Broun v. Busch

128 S.W. 1156, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 66, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 690
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 128 S.W. 1156 (Broun v. Busch) 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
Broun v. Busch, 128 S.W. 1156, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 66, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 690 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

LEVY, Associate Justice.

— Appellants Jagoe and Pasehall owned a tract of 320 acres of land in Denton County, and conveyed the same by deed to E. T. Broun for the consideration of $2,200, evidenced by two notes for $1,000 each. The deed and notes expressly retained the vendor’s lien, and the deed was placed of record by Broun. W. A. Ponder purchased the notes, and Jagoe and Pasehall endorsed the notes in blank “without recourse” and delivered them to Ponder. W. A. Ponder sold the notes afterwards to appellee, Busch, and endorsed and delivered them to him. The assignment of the lien in writing was taken by Ponder, or appellee Busch. Broun platted the tract into smaller subdivisions, and from time to time - sold them out to purchasers and executed deeds therefor. Soon after buying the notes the appellee, Busch, took them to Cooke County, but upon approach of the time for the payment of the annual interest would carry or send the notes to W. A. Ponder, who would collect the interest. ■ All the credits for interest on the notes were in the handwriting of Ponder. It appears that neither Broun, nor Jagoe, nor Pasehall ever knew or heard of appellee Busch’s ownership of the notes. Appellee never notified them of his ownership. Some time prior to April 17, 1905, some of the purchasers of the subdivisions of the tract desired to obtain a loan from the Union Central Life Insurance Company. This company demanded a release from Jagoe and Pasehall before making a loan. The agent of this company prepared a release and requested Jagoe and Pasehall to execute it. Jagoe saw Broun, the maker of the notes, and he represented that Ponder was the holder and had been fully paid by him, and Ponder represented to Jagoe that the notes had been paid. Jagoe then reading the release offered by the agent of the insurance company, refused to sign it because the same recited that Jagoe and Pasehall were “the owners and holders” of the notes. Jagoe informed the agent that he and Pasehall were not the owners and holders of the notes, and would not sign any release so stating. The words “owners and holders of said notes” were then erased and the instrument signed by him. Pasehall was informed by Broun that he had paid off the notes to Ponder, and, upon seeing Jagoe’s name to the release, signed it.. The agent of. the insurance company then had the instrument recorded, and the loan was afterwards made to the parties applying therefor. *68 The instrument signed and recorded recited “the payment in full of two promissory notes described in a certain warranty deed executed by B. F. Paschall and J. W. Jagoe to E. T. Broun, dated March 4, 3901, and recorded in Yol. 73, p. 556, of the record of deeds of Den-ton Co., Texas,” and purported to release the lien retained to secure their payment on the 320 acres conveyed. No fraud or fraudulent connivance is shown or indicated between Jagoe and Paschall, and Broun. Broun contends that Ponder was the owner of the notes to his understanding, and that he paid off the notes to him. Ponder contends in the evidence that he was the agent of appellee and authorized to direct the release. Appellee contends in the evidence that Ponder was not his agent, and had no authority to direct the release. The evidence in this respect is in conflict. Appellee Busch, claiming the notes were due and unpaid, brought suit to recover the amount of the notes against Broun as maker, and Ponder as endorser, and to foreclose the vendor’s lien on the 320 acres against Broun, and all parties who had acquired any interest bjr purchase, mortgage or otherwise; and also made appellants Jagoe and Paschall parties, alleging that they executed a release without authority, and sought to recover of them for all 'injury resulting from the release of the lien. The Exchange National Bank was also made a party defendant, and a recovery sought by appellee of it on account of alleged acts concerning the notes while acting as agent. As only Jagoe and Paschall appeal and assign errors, no further statement is set out.

The trial was to a jury, and in accordance with their verdict, judgment was entered in favor of appellee against Broun and Ponder for the full amount of the notes, and against appellants Jagoe and Paschall, for $800, but in favor of the Union Central Life Insurance Company, the Exchange National Bank, Henry, Tali afero and Cresswell, but against Campbell, Baggett, Tucker and Harwood for foreclosure of the l'ien.

'After stating the case. — A peremptory instruction to the jury to return a verdict for appellants Jagoe and Paschall was refused by the court, and the first assignment urges this as error. The contention is, that as appellee .was negligent in not procuring an assignment of the lien, and did not notify the appellants of his purchase of the notes, and the evidence conclusively showing that in executing the release the' appellants acted in good faith, believing at the time that the notes were paid, no cause of action against them is shown. The instruction was properly refused, we think. Appellants knew that they were not the owners and holders of the notes, and they knew that they had passed same by endorsement “without recourse.” They were remitted to know the law that their transfer of the notes carried with it, as a legal consequence, the lien on the land. Having passed the notes “without recourse,” they had no longer any interest or right in the notes. Speaking strictly to the lien, they had no lien after transfer of the notes. Having passed the lien, as a legal consequence of the transfer of the notes, then an entry of satisfaction of the lien on the record when the mortgage was not in fact satisfied, and without . authority of the owner or holder of the lien, or his authorized agent, *69 would be an intermeddling act and wrongful. And for the intermeddling and wrongful act, the appellants would be liable to the injured party for such injury as is the reasonable, and legal result of the wrongful act. The record of the release affords the opportunity or occasion for injury to the owner and holder of the mortgage through rights acquired by subsequent purchasers and lienholders without notice relying on the clear title of the record. It may be true that the appellants were misled into signing the release by statements made that the notes were paid, but it was from no statements of the owner. And it may be that the owner could have protected himself by a recorded transfer of the lien. But if intermeddlers and wrong doers, in consequence appellants are not in a position to claim relief against such mistake of information and neglect, if any. It was not their legal duty to release the lien and acknowledge payment of the notes, for speaking to the lien, they had parted with it and afterwards had none to release. The instruction was properly refused. If, however, appellants seek to justify their act in signing the release on the ground that they were directed to do so by the authorized agent of the appellee, this they may do, as appellee in such circumstances could not assert a wrongful act against the appellants. The court submitted this view to the jury.

By the fourth assignment complaint is made of the court’s charge. The eleventh clause of the charge instructed the jury that the execution of the release by appellants at the direction of W. A. Ponder, would not relieve them of liability if at the time he directed appellants to execute the release, the notes were in the Exchange National Bank for collection, and not in his personal control. The evidence showed Ponder to be vice-president of the bank.

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Related

Allen v. Hall
52 S.W.2d 661 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1932)
Welch v. Logan
286 S.W. 906 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1926)
Busch v. Broun
152 S.W. 683 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
128 S.W. 1156, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 66, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broun-v-busch-texapp-1910.