Citizens' Guaranty State Bank v. Johnson

211 S.W. 271, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 496
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1919
DocketNo. 5976. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 211 S.W. 271 (Citizens' Guaranty State Bank v. Johnson) 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
Citizens' Guaranty State Bank v. Johnson, 211 S.W. 271, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 496 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

KEY, C. J.

Mrs. Emma Johnson brought this suit against the Citizens’ Guaranty State Bank, J. W. Carlson, and Joe^ Jester for damages on account of the alleged conversion by the defendants of 10 bales of cotton, alleged to be the property of the plaintiff. She alleged that on January 3, 1916, Ed. Zar and his wife,. Malvina Zar, executed a mortgage to her, which covered the cotton in question, and that thereafter Ed. Zar sold and delivered same to her in part payment of the mortgage debt.

The defendants filed a joint answer, consisting of a general denial and a special plea, asserting the bank’s right to the cotton under a mortgage executed in April, 1916, by Ed. Zar, and under a bill of sale subsequently executed by Mrs. Malvina Zar, wife of Ed, Zar.

At the trial the court submitted the case to the jury upon one special issue, as follows:

“Question No. 1. Were the ten bales of cotton alleged to have been sequestrated and sold by the defendant Citizens’ Guaranty State Bank of Manor, Texas, covered by and subject to the chattel mortgage executed on the 3d day of January, A. D. 1916, by Ed. Zar and wife, Mal-vina Zar, to the plaintiff, Mrs. Emma Johnson, and introduced in evidence in this case?”

By their verdict the jury gave an affirmative answer to that question, whereupon the court rendered judgment for the plaintiff for the value of the cotton on the day it was seized and levied upon under a writ of sequestration which the bank had caused to be issued against Ed. Zar, less $39.89 paid by the bank for ginning the cotton, and the bank has appealed.

Judgment was rendered to the effect that the plaintiff take nothing as against the other two defendants, and the bank is the only complainant in this court.

The first assignment of error complains of the refusal of the court to give a requested instruction directing the jury to find a general verdict in favor of the defendants. Under that assignment appellant submits but one proposition of law, which is that the plaintiff having sued for the conversion of her personal property, and not for the conversion of property upon which she had a lien, and having failed in her proof to show title, in said property, defendants were entitled to a peremptory instruction in their favor.

In our opinion the proposition asserted is not sustained by the record, and therefore the charge- referred to was properly refused.

[1] In the plaintiff’s petition her rights as mortgagee were fully set out; and while it is true that she also alleged that. Ed. Zar had sold and delivered to her the cotton in controversy in part payment of the mortgage debt, she prayed for both general and special relief, and, as the petition was not excepted to because it asserted her rights in both respects in the same count, she was entitled to recover, if the proof was sufficient, either as purchaser or mortgagee; also the plaintiff submitted testimony tending to sustain her plea of title by purchase from Ed. Zar, 'and for that reason the instruction referred to was properly refused.

[2] The other assignments in appellant’s brief present substantially one question, and that is whether or not the fact that the plaintiff’s mortgage was prior to the bank’s mortgage conferred upon the plaintiff, as against the- bank, any right to recover for more than the value of one-half of the cotton in controversy, which is a close question, and not entirely free from difficulty.

The material facts are as follows: On the 3d day of- January, 1916, Ed. Zar and his wife, Malvina Zar, executed a mortgage to the plaintiff, from which we copy as follows:

“ * * * We have this day and do by these presents grant, bargain, sell, convey, and mortgage unto her, the said Mrs. Emma Johnson, the entire crop of cotton raised on fifty (56) acres of land adjoining the fifty (56) acres rented by us to Victor Anderson, and one-half (½) of the entire crop of cotton for the year 1916, to be grown and cultivated on about 193 acres of our farm of four hundred and eighteen and ⅛ acres (418⅛), part of the Wayman E. Wells and Gordon O. Jennings survey, in said Travis county, Texas; and we hereby bind and obligate ourselves to work and cultivate in a farmer-like manner all said crops, and we hereby bind and obligate ourselves to gather and house the same in good time, order, and condition, and have the said cotton ginned and baled at Manor, Texas, and to deliver all of said cotton to the said Mrs. Emma Johnson in the town of Manor, Texas, on or by the 15th day of November, A. D. 1916.
“And in default of payment of said indebtedness herein mentioned on or by the 1st day of January, A. D. 1917, then the said Mrs. Emma Johnson, her agent or attorney, or the bearer of said indebtedness, is hereby authorized to take immediate possession of said crop hereby mortgaged, or so much thereof as they may deem necessary, and sell the same at either public or private sale. * * * ”

On April 1, 1916, Ed. Zar also executed to the defendant bank a chattel mortgage upon certain live stock, and upon a portion of his crop described as follows:

*273 •‘Also the first 10 bales of cotton raised by me on my farm 2½ southeast of Manor, Tex., ■which represents my half not already mortgaged. * * * ”

The testimony of C. W. Rickley, who was a witness for the hank, justifies the finding that, during the year 1916, Ed. Zar raised at least 32 bales of cotton on the farm referred to, 27 of which were probably raised on the 198 acres, and 5 upon the 50 acres, referred to as adjoining the 50 acres rented to Victor Anderson.

The plaintiff submitted testimony tending to show that in November, 1916, Ed. Zar sold the cotton in question to the plaintiff in part payment of her debt secured by the mortgage thereon. Thereafter Zar caused the cotton to be carried to • the town of Manor, and left in a cotton yard; and on January 4, 1917, the bank brought suit in the court which tried this case against Ed. Zar, seeking to recover upon a promissory note for $1,595, and also to foreclose its chattel mortgage hereinbefore referred to. The bank also sued out a writ'of sequestration, under which the cotton in question was seized by an officer; whereupon the bank gave a sequestration bond, obtained possession of the property, and sold and appropriated it to its own use; and thereafter the plaintiff, Mrs.) Johnson, brought this suit against the bank and two of its officers and agents, which, as heretofore stated, resulted in a judgment for Mrs. Johnson against the bank, and the latter has appealed. There was no controversy as to the value of the cotton at the time the bank appropriated it.

In this court it is earnestly and ably insisted by appellant’s counsel that the date of the respective mortgages is of no consequence; that the legal effect of the two instruments is this: that Mrs. Johnson had a mortgage on an undivided half interest in the ten bales of cotton in controversy, and that the bank had a mortgage of equal dignity and force upon the other undivided half interest; and therefore Mrs. Johnson should not have recovered, as> she did, the full market value of the cotton when it was appropriated by the bank, but only half of that sum. That argument is based upon the assumption that Mrs.

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211 S.W. 271, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 496, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-guaranty-state-bank-v-johnson-texapp-1919.