Chandler v. Guaranty Mortgage Co.

89 S.W.2d 250
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 1935
DocketNo. 9642.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 89 S.W.2d 250 (Chandler v. Guaranty Mortgage Co.) 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
Chandler v. Guaranty Mortgage Co., 89 S.W.2d 250 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

SMITH, Chief Justice.

On August 31, 1929, C. C. Chandler and wife, Ernesteen, of Corpus Christi, borrowed $3,600 from the Guaranty Building & Loan Company, a Galveston. corporation, evidenced by their two identical coupon notes, as follows (date and signatures omitted) :

“For Value Received, I promise to pay to the Guaranty Building & Loan Co., at its office in Galveston, Texas, in gold coin of the United States of present value, weight and fineness, the sum of $1,800.00, with in *252 terest thereon from date until paid at the rate of eight per cent per annum in 124 installments of $22.50 each, except the first nine which are for $12.00 each, and the last which is for $15.25, the first installment payable on the first day of October next, and one on the first day of each calendar month thereafter, as set out in attached coupons, which are part hereof; and ten per cent per annum after maturity, together with ten per cent additional on the total amount due if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection after default.

“In event of default in payment of any installment hereon, the entire indebtedness shall, at the option of holder, immediately become due and payable.

“Payment hereof secured by deed of trust of even date herewith to Maco Stewart, Trustee, which shall be considered part hereof.”

On the same day the Chandlers executed and delivered to the corporation their two identical deeds of trust, each as security for one of said notes, respectively, in one of which the Chandlers conveyed the east 40 feet of lots 62, 63, and 64, in a certain addition to the city of Corpus Christi, and in the other of which they conveyed the west 40 feet of the same lots, to Maco Stewart, trustee, with power of sale in event of either of various defaults therein prescribed.

Also, at the same time the Chandlers executed and delivered to the Guaranty Building & Loan Company their coupon note in which they agreed to pay Guaranty Mortgage Company nine monthly installments, of $10.50 each, with 10 per cent, interest after 'maturity, running concurrently with the first nine installments to be paid on the $1,-800 notes to the Building & Loan Company. It was stipulated in the note to the mortgage company that “this note is given to evidence the amount agreed to be paid by the undersigned and owing to the payee herein for services rendered by said payee as agent of the undersigned in obtaining a loan on the date hereof from Guaranty Building & Loan Company.”

After making numerous payments upon the several installment obligations assumed by them, the Chandlers defaulted in the payment of several succeeding installments and the Building & Loan Company, acting by and through its president, Maco Stewart, and the latter as original trustee named in the deeds of trust, executed two identical instruments, in which it was recited that “Maco' Stewart, Trustee, declining to act further as trustee, as evidenced by his signature hereto, the Guaranty Building & Loan Company” therein appointed Thornton Thacker, as substitute trustee, to foreclose and sell the property. In pursuance of this authority, Thacker advertised and sold the two properties on July 4, 19?3, to the Guaranty Mortgage Company for the sum of $900 each.

Subsequently, after various amendments of pleadings and rearrangement of parties and causes of action, this suit was tried upon the petition of the mortgage company upon an action in trespass to try title to recover title and possession of the property covered by the two deeds of trust, and conveyed by the trustee’s deeds. The Chandlers contested the suit upon allegations in which they charged usury and attacked the regularity and validity of the sale by the substitute trustee. At the conclusion of the trial before a jury, the court directed a verdict in favor of the mortgage company, and the Chandlers have brought writ of error from the resulting adverse judgment. Plaintiffs in error and defendant in error will be referred to herein as appellants and appellee, respectively.

It was provided in the deeds of trust that • in event of appellants’ default in any one of numerous specified obligations assumed by them in those instruments, including default in the payment of any installment when due, “then, and in any such case, the whole amount of said indebtedness hereby secured remaining unpaid may at the option of the party of the third part, or other holder thereof, immediately mature and become payable, and it shall thereupon, or at any time thereafter, the same or any part thereof remaining unpaid, be the duty of * * * (trustee), and of his successor or substitute as hereinafter provided, on the request of the * * * holder of the indebtedness hereby secured or any part thereof (which request is hereby presumed), to enforce this Trust; and after advertising the time, place and terms of the sale * * * to sell the same in accordance with such advertisement, * * * and make due conveyance to the purchaser or purchasers, with general warranty, binding (appellant) * * *; and said’sale shall forever be a perpetual bar against (appellants), their heirs and assigns. * * *

“It is expressly understood and agreed that the recitals in the conveyance to the purchaser at said sale shall be full evidence of the truth of the matters therein stated, *253 and all prerequisites to said sale shall be conclusively presumed to have been performed, and such sale and conveyance shall be conclusive against the parties of the first part herein, their heirs and assigns, whether such prerequisites shall have been performed or shall not have been performed.

“In case of the absence, death, inability, refusal or failure of the Trustee herein named to act, a successor and substitute may be named, constituted and appointed by the * * * holder of said indebtedness, or any part thereof, without other formality than 'an appointment and designation in writing, and this conveyance shall vest in him, as Trustee, the estate and title in all said premises, and he shall thereupon hold, possess and execute all the title, rights, powers and duties herein conferred on said trustee herein named, and his conveyance to the purchaser shall be equally valid and effective. * * *

“Any holder of any part of the indebtedness hereby secured shall have the option of paying taxes and insurance premiums her'eunder, and in such event the sums so expended shall operate as a lien on the real property herein described and be secured hereby.”

Upon the sale of the property by the substitute trustee, the latter sold and conveyed it to appellee. That conveyance contained recitals of fact evidencing strict compliance with the terms of the deed of trust, including the refusal of the original trustee to act, the appointment of the substitute trustee, advertisement and posting notices of sale, and sale thereunder.

It appears from the record that the holder of the debt and lien gave no prior notice to appellants of the election to mature the entire debt, prior to demand upon the substitute trustee to proceed with the sale, and that the substitute trustee proceeded thereunder, without formal notice to appellants of said election to accelerate the maturity of the debt.

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Bluebook (online)
89 S.W.2d 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-guaranty-mortgage-co-texapp-1935.