Blount, Price & Co. v. Payne

187 S.W. 990, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 815
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 1916
DocketNo. 103.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 187 S.W. 990 (Blount, Price & Co. v. Payne) 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
Blount, Price & Co. v. Payne, 187 S.W. 990, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 815 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

CONLEY, C. J.

This was a suit by J. O. Payne, instituted in the county court of San Augustine county on the 30th of March, 1915, to recover of Joe McCoy an amount due on a *991 promissory note, amounting to the sum oí $605.70, and foreclosure of a chattel mort gage executed by Joe McCoy on the same date to better secure the payment of said note. The chattel mortgage covered two mules. The petition is in the usual form declaring on a promissory note, and a foreclosure of the mortgage lien, and in addition thereto, in paragraph sixth, contains the following allegation:

“Plaintiff further represents that, while said mortgage on its face shows the First National Bank of San Augustine, Texas, to be the payee in said note and the grantee in said mortgage, yet in truth and in fact said bank is not the payee of said note nor the grantee in said mortgage, nor was it in any manner a party to the transaction, nor had it any interest in the same, but whatever interest in or relationship to the transaction that said bank apparently had with said paper, in truth and in fact appear by reason of a mutual mistake, accident, oversight, and inadvertence on the part of the parties to the transaction at the time of the execution of the written evidence of said agreement in this: That at the time of the execution and delivery of said note and mortgage and the agreement to reduce the evidence of the contract then made to writing, a blank form of mortgage of said First National Bank of San Augustine was used for said purpose, with the mutual intent and agreement of the parties and the defendant Joe McCoy to erase the name of said bank from said mortgage form and to insert in lieu thereof the name of the plaintiff, J. 0. Payne, and to erase the name of said bank wherever it occurred in said blank form, and to insert in lieu thereof the name of the plaintiff herein, and that by mutual mistake, oversight, and inadvertence and accident of the parties to the transaction the name of the bank was not erased, nor was the name of the plaintiff, J. O. Payne, inserted in the body of said instrument, as per the agreement of the parties.”

Paragraph 7 contained the following allegation:

“Plaintiff further says that the defendant Lamar Blount, either for himself or as agent of the defendant Blount, Price & Co., and the defendant Blount, Price & Co., are now in the possession of the above-described property, and are unlawfully withholding the same from this plaintiff, and are setting up some character of claim thereto, and they are made parties hereto for the purpose of determining whatever rights they may have in said property, and of obtaining any relief against them that the proof should show plaintiff entitled to by reason of the premises, and said property is now situated in San Augustine county.”

The plaintiff closed with a prayer for judgment for the principal, interest, and attorneys’ fees on the debt, a foreclosure of the mortgage lien upon the property, and for any and all orders necessary to enable plaintiff: to subject said property to the payment of the debt, and for general and special relief in law and equity.

Defendant filed a general denial, and denied specifically all the allegations in plaintiff’s petition and in the supplemental petitions, denied that Joe McCoy had executed any mortgage to J. O. Payne, that, if Joe McCoy had ever executed any mortgage on the mules, the mortgage executed by him was to the First National Bank, and not to J. O. Payne, that said Joe McCoy was not indebted to the said bank, and further answered that said Joe McCoy had on the 25th of January, 1913, executed a mortgage to it covering the two mules in question to secure certain indebtedness due it by the said Joe McCoy, that the mortgage had been duly filed, and that it had no actual or constructive notice that said Joe McCoy had executed a mortgage previous to the one given it, and further answered that after its debt against Joe McCoy became due it filed suit in the justice court of San Augustine county against Joe McCoy, and thereafter secured a judgment for its debt, with a foreclosure of the mortgage lien, and at execution sale purchased the said mules, paying therefor a fair price, that the mortgage of the plaintiff is not and could not be a mortgage to the plaintiff, as it shows conclusively to be a mortgage to the First National Bank of San Augustine, and that therefore the registration of the mortgage was not notice in law of the fact that the plaintiff had a mortgage upon the property described, and that the defendant, being a bona fide creditor against said McCoy, was entitled to preference over the mortgage of the plaintiff, and that the defendant was in no way chargeable with notice of the mistake alleged to have been committed between the parties to that transaction.

Lamar Blount disclaimed, and was dismissed from the suit with his costs. The general demurrer of the defendant Blount, Price & Co. to plaintiff’s petition was overruled, and a trial of the issues presented by the pleadings resulted in a verdict and judgment for the appellee, from which the appellant has duly perfected an appeal to this court.

There is but one assignment of error urged by appellant, and that is that the court erred in overruling the general demurrer to the appellee’s petition. Under this assignment of error appellant contends that the petition is defective in that:

(a) It does not allege that the appellant had actual or constructive knowledge of the existence of the mortgage of appellee.

(b) That the court erred in admitting evidence, in the absence of proper allegations supporting it, on the question of such notice, and that this is fundamental error.

(e) That the allegation in paragraph seventh of plaintiff’s petition that “Lamar Blunt, either for himself or as agent for Blount, Price & Co., and the defendant Blount, Price & Co., are now in the possession of the above described property, and are unlawfully withholding the same from this plaintiff, and are setting up some character of claim thereto,” is not sufficient to charge a cause of action against Blount, Price & Co.

(d) That equity will not correct such mistakes as shown in the petition, because it affirmatively appears that the mistake and *992 oversight in failing to properly 'prepare the mortgage sought to be corrected was caused by the carelessness and inattention of the appellee.

[1] An inspection of the petition in this case shows sufficient allegations charging the execution and delivery of the note and mortgage by Joe McCoy to J. O. Payne, the maturity of the note, the existence of the mortgage lien, his failure and refusal to pay the debt in accordance with the terms of the contract, the mutual mistake in the execution of the written evidence of the lien, that the appellant was in the possession of the property covered by the mortgage, unlawfully withholding the same from the plaintiff, and prayed that the appellant be made a party for the purpose of determining whatever rights it had in the property, so that appellee might obtain any relief against it that the proof would warrant. This was all the pleader was required to do.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 S.W. 990, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blount-price-co-v-payne-texapp-1916.