Brazelton & Johnson v. J. I. Campbell Co.

108 S.W. 770, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 218, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 50
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 108 S.W. 770 (Brazelton & Johnson v. J. I. Campbell Co.) 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
Brazelton & Johnson v. J. I. Campbell Co., 108 S.W. 770, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 218, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 50 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

— I. L. Campbell and S. M. Campbell sued the J. I. Campbell Company, the Tyler Land & Lumber Company, and the Warren, Corsicana & Pacific Bailway Co., in the District Court of Harris County, for the purpose of having receivers appointed for the named defendants. The plaintiffs in the petition filed in that proceeding represented that they were stockholders in the defendant corporations named, and were also creditors of the same, and that the corporations named as defendants were in imminent danger of insolvency. Upon the filing of this petition the District Court of Harris County appointed receivers of all of the defendant corporations sued.

During the pendency of the receivership the appellants, Brazelton & Johnson, filed a petition of intervention, in which it is alleged that the receivers had taken possession of certain lumber described in the petition, which the appellants had purchased from the J. I. Campbell Lumber Company prior to the filing of the petition seeking to place the assets of that compan3r in the hands of a receiver. The aggregate amount of the lumber purchased was 1,253,821 feet, and the consideration paid was $10,000 in cash, the sale of which was evidenced by exhibit- “A” attached to appellant’s petition of intervention, which it is claimed constitutes an executed contract of sale. There is also attached to plaintiffs’ petition an exhibit . “B,” which appears to be an instrument executed at or about the same time that the instrument classed as exhibit “A” was executed, and is to be taken and considered as á part of the same transaction. *222 The interveners in the petition seek to recover from, the receivers the value of the lumber converted by them; and it is substantially alleged that the receivers had sold the lumber, or a part of the same, and the proceeds were now in their hands, which should be subjected to the demand of the interveners. They also plead in the alternative that in the event it should be held that they were not purchasers of the lumber, then that the instruments executed by the Campbell Company should be construed to be a mortgage on the lumber in question to secure the $10,000 paid. The instruments described the lumber.

Upon the trial of appellants’ intervention the court below held that the instruments in question did not constitute a sale of the lumber by the Campbell Company to interveners, but that they constituted a mortgage on the lumber in question to secure the $10,000 paid by interveners, and a decree was rendered foreclosing a lien in favor of appellants on the fund in the hands of the receivers, which they received as the proceeds of the lumber sold by them. From this judgment the appellants as interveners have appealed, and the principal question raised in their brief is to the effect that the court erred in holding that they did not acquire title to the lumber in question as purchasers from the Campbell Company.

There is no statement of facts or findings of fact contained in the record, and all that can be ascertained with reference to what was before the trial court as evidence is set out in the judgment and decree rendered by that court. It is true that the record does contain a report of the Master in Chancery bearing on the claim of the interveners. That report finds that the appellants were the purchasers of the lumber in question, and the report states evidence tending to show -that the purpose and intention was to convey title to them; but there is nothing indicating that this report was in evidence, and from a recital contained in the judgment it appears that -a part, if not all, of this report was stricken out. Objections were filed in the trial court to the report of the master, and it is recited in the judgment that after having considered the objections, no additional evidence was offered, except as to the disposition of the property in controversy, it is the opinion of the court that certain exceptions urged _to the report and the findings of the master should be sustained as hereinafter stated. Then fob lows this recital: “Wherefore it is 'considered and so decreed by the court that the transactions and dealings between interveners herein and the J. I. Campbell Company, as evidenced by the written contracts in evidence, did not constitute an absolute sale by the said J. I. Campbell Company to the said interveners of the lumber described in interveners’ intervention, and in said written instruments thereto attached, but the same constituted and was intended as a mortgage,” etc. From this we take-it that the court determined the legal effect of these instruments from the face of the documents themselves, without a resort to the report of the master. The theory of the court evidently was that there was no ambiguity upon the face of these- two instruments, which are attached to the plea of intervention, and which are known as exhibits “A” and “B,” *223 and therefore the evidence heard by the master, which is stated in his report, was not to be considered in determining the legal effect of the transaction. As. before said, the finding of the master was that the effect of the two instruments was to create a sale; and especially was this true when taken in connection with paroi evidence introduced before him and considered by him in determining what was the intention of the parties in executing the instruments. The master held that the instruments upon their face showed an intention to convey, but if he was mistaken in that, and that the instruments were ambiguous, then he held that the evidence introduced removed the ambiguity and demonstrated the fact that a sale was intended. But, as before said, we can not look to this report in determining this appeal, because, as we take it, it was eliminated by the judgment of the trial court.

In Eidson v. Reeder, 101 Texas, 202, the Supreme Court held that although the Appellate Court might properly hold that evidence excluded by the trial court was admissible, it could not be considered by the Court of Civil Appeals in determining the character of judgment that should be rendered by that court. In the case cited this court held that in the trial of the case below before the judge without a jury that a certain deed which was excluded by the trial court should have been admitted in evidence and considered; and there being no dispute as to the other facts, we then held that if the excluded deed was considered, then the proper judgment to be rendered was to reverse and render. But, as said before, the ruling of the Supreme Court was that we could not consider evidence that was not before the trial court. This much is said in view of the fact that while we have reached the conclusion that there is an ambiguity in the instruments involved in this controversy, and the master’s report from the evidence received by him, placed the proper construction upon them, we can not consider that report in determining what disposition we will make of this case, but we have to determine it alone upon the evidence which was before the trial judge; and as we construe the decree bearing upon that subject, all that he considered was the two instruments declared on and described by the appellants in their plea of intervention.

The first instrument, known as exhibit “A,” is clearly a bill of sale, and shows upon its face that the purpose was to convey title to the lumber in question to the appellants.

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Bluebook (online)
108 S.W. 770, 49 Tex. Civ. App. 218, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brazelton-johnson-v-j-i-campbell-co-texapp-1908.