Blackwell v. Guaranty State Bank of Keller

260 S.W. 895, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 306
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 1924
DocketNo. 7133.
StatusPublished

This text of 260 S.W. 895 (Blackwell v. Guaranty State Bank of Keller) 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
Blackwell v. Guaranty State Bank of Keller, 260 S.W. 895, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 306 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

COBBS, J.

Appellee instituted this suit in the county court of Tarrant county against appellant to recover judgment- on three several promissory notes aggregating $500, and also sought to foreclose a chattel mortgage on certain personal property. In none of ap-pellee’s pleadings was the value of the mortgaged property specifically alleged. However, the pleading contained a copy of the mortgage, which it sought to foreclose, and which described the property, giving its value as follows:

“20 acres of cotton on H. M. Ash farm, Í922 crop, 1 gray' mare, 9 years old, her increase, 14% hands high, 1 mule colt, 1 year old, 3 Jersey cows, 6 years old, their increase, 2 wagons, Studebaker and Watson, of the value of the sum of six hundred forty dollars.”

Appellant filed a general denial and special answer admitting the execution of the three notes, and pleaded a renewal and extension of the $220 note. He also set up a cross-action against appellee for the wrongful suing out of the attachment upon which he took a nonsuit; but in such cross-action he alleged that the four bales of cotton levied on were “of the value of, to .wit, about $475.-00.” And again in said cross-action says he “has thus sustained actual damages because of such illegal and wrongful suing out of said •writ of attachment and the seizure of said property in the sum of, to wit, $500.00, for which-he sues as actual damages.”

H. M. Ash intervened in said suit, alleging appellant became indebted to him in the sum of $2,000, secured by a chattel mortgage on 30 acres of cotton and other property, alleging an agreement to cancel' a portion of said indebtedness on the condition that appellant pay intervener $500. And alleging further that the $200 note executed by appellant to intervener’s wife was assigned to him.

Appellee sued out a writ of attachment on the 23d day of October, 1922, which was levied on four bales of cotton belonging to the appellant. Appellant on January 10, 1923, filed motion to quash the writ of attachment, which motion was granted. Appellee immediately sued out another writ of attachment which was executed by levying on the same four bales of cotton. Plaintiff’s original writ of attachment, defendant’s motion to quash, and plaintiff’s second writ of attachment are not shown in the .transcript. Appellee has filed a motion in this court requesting that plaintiff’s second writ of attachment be made a part of the record of this cause in this court.

Neither party paged their briefs, as they should have done, which makes them a little unhandy for quick reference.

The case was submitted to the court without a jury, and the court made the following findings and conclusions of law:

“First, that the total amount due from appellant was $508.24.
“Third, that the property described in said note is as follows; ‘20 acres of cotton on the H. M. Ash farm, 1922 crop; one gray mare, nine years old, her increase (11 hands high); one mule colt, one year old; three Jersey cows, six years old. their increase; 2 wagons, Studebaker and Watson.’ * * *
“Sixth, that the instrument in writing, executed by L. J. Blackwell, in form a mortgage, and purporting to secure said notes, while bearing no date, was executed contemporaneously with the two notes last above mentioned, dated November 1, 1921, but ‘in fact executed on or ‘about March 29, 1922, and filed for record on March 29, .1922; that said mortgage, among other things, refers to 30 acres of cotton to be grown on the H. M. Ash farm, but does not define any particular 30 acres of cotton nor fix the year in which such cotton was to be raised.”
“The court sustains findings ‘first,’ ‘third,’ and ‘sixth,’ as requested by the plaintiff, and finds as a fact in lieu of ‘second,’ requested by plaintiff, as follows:
“Second, note above referred to dated December 22, 1921, had attached thereto a chattel mortgage given by defendant to plaintiff securing not only the $220 (two hundred twenty *896 and no/100) dollars ¡recited in said note, but also such other sums of money which the said L. J. Blackwell might then owe or thereafter owe the First State Bank of Keller, Tex., or its assigns prior to the payment of the above-described $220 (two hundred twenty and no/100) dollar note, and that by reason of the terms of said note and mortgage the said two hundred twenty and no/100 ($220.00) dollar note and the balance due on the $152.76 (one hundred fifty-two and 76/100)‘dollar note, dated July 5, 1922, and due October 1, 1922, were secured thereby, but that note for $191.83, dated May 24, 1922, due October 1, 1922, given to the Garter Grocer Company, did not become secured by said mortgage.
“The court further finds in lieu of finding ‘fifth,’ requested by plaintiff, as follows:
“Fifth, that the defendant L. J. Blackwell was at and prior to the time of filing this suit, and now is indebted to the intervener, H. M. Ash, in the sum of $700 and that the balance of the original indebtedness from L. J. Blackwell to intervener,. H.-M. Ash, viz. $1,837.70, had been canceled by agreement between the defendant, L. J. Blackwell, and the intervener, PI. M. Ash, prior to the filing of this suit, leaving but $500 of said $1,837.70 due froth defendant L. J. Blackwell to intervener, H. M. Ash. The remaining $200 being due upon, a separate n.ote given by defendant, L. J. Blackwell, to Mrs. H. M. Ash, October 11, 1921, and by her indorsed to intervener, H. M. Ash. That the two notes evidencing the original indebtedness of the $1,837.70 above referred to, while dated November 1, 1921, were not in fact signed until some time after January 21, 1922, the exact date of which is not shown by the evidence.
“And the court finds in lieu of ‘sixth,’ requested by plaintiff, as follows:
“Sixth, that the instrument in writing executed by L. J. Blackwell, in form a chattel mortgage, and purporting to secure said two notes aggregating $1,837.70, while bearing no date, was executed contemporaneously with said two notes dated November 1, 1921, but in fact executed some time after January 21, 1922, the exact date of which is not shown by the evidence, and that said instrument‘was received and filed for registration March 29, 1922, that said mortgage among other things refers to 30 acres of cotton to be grown on the H. M. -Ash farm, but does, not define any particular 30 acres of cotton nor fix the year in which such cotton was to be raised.
“The court finds on his own motion that in-tervener, H. M. Ash, is entitled to a decree of foreclosure of the chattel mortgage given him by L. J. Blackwell, except as to the 30 acres of cotton therein referred to; that all the remaining property therein mentioned should be sold, or so much as necessary, and the proceeds thereof apfdied to the payment of the balance due from the said L. J. Blackwell to said H. M. Ash, intervener, on the $1,837.70 notes mentioned in said mortgage, said balance being $500. '
“The court further finds, on his own motion, that the various notes offered in evidence in this case should be marshaled as follows:
“First, plaintiff’s note, viz.

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Bluebook (online)
260 S.W. 895, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackwell-v-guaranty-state-bank-of-keller-texapp-1924.