Cameron Co. v. J. B. Machine Works

90 S.W. 1129, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 4, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 2
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 90 S.W. 1129 (Cameron Co. v. J. B. Machine Works) 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
Cameron Co. v. J. B. Machine Works, 90 S.W. 1129, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 4, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 2 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

REESE, Associate Justice.

Wm. Cameron & Co., plaintiffs in error, sued W. M. Jones, sheriff, and the Berlin Machine Works, defendants in error, to enjoin the sale by Jones of certain personal property, to wit, a planer and matcher, under an order of sale issued out of the District Court of Smith County, upon a judgment recovered by the Berlin Machine Works against the Tyler Car and Lumber Compaq, for debt and foreclosure of chattel mortgage lien, and against certain other defendants for foreclosure.

The following statement is taken from appellants’ brief, with certain slight additions and corrections suggested by the record:

1. On April 10, 1891, John Durst sold to the Tyler Car and Lumber Company certain lands in Angelina County, and, to secure a part of the purchase money, reserved a vendor’s lien to secure thirty-nine thousand dollars ($39,000) in notes, executed to him by the Tyler Car and Lumber Company, a private corporation. On the same day the Tyler Car and Lumber Company executed a deed of trust to J. D. Moody, trustee, to secure the same notes.

2. These deeds were recorded in the proper records in Angelina County on May 15, 1891, and covered the Yiventi Michelli and James R. Grafton surveys, “together with all improvements and appurtenances thereto belonging.”

3. Said notes, with the lien by which they were secured, were, in May, 1891, and before maturity, sold and delivered, for a valuable consideration, by Durst to the Paramore Investment Company, a private corporation organized under the laws of the State of Missouri, domiciled at St. Louis, Missouri.

4. Subsequent to the execution and delivery of said deeds the Tyler Car and Lumber Company erected upon said land a large lumber manufacturing plant, including sawmills, planers, edgers, a railroad, and the usual equipments of a sawmill plant of large capacity.

5. Afterwards, on April 3, 1896, the Tyler Car and Lumber Company purchased from said Berlin Machine Works, by an order therefor given its agent, an “invincible planer and matcher,” with appurtenances. In the order it was agreed that title to the planer and matcher should remain in the Berlin Machine Works until paid for, and the Tyler Car and Lumber Company gave the Berlin Machine Works its notes for one thousand dollars ($1,000), the purchase price, payable in four,- eight and twelve months after date. These notes were never paid.

6. The planer, within a few days—about June 15, 1896—after its purchase, was received at the mill plant of the Tyler Car and Lumber Company, and placed by it in its plant.

7. The machine weighed about seven thousand pounds, was constructed of iron and steel, and was placed in the planing mill building, fastened to the floor, and affixed to the realty by bolts and lag screws, and connected by belts and pulleys and shafting to the main driving engine. There were a number of other different machines used in the manufacture of lumber on the same floor, fastened to the building, and *7 connected in the same way. The machine in question remained in the same position, and with the same fastenings and connections, and was there operated up to the time this suit was brought, on April 34, 1899.

8. On September 1, 1896, said Tyder Car and Lumber Company executed and delivered to E. E. Paramore a deed of trust to sécure fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) in its promissory notes, payable to bearer, and of even date with the deed. This deed of trust was filed for record in Angelina County, Texas, on September 35, 1896, and duly recorded in the proper records, and covered said Miehelli and Grafton surveys, as well as other lands, pine timber, trams, railroads, wagon ways, sawmill plant, and all improvements and appurtenances, and all erections and fixtures of every sort, and all property of every character then owned or to be thereafter acquired by the Tyler Car and Lumber Company in Angelina County, and all machinery and equipments of every nature or description incident or appertaining to the business and property of the Tyler Car and Lumber Company at its mill plant at Miehelli, with the exception of lumber on hand and a stock of dry-goods, etc.

9. Thereafter the First National Bank of Tyler, Texas, became the owner, by purchase for a valuable consideration, before maturity, of twenty thousand dollars ($30,000) of said fifty thousand dollars ($50,-000) issue of notes, without notice of other liens than those to secure the Durst notes, and the Texas Life Insurance Company became the owner and holder, by purchase for a valuable consideration, before maturity, of thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) of said issue, without notice of other liens than those to secure the Durst notes.

10. On October 5, 1896, the Paramore Investment Company, as the owner and holder of the said Durst notes, filed suit in the District Court of Smith County, Texas, against the Tyler Car and Lumber Company, to recover balance of principal and interest on said Durst notes, amounting to something over forty thousand dollars ($40,000), and to foreclose the lien, and, upon proper allegations, secured the appointment of a receiver, who immediately took charge of the entire mill plant and property of the Tyler Car and Lumber Company in Angelina County, and elsewhere, and proceeded to administer it under the orders of the court. Immediately thereafter the receiver of said First National Bank and the receiver of the Texas Life Insurance Company intervened in the suit to secure judgment and establish their lien against the Tyler Car and Lumber Company on said notes held by them respectively, nothing having been paid thereon.

11. On June 7, 1897, more than a year after its execution, the Berlin Machine Works filed in the county clerk’s office of Angelina County, and caused to be registered in the register of chattel mortgages, the aforesaid order of April 3, 1896, for the planer and matcher.

13. On October 7, 1897, there was entered in said receivership’s suit, number 4353, a decree in favor of the Paramore Investment Company for the sum of. forty-four thousand dollars ($44,000); in favor of the receiver of the Texas Life Insurance Company for the sum of thirty-six thousand dollars ($36,000), and in favor of the said receiver of First National Bank for the sum of twenty-three thousand dollars *8 ($23,000) against the Tyler Car and Lumber Company, with foreclosure of their respective liens, and adjusting the priorities as between them, and providing for the terms of sale by a special master, and the conveyance of title and delivery of the property to the purchaser.

13. On October 27, 1897, said Berlin Machine Works filed a suit in the District Court of Smith County, Texas, against the Tyler Car and Lumber Company and its receiver, B. N. Stafford, the Paramore Investment Company, the First National Bank of Tyler, Texas, the Texas Life Insurance Company, and its receiver, to recover on the notes given by the Tyler Car and Lumber Company to said Berlin Machine Works in the purchase of said planer, amounting to one thousand dollars ($1,000) principal, setting up said order and its registry as a lien, and praying for foreclosure of same on the said planer and matcher, the petition alleging that F. W. Paramore was president, and E. E. Paramore secretary, of the Paramore Investment Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 S.W. 1129, 41 Tex. Civ. App. 4, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-co-v-j-b-machine-works-texapp-1905.