City National Bank of Corpus Christi v. Morgan

29 S.W.2d 923
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 4, 1929
DocketNo. 8274.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 29 S.W.2d 923 (City National Bank of Corpus Christi v. Morgan) 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
City National Bank of Corpus Christi v. Morgan, 29 S.W.2d 923 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

COBBS, J.

There is no brief statement of the nature and result of the case as is provided by the rules of practice and procedure. Harry J. Neihaus sued Bertha Morgan and the City National Bank to foreclose the mortgage lien in the first deed of trust and also in the deed of trust in favor of E. B. Eidson, alleging that there was some question as to the priority of the rights of the plaintiff and defendant bank, and .that plaintiff was entitled to have a foreclosure" of his said prior lien, which liens were subject to the rights of the Dallas Joint Stock Land Bank of Dallas, who held the first Ren for $6,000; and alleging a $210 interest note by E. B. Eidson to the said Joint Stock Land Bank, being for interest due by Bertha Morgan to the said bank; and further alleging the deed of trust above referred to dated November 22, 1926, to secure a note for $1,-665.70, and another note dated March 10, 1927, executed by Bertha Morgan to B. B. Eidson for the sum of $215, payable September 1, 1927; and also alleging an open account of E. B. Eidson for the sum of $111.76, plaintiff alleging that he was the owner and holder of the notes described and the account, *924 claiming an indebtedness against ¡the defendant Bertha Morgan aggregating $4,200; and further alleging “that The City National Bank of Corpus Christi, Texas, defendant herein, claims some right, title or interest in the hereinbefore described lands belonging to the defendant, Mrs. Bertha Morgan, and that this plaintiff! has a prior lien to any alleged or claimed right of said Bank, and that this plaintiff is entitled to have a foreclosure of his said liens on the above described lands as against defendants herein.” Plaintiff further alleged that the City National Bank has a chattel mortgage on certain personal property belonging to Mrs. Bertha Morgan of the value of $3,000, to secure an alleged indebtedness held by said bank, “which said alleged indebtedness is claimed to be further secured by a lien and deed of trust on the land here-inbefore described, and that this plaintiff is entitled.to have the said defendant exhaust the security on the said personal property, consisting of livestock, farming tools and implements, before said bank can claim any right, lien, title or remedy against said land; * * * that if this plaintiff’s lien on said land should be declared to be secondary to and subordinate to a portion of the defendant Bank’s lien this plaintiff is entitled to have the said bank exhaust the security on said personal property first before it can resort to any security on the said land herein-before described, and that such remedy would not hinder or delay the said bank in collecting its said claim.’

Bertha Morgan, on the ©Uh day of March, 1928, executed a deed to the City National Bank renouncing any claim or interest in the land in question.

The City National Bank filed its first amended original answer containing exceptions to the said first amended original petition, which were overruled.

Bertha Morgan filed her answer on November 8, 1927, consisting of demurrer and general denial. On February 11, 1929, E. B. Eid-son filed his petition in intervention against Harry J. Neihaus, the City National Bank of Corpus Christi, Tex., and Bertha Morgan, alleging Iha't he was the owner of 'the obligation described in the plaintiff’s original petition. It is alleged that the City National Bank assumed to' pay intervener’s, claim for an indebtedness against Mrs. Bertha Morgan, and by reason thereof the City National Bank became personally obligated and liable to pay to intervener the total sum sued for, and that the lands described therein are charged with a lien securing the payment thereof in the sum of $4,200, with interest and costs of suit.

On May 2, 1928, Bertha Morgan filed her first amended original answer setting up agreement between her and the City National Bank, whereby in consideration of the delivery to the National Bank of a certain quitclaim deed, quitclaiming to said bank all of her right, title, and interest in the land, “said Bank agreed to and did obligate itself to pay off and discharge all the outstanding indebtedness against said above described land, particularly all the indebtednesses claimed in this suit by the plaintiff Harry J. Neihaus.” She further alleged that on March 6,1928, she executed and delivered to the bank her quitclaim deed to all of the property, and “did accept as full consideration therefor, the aforesaid promise and agreement on the part of said Bank to pay off said indebtedness and relieve her therefrom.” She alleges that said bank has failed and refused to carry out its agreement to pay off the indebtedness, and prays the court “that she have judgment over against said defendant City National Bank for all of said indebtedness charged against her by the plaintiff herein, in the event the same should be adjudged against ¡her,” etc.

After the ease had proceeded to trial, Bertha Morgan filed a trial amendment, in which she alleged that, when the City National Bank made the agreement with her to assume and pay off the alleged indebtedness, it had no intention to do the same, and that the representations made to her were false and untrue, and that they had no present intention of carrying out said agreement, and that it was made to gain an unfair advantage over her, and to mislead her to execute the quitclaim deed; and that she, relying upon such false promises, executed the same, and they have failed and refused to carry out the same, and thereby perpetrated a fraud upon her in the sum of $4,300, for which she prays judgment.

The City National Bank alleged in reply thereto that the quitclaim deed embraced the entire agreement in reference to the land, and there was no’ other consideration, and that she was estopped from denying the recitations made in her deed, ■ and that she paid no consideration whatever to the bank to assume any obligation, as the title to the land was invested in the City National Bank, and it received no consideration for the alleged promise.

The City National Bank and E. B. Eidson, intervener, moved for instructed verdicts, which were refused, and the -case was submitted to the jury upon special issues, and upon their findings the court entered judgment as follows: (1) For the sum of $4,315.79 in favor of E. B. Eidson against Mrs. Bertha Morgan, with interest; (2) Foreclosing the lien upon the lands; (3) foreclosing lien in favor of E. B. Eidson retained in deed of trust for $1,239.86, with 10 per cent, interest, and the sum of $123.98 at 6 per cent, interest, with costs of suit; (4) foreclosing lien in the dped of trust of November 22, 1926, for $2,323.41, with 10 per cent, interest and $357 with 6 per cent, interest; (5) that the trustee’s deed and sale made on the 6t(h day of December, 1927, be declared void and set aside; (6) that *925 Mrs. Bertlia Morgan recover of City National Bank; of Corpus Christ! the sum of $4,315.79, ■with 6 per cent, interest.

The court rendered two separate judgments. One in favor of Eidson in excess of the amount prayed for with foreclosure, and one in favor of Mrs. Bertha Morgan in excess of the amount prayed for.

Intervener sued for $4,⅛00, and Bertha Morgan prayed for $4,300, charged against her hy the plaintiff. There was no judgment in favor of plaintiff, but in favor of intervener E. B. Eidson.

We do not think the trustee’s sale by W. R.

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Related

First Trust Joint Stock Land Bank of Chicago v. Hayes
90 S.W.2d 331 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)

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29 S.W.2d 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-national-bank-of-corpus-christi-v-morgan-texapp-1929.