that the cause of action now asserted by appellee was asserted in said Hill county suit and prosecuted* to a final judgment, and pleaded same as res adjudicata to this suit; and (6) that the estate of deceased Bankston was solvent and asked that same be made a party defendant, which was done, and the interested parties appeared and adopted the answer of appellants and further answered that the estate of their deceased father was insolvent, and that all property inherited by them therefrom was exempt and not subject to execution.

Appellee, by supplemental petition, replied to appellants’ answer by general demurrer, numerous special exceptions, general denial, and specially answered: (1) That the judgment in the Hill county case, was not res adjudicata: (a) Because appellee did not become a party to the pending suit in that case when it filed its claim upon the certificate, because said certificate was an adjudicated and ascertained debt and claim subject to be paid out of the funds in the hands of the court; (b) because the certificate and the note here sued upon are different and distinct transactions, independent of each other, and said note was irrelevant in said Hill county suit, for in that appellee had no right to intrude in said receivership proceedings and bring Suit against parties upon a personal obligation, which was not done or attempted; and (c) because there already had been a final judgment rendered in said cause before appellee filed its claim, and it was not a party to any issue that was tried on its merits between the parties to this suit in said cause. (2) That the Hubbard Farmers’ Oil & Gin Company was a corporation, and that the defendants, except Washington, were stockholders, owning most, if not all, of its capital stock, and were its directors, officers, and managers; that said corporation was largely indebted to the First State Bank of Hubbard, which held a valid first lien upon its property to secure same, and that, defendants were *539

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 537, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-first-nat-bank-of-dawson-texapp-1923.