Brown v. Hudson

38 S.W. 653, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 401
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 28, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 S.W. 653 (Brown v. Hudson) 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
Brown v. Hudson, 38 S.W. 653, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 401 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Associate Justice.

In heir joint and several promissory note to W. T. Carpenter in the sum of $24,000, and to better secure its payment W. T. Hudson, who resided in Bosque County, Texas, executed a chattel mortgage upon his cattle then ranging in Throckmorton Oounty, branded IX and some XI, of the estimated number of 1300. This mortgage was promptly registered in the latter county, but not in that of the mortgagor’s residence.

Soon thereafter Carpenter pledged both, the note and mortgage to a bank in Fort Worth as security for a loan to him of $2500. On December 1, 1885, E. Y. Brown, at the instance of the Hudsons and Carpenter, in order to prevent an impending sacrifice of this collateral, made a loan to Carpenter of $2500 for twelve months which was used in redeeming the collateral, by paying the debt to the bank. The collateral paper thus redeemed was consequently pledged to Brown to better secure the $2500 note executed to him by Carpenter in this transaction, with the usual power of sale in case of default in the payment of the principal note. It was further agreed between the Hudsons and Brown that the latter should have the control of the cattle, and that A. J. and N. S. Hudson should look after them for him upon the range.

W. T. Hudson and W. T. Carpenter, being indebted to Andy Walters, were sued about and just before this time in Bosque County, and on December 12, 1885, 400 of the IX cattle were attached under process in that suit by the sheriff of Throckmorton County, through a range levy, which will be more fully stated when we come to consider its effect. This suit resulted in a judgment on the 8th of February, 1888, against W. T. Hudson and Carpenter in the sum of $1532.40, together with costs of suit, foreclosing the attachment lien on the 400 head of IX cattle. Thereafter, September 27, 1889, the return of the officer upon the attachment writ was amended, under the directions of the court, upon motion, so as to state the facts showing a range levy in full compliance with the statute.

Carpenter made default in the payment of the $2500 note held by Brown, and the $24,000 note, with the mortgage securing its payment, was sold in accordance with the terms of the pledge, and Brown became the purchaser thereof. Consequently, on May 8, 1888, Brown instituted this suit on the collateral note and to foreclose the mortgage against the *608 three Hudsons, and also against Andy Walters, alleging that Walters was setting up some sort of pretended claim to the cattle, and caused 200 of those levied on by Walters to be seized under sequestration process by the sheriff of Hardeman County, through a range levy in Cottle County, then attached to Hardeman for judicial purposes, and into which the Hudsons had by the permission or under the direction of Brown removed the cattle; and the cattle so seized were replevied by appellant Brown. In the course of the litigation, by an amended pleading, Brown declared also upon the transaction of December "l, 1885, as giving him, in addition to the rights of mortgagee, those of pledgee; the defendant Walters having assailed the validity of the mortgage upon the ground, among others, of its not having been registered in the county of the mortgagor’s residence.

The Hudsons filed a written waiver of citation, and judgment by default went against them, August 28, 1888.

On February 5, 1887, L. V. F. Randolph recovered a judgment in the Federal Court at Dallas against W. T. Hudson, L. B. Hudson, A. J. Hudson and others in the sum of $52,926.66, upon which execution issued March 19, 1891, which was levied by the marshal of the Northern District of Texas, as recited in the statement of facts, “on about 2000 head of cattle, more or less, running at large upon their range in Haskell and adjoining counties. Said levy, purported to have been made in the presence of H. J. Duly and L. C. Hearne. Said cattle branded. IX and XI, commonly known as the lazy H and X, and also upon those branded NIK.”

Under a writ of venditioni exponas, a sale of the cattle so levied on was made on the 9th day of October, 1891, at which Randolph became the purchaser and received the marshal’s bill of sale; the return on this writ being as follows: “By virtue of the writ of venditioni exponas issued out of the Honorable United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Texas, of date July 21, 1891, in the above entitled and numbered cause, and to me directed and delivered, I have this day, March 19, 1891, levied upon the interest of W. T. Hudson and A. J. Hudson in the following described property, to-wit: 2000 head of cattle, more or less, branded IX or XI and NIK, the number in each brand not known, as the levy made was a range levy, which I shall expose as the law directs on the 9th day of October, 1891, between the hours of 10 o.’clock and 4 o’clock p. m., in the town of Haskell, Haskell County, Texas, before the court house door of said county, for cash to the highest bidder, to satisfy said writ of venditioni exponas.”

Thereafter, April 30, 1894, Randolph intervened in this suit, setting-up his rights as a judgment creditor and by virtue of said levy and sale, alleging the invalidity of the mortgage which Brown was endeavoring to foreclose, and charging a conspiracy between him and the Hudsons to defraud the creditors of the latter, and that they had prevented him from taking possession of the cattle so purchased at his execution sale, etc.

*609 Carpenter also intervened, charging Brown with certain negligent and wrongful acts as the holder of the collateral, but his plea in intervention was not filed until more than two—and even four—years after the grievances complained of had occurred. To this plea, therefore, the statute of limitations was successfully and properly interposed, and no further notice need be taken of it.

No service of these pleas in intervention was had on the Hudsons, and appellant’s motion to strike them out on this ground was denied.

Appellant Brown, in bar of Randolph’s intervention, pleaded a judgment in the Federal Court in a garnishment proceeding as res adjudicata; but as that judgment was on its face so manifestly a voluntary non-suit on the part of Randolph, we content ourselves with the bare statement of that conclusion, without copying or commenting on the judgment. .

The court submitted special issues to the jury, and in accordance with the verdict thereon entered judgment in favor of Brown against the Hudsons for the amount of the note sued on, with a foreclosure as against them of the mortgage lien on the cattle; but, holding the mortgage to be invalid as against Walters, whose range levy of December 12, 1885, was held to be sufficient to entitle him as a creditor within the chattel mortgage statute to urge its invalidity, gave j udgment in his favor on the replevy bond for the amount of his debt, with interest and costs, which was less than the value of the property so replevied. Included within this verdict and judgment was an express finding against the pledge lien set up by Brown. The court also instructed the jury to return a verdict, not only against Carpenter on limitation, but also against Randolph, both on account of the plea of res adjudicata, and because his purchase of the cattle in October, 1891, “was insufficient, from uncertainty as to what was intended to be levied on, to pass title at such sale.”

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.W. 653, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 605, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-hudson-texapp-1896.