Bute v. Williams

162 S.W. 989, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 504
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 4, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 989 (Bute v. Williams) 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
Bute v. Williams, 162 S.W. 989, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 504 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HARPER, J.

This action was brought by appellant Bute to recover the principal and interest due on certain notes, aggregating $3,500, to foreclose the vendor’s lien on the land sold, and for which the notes were executed as consideration, against H. G. Williams, C. C. Waller, and C. F. Bates, defendants.

Plaintiff alleged that on June 29, 1910, defendant Waller executed and delivered to defendant H. G. Williams certain promissory notes aggregating $150,000, being the pur *990 chase price of 10,000 acres of land. — a vendor’s lien was retained — the first nine due one year after date, etc.; that C. P. Bates, a real estate agent, made the deal, and that seven notes, aggregating $3,500, were assigned and transferred to said Bates in payment of his commission for making, the sale; that thereafter, before maturity, Bates assigned the said last notes to the Houston National Exchange Bank as collateral for a loan; that plaintiff purchased from bank; that all of said notes provided that failure to pay any one shall, at the option of the holder, mature all the notes that day given by Waller to Williams; prayed for judgment for notes, etc., as innocent purchaser from bank.

IT.' G. Williams answered that by reason of fraud practiced upon him by said O. E. Bates and O. O. Waller at the time of their execution, in this: that Bates represented that he could sell a tract of land owned by him for the sum of $150,000 to a wealthy and responsible man, and that he agreed to allow 5 per cent, commission on the sale. Be-' lieving and relying upon the representations so made, the sale was consummated to C. G. Waller and notes executed for the whole of the purchase price. That the notes sued on were transferred to plaintiff long after maturity and long after the entire series of notes had been declared to be due, and that the notes sued on were taken by plaintiff with full knowledge; wherefore, plaintiff has no cause of action for foreclosure of vendor’s lien, etc. Further alleges that plaintiff is not the owner of the notes, but has an agreement with said Bates to become the ostensible owner and to institute this suit, that he may avoid the defenses which exist against their collection. By cross-action makes Louis R. Bryan, Ghas. A. Warnken, Fred E. Hatey, S. W. Davis, and F. Z. Kit-termán, Louis C. Kitterman, W. J. Wiley, and the Hay City Land Company and the Blanco Land & Cattle Company, and George Dowell, parties defendant, and alleges for cause of action, after describing the way the sale of land and execution of notes were brought about at length, he charges that the purchaser, Waller, failed to perform any of the promises made, charges collusion between Bates and Waller, and prayed that plaintiff take nothing by the suit, and that he have judgment canceling the deed and notes and removal of cloud, etc.

The findings of fact by the trial court being a clear and comprehensive statement of all the essential facts of the case as plead, we copy same in full and refer to it for further details of the questions involved for consideration in this opinion. C. C. Waller alleged that the notes sued on were without consideration and void, and prayed that his contract be canceled. The others made parties to the suit have been disposed of by the trial court, and they have not appealed from the action there taken. The case was tried by the court without jury, and judgment for defendant H. G. Williams upon his cross-bill, canceling notes and the lien on the land sought to be conveyed, and that plaintiff Bute take nothing. The findings of fact by the trial court are as follows:

“(1) The defendant Williams was the owner of 10,000 acres of land in Hays county and was desirous of selling it, and he and defendant Bates, and probably Waller, after going .over to East Texas to look at some lands which had nothing to do with this case, and which was not necessary to inject into it, came back to Houston, and Williams said that he would give 5 per cent, if Bates would find him a purchaser willing and able to buy his 10,000 acres at $15 an acre.
“(2) I conclude that Bates had seen Waller, who was a very optimistic and visionary kind of a man to whom every prospect of- a trade meant a fortune, and that Bates, relying upon representations made by Waller as to his prospects of being soon provided with large funds, represented to Williams that Waller was a man of large means and able to carry out the trade, and Williams, who was an old man and a countryman, thereupon agreed with Waller to sell him the land for $150,000 at $15 an acre, Waller assuming to pay, as a part of the purchase money, a note for $10,-000 due to a c&tain Mrs. Davis, such payment to be made by Waller in three years, Waller to be credited to the extent of the said $10,000 and interest on the purchase money of the land under the contract between him and Williams, and, in order to assure and secure Williams in the payment of said note by Waller, Waller had the American Mortgage Company of Pittsburg, Pa., to convey to Williams, by deed, certain lots and lands situated in what is known as Penn •City, Harris county, Tex.
“(3) Penn City was represented by an enterprise in the nature of .a proposed establishment of rolling mills and other enormous establishments of like kind on about 3,000 acres of land on the banks of the Houston Ship channel, an enterprise which later vanished into thin air and wholly failed in every way.
“(4) It was provided that if Waller paid off the $10,000 note that the conveyance of the American Mortgage Company is to be treated as a mortgage and be released, but if he did not the lots should become the property of Williams.
“(5) The $143,895, being the difference between the $10,000 note and interest and the $150,000 to be paid for the land, was represented by a series of notes; the first nine for the sum of $1,000 each, and two notes for the sum of $500 each, due and payable a year from said date, and a large number of other notes payable as late as 13 years after date, with the usual right to elect to declare maturity of the whole series in the event of failure to pay any one of them.
“(6) Waller and Williams went together (Bates not going) to look over the land, and *991 Waller said that he would build a railroad from the I. & G. N. Railroad out to a place where they proposed to establish a city, and for that reason he could not pay the $10,-000 and the agreement was made to put up the Penn City lots in lieu of it.
“(7) It was later found that there was a mortgage retained by the Penn City on the lots, and in lieu of that, in order to protect Williams against that mortgage, Waller procured the American Mortgage Company to agree to deliver him $50,000 of 7 per cent, participating bonds of the American Mortgage Company as soon as they came from the hands of the printer, Waller releasing all of his interest in the lots, and Waller deposited with one Dowell in Austin the $50,000 receipt from the American Mortgage Company in order to guarantee that he would secure release from the mortgage on the lots or the lien retained, which lots were to stand in place of the cash payment that Waller was to make.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 989, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bute-v-williams-texapp-1913.