Borden v. Tapp

333 S.W.2d 417, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 2054
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 25, 1960
Docket3712
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 333 S.W.2d 417 (Borden v. Tapp) 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
Borden v. Tapp, 333 S.W.2d 417, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 2054 (Tex. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

TIREY, Justice.

On March 18, 1958, appellants, Borden and his wife, executed and delivered a Mechanic’s Lien Contract to Robert N. Foster for the purpose of constructing a dwelling on their homestead tract. Contemporaneously therewith they executed and delivered a promissory note due 90 days after date, and bearing interest after maturity at the rate of 10% per annum, and providing for attorney’s fees in certain contingencies, in the principal sum of $14,000. The Mechanic’s Lien obligated them to pay Foster for the construction of the building according to the agreed plans and specifications. The note and lien was transferred and assigned on the same day to Calvin Tapp, and Foster entered upon his duties of constructing the building, but failed to complete it, and Tapp exercised the privilege granted him to complete the building. Borden and his wife were not fully satisfied with the building after Tapp did his work, and they, thereafter, spent some if their own money to complete the building and, thereafter, moved in. While Foster, the contractor, was engaged in the construction of the building, claimants, Noble Hurley & Company, J. D. Haverkorn, and J. C. Taylor, and Clay Building Material Company, filed liens with the County Clerk of Johnson County, asserting constitutional and statutory liens against the property for labor and material furnished at the instance and request of contractor, Foster.

The plaintiffs, appellants here, brought this action on the theory that they were stakeholders, and that the action was one of interpleader.

Borden and wife went to trial on their original petition and pertinent to this discussion they alleged in effect that Tapp had a valid and subsisting lien on their property to secure the payment of the note of $14,-000 less the sum of $749.24, itemizing the same, which they had been forced to expend in order to complete the building, and further alleged that the filing of the claims by Noble Hurley & Company, Haverkorn, Taylor and Clay Building Material Company had cast a cloud upon the title to their homestead and that it prevented them from obtaining the loan from Cleburne Savings & Loan Association in order that they might take up and extend the amount they owed to Tapp on the Mechanic’s Lien Note and Contract, and that because they were forced to clear their title it was necessary for them to bring this suit and that they were entitled *419 to the relief under an interpleader, and asked that they be awarded attorney’s fees in the sum of $500.

It is our view that this theory vanished under the pleadings and the undisputed evidence. The cause was tried without the aid of a jury and there was no request for findings of fact and conclusions of law, and none were filed, except that the Court made comprehensive findings in the judgment. These findings reflect the nature and result of the cause.

We quote substantially the findings made by the Court:

Mr. and Mrs. Borden, on the 18th day of March, 1958, entered into a contract with Robert N. Foster for the construction of their dwelling house, and a two-car garage for the contract price of $14,000. Foster hound himself to furnish all the labor and material. This contract was evidenced by the execution and delivery of the usual Mechanic’s and Materialman’s Lien Contract, and the Bordens, contemporaneously therewith, executed a promissory note in the sum of $14,000, payable to Foster, and the Mechanic’s Lien Contract provided that Foster would complete the house within 90 days of March 18, 1958; that on the same day Foster transferred and assigned the Mechanic’s Lien Contract and the note to Calvin Tapp, and this transfer and assignment was duly executed in usual form and Foster delivered the note and the transfer to Tapp, and Tapp filed the same for record with the County Clerk of Johnson County on the 20th day of March, 1958; that at the time the note and lien was transferred and delivered to Tapp he knew that no material had been furnished and that no work had been done toward the completion of the improvements provided for in the contract; that Foster did not substantially complete the improvements provided for by the contract within the time specified, but defaulted; that thereafter Tapp agreed to complete the improvements according to the plans and specifications and did undertake to do so, but failed to complete them according to the plans and specifications; that after the abandonment by Foster and Tapp, the Bordens made certain expenditures, itemizing same, totaling the sum of $491.14, and the Court found that such improvements were reasonable and necessary, and further found that the contract for the building of the house was not completed and accepted by the Bordens until February 5, 1959; that Tapp paid Foster the sum of $13,781 for the note and the assignment of the lien and that after Foster defaulted by failing to complete the dwelling Tapp expended the sum of $2,075.14 to complete the contract; that at the time the Bordens executed the note and Mechanic’s Lien Contract to Foster they had made arrangements with the Cleburne Savings & Loan Association for a loan in the amount of $13,781, with which to pay for the improvements provided for in their Mechanic’s Lien Contract with Foster; that such loan was to be secured by a first lien on the property of the Bordens, and the loan was to be completed after the improvements were completed; that this factual situation was known to Tapp at the time he purchased the note and lien; that the loan company was willing to make the loan of $13,781 to the Bordens, but would not do so until all liens and claims for labor and material furnished in making improvements are released, except the Mechanic’s Lien Contract which it requires to be set over to it; that while Foster was engaged in constructing the dwelling that J. F. Haverkorn, J. E. (Curt) Taylor, Clay Building and Material Company, or intervenor, H. Williams, furnished labor and/or material to the said Foster, and undertook to fix a constitutional and statutory lien against the building and land described in the Mechanic’s Lien Contract. The Court specifically found that the assignment of the note and contract to Tapp was filed for record in the office of the County Clerk of Johnson County before the foregoing claimants attempted to perform any labor or furnished any material to Foster for the construction of the building. The Bordens filed their suit on the 7th day of March, 1959, for the purpose of clearing *420 title of their property, because the loan association would not complete the loan because of the attempt of the last above claimants to fix their constitutional and statutory lien for labor and materials. The Bordens, in their petition on which they went to trial, alleged that they were ready, willing and able to tender the sum of $14,000 to the Court, less the sum they had expended to complete the contract, for the proper distribution to the persons entitled to receive it, and they alleged that such sum is available for proper distribution by the Court when it shall determine who is entitled to receive the money and in what amounts, such sum to be advanced by the association for the benefit of the Bordens, but that it cannot be advanced by the association until all the asserted liens for labor and material, save and except the Mechanic’s Lien are released.

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Bluebook (online)
333 S.W.2d 417, 1960 Tex. App. LEXIS 2054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borden-v-tapp-texapp-1960.