Busch v. Broun

152 S.W. 683, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1316
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 152 S.W. 683 (Busch v. Broun) 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
Busch v. Broun, 152 S.W. 683, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1316 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

On March 4, 1901, J. W. Jagoe and B. E. Paschall sold a tract of 320 acres of land situated in Denton county to E. T. Broun. As a part of the consideration they took from Broun two promissory notes for $1,000 each, payable to them or their order four and five years after date. A vendor’s lien was retained in both of the notes and in the deed. This deed was filed for record in Denton county March 16th of the same year, and was duly recorded. On the 7th of the same month Jagoe & Paschall sold both of the above notes to W. A. Ponder of Denton, Tex., and transferred them by indorsement without recourse, but gave no other written assignment. Ponder within a few days thereafter sold and transferred the same notes to the appellant, Busch, who has since owned them. No written assignment was made by Ponder, except the indorsement on the back of the notes. Some time after purchasing the land, and before the maturity of either of the notes, Broun subdivided the tract into eight different blocks, most of them containing 40 acres, and sold off specific portions to other parties. On October 7, 1901, Broun deeded 40 acres of the land to H. A. Wood, and on November 15, 1902, deeded still another 40 acres to' Wm. McIntyre. Both tracts were afterwards acquired by W. S. Kanady, who on August 16, 1904, conveyed the entire 80 acres to J. W. Mitchell. As a part of the consideration Mitchell executed vendor’s lien notes aggregating $950. These were aft-erwards acquired on June 22, 1905, in the regular course of business, by the Union Central Life Insurance Company. (For brevity this party will be hereafter referred to as the “Insurance Company.”) On January 31, 1903, Broun sold another tract of 60 acres to F. F. Baines. In August following Ponder executed a release of the lien reserved in the original notes made to Jagoe & Paschall, so far as it related to this tract. But at that time Ponder did not own the notes, and had no authority from Busch* to execute this release. Baines thereafter conveyed the same land to B. H. Ewing, and later Ewing sold and conveyed to Mrs. E. J. Tucker, taking as a part of the consideration five notes for $100 each, in all of which vendor’s liens were retained. Ewing after-wards transferred those notes to A. C. Ous-ley, and the latter by an instrument of writing on March 25, 1905, which recited a consideration of $600 paid, assigned them to the Insurance Company. On January 23d Broun deeded another 40 acres to J. P. Baggett. Baggett thereafter sold the same land to C. C. Hooten. On September 14,1904, Broun sold still another 40 acres to Hooten. On the 3d of November, 1904, • Hooten conveyed both tracts to J. A. Campbell, the deed reciting as a part of the consideration therefor the execution of a vendor’s lien note by Campbell for the sum of $1,000, in which a vendor’s lien was retained to secure its payment. In December, 1905, Hooten and wife, by an instrument in writing reciting the payment of $1,000 as the consideration, assigned this note to the Insurance Company. By these transactions the Insurance Company acquired vendor’s lien notes against the property aggregating in value $2,550. On February 4, 1904, Broun sold another 40 acres of the land to Claude McCormick. The latter sold to W. A. Taliaferro on August 27, 1904. Taliaferro assumed a note which McCormick had given to Broun, and executed two other notes for $100 each. He later paid the sum of $100 of the purchase money; the balance at the time of the trial being unpaid. On April 19, 1905, at the request of the agent of the Insurance Company, but without the knowledge or consent of Busch, who was then the owner and holder of the original purchase-money notes given by Broun, Jagoe & Paschall executed a formal release of the lien retained in their deed to Broun in 1901. This instrument recited that the notes had been paid in full, and purported to release the liens which had theretofore been reserved. Only one of the original notes had at that time matured, and neither of them had been paid. On July 6, 1906, a few months after the maturity of the last note, Busch instituted this suit against Broun for the collection of the notes and the foreclosure of his vendor’s lien. He joined as defendants in that suit the Insurance Company, and quite a number of those who claimed interests in the property under conveyances from Broun. He also made Jagoe & Paschall parties defendant. Upon a trial of the case a judgment was entered in favor of Busch against Broun and Ponder for the full amount of the notes, and against Jagoe & Paschall for $800, but against Busch as to the other defendants. *686 An ' appeal was prosecuted to this court, which resulted in a reversal oí the judgment and a remand of the cause. See Broun v. Busch, 128 S. W. 1156. On the trial from which this appeal is prosecuted Busch recovered a judgment against Broun for. the principal, interest,-' and attorney’s fees due upon his debt, and a foreclosure of his vendor’s lien, but subject to the superior lien of the Insurance Company for $2,550 on 220 acres of the original tract of land. It was also adjudged that from the proceeds of the sale of a designated block of 40 acres theretofore purchased by W. A. Talia-ferro $100 should be paid to Taliaferro, and the remainder applied on Busch’s judgment. It was further adjudged that Busch take nothing in his suit against Jagoe & Paschall. From that judgment Busch alone has appealed.

[1] In the first group of assigned errors appellant complains of that portion of the judgment which subordinates his lien to that of the Insurance Company on 220 acres of the land. He claims that his lien was prior in date, and is therefore entitled to priority in satisfaction. While the case was tried by a jury upon special issues submitted, some of the most material facts must have been determined by the court. The judgment involves a general finding, either by the court or the jury, that the insurance company had acquired its lien in good faith without any notice, actual or constructive, of the older lien held by Busch, and for that reason it was entitled to priority in the foreclosure proceedings. The evidence abundantly supports that conclusion. In response to special interrogatories submitted by the court the jury found that Duggan, the representative of the Insurance Company, exercised ordinary care and prudence in making the- loans mentioned in the evidence, that a reasonably prudent person acting in that capacity would have believed at the time of the execution of the release by Jagoe & Paschall that W. A. Ponder was the owner of the notes given by Broun for the purchase money of the land, and that the representative of the Insurance Company did so believe.

The evidence relied on to support those findings and other similar conclusions reached by the court shows that Duggan pushed his inquiry as to the title of the land far enough to ascertain that Ponder was the assignee of the notes and lien from Jagoe & Paschall, and that he still claimed the ownership. Upon that point Duggan testified : “I had no information that anybody had an interest in the notes except Jagoe & Paschall and Ponder. In making the abstract I discovered the release from.Ponder, believed he owned the notes when paid. I exerted every effort I could to find the true owner. My recollection is when I went to Ponder he claimed to be the owner; have no recollection of asking where the notes were' as evidence that they were paid; have no recollection of calling on Broun for the notes 'when he told me they' were paid off. * * * Did not ask Ponder what he got for the notes nor to whom paid. The only thing I asked him was if the notes were actually paid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 S.W. 683, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 1316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/busch-v-broun-texapp-1912.