Coke v. Bargaimes

116 S.W.2d 904, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 16, 1938
DocketNo. 12351.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 116 S.W.2d 904 (Coke v. Bargaimes) 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
Coke v. Bargaimes, 116 S.W.2d 904, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1103 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

YOUNG, Justice.

James Bargaimes, appellee, originated this proceeding March 2, 1935, by filing in a district court of Dallas county a petition against R. K. Coke, Jr., S. P. Sadler trustee, and the Maple Lawn Lumber Company, appellants, to enjoin a threatened trustee’s sale of real estate and premises located on North Fitzhugh street, Dallas, under a deed of trust in favor of Coke, Jr., securing a note for $1,988 signed by Bargaimes, payable to Maple Lawn Lumber Company and transferred to said Coke, and to cancel the said $1,988 note and lien securing same. R. K. Coke, Jr., and wife had previously, on March 7, 1931, conveyed the above real estate to Bargaimes, subject to substantial first and second lien notes to M. P. Crum Company, executed by Coke in purchasing the property. For the equity of Coke in the sale to Bar-gaimes, he received a small cash payment, a house and lot on Lemmon avenue, and a Forrest Hill addition lot, all subject to existing indebtedness thereon. The Fitzhugh street property was encumbered with several other small lien notes at the time, secondary to the M. P. Crum Company notes, none of which were assumed by Bargaimes. As additional consideration, appellee executed to the Maple Lawn Lumber Company two notes for $1,988 and $950, respectively; the latter note having been paid and the $1,988 note having been transferred to appellant Coke prior to this suit. In the former purchase of the Fitzhugh street property, appellant Coke and wife had executed a chattel mortgage and deeds of trust securing the lien notes to M. P. Crum Company, obligating themselves to pay the debts so created as they became due, as well as all charges on the property conveyed, including taxes, a failure so to do authorizing the holder of the secured indebtedness to pay delinquent taxes or charges, with right of subrogation, 10 per cent, interest and attorney’s fee. The deeds of trust authorized a sale of the described property on default of indebtedness secured, or any breach of the conditions thereof, including the above tax payments. The deed of trust executed by Bargaimes, plaintiff below, to Coke, Jr., securing the $1,988 note, obligated the former to pay taxes on the Fitzhugh street property— city, county, and state — promptly as they became due; a failure giving the noteholder the right of subrogation upon payment of any such taxes.

The parties will be styled as in the trial court. The injunction feature of the case and the later receivership of the property described have already been before this court on previous appeals. See Bargaimes v. Coke et al., 86 S.W.2d 653, and Bargaimes v. Lemons, 97 S.W.2d 511, for further facts relative to previous phases of this litigation. Plaintiff, Bargaimes, contended in his original pleading for'injunction that he owed only a balance of $430.-14 at the time the notices of foreclosure were posted, and that R. K. Coke, Jr., defendant in said action, had failed to pay some “assumed” taxes on the Lemmon avenue property, while in possession, in the sum of $477.83, which constituted a debt from Coke to plaintiff Bargaimes, thereby wiping out the $1,988 owing to such defendant. Coke, Jr., defendant, in his cross-afeon, sued for an alleged balance on said $1,988 note and foreclosure of his lien, alleging said balance to be $974.68 at the date of posting of trustee’s notices, with 10 per cent, attorney’s fee. Defendant Coke, Jr., also sued for an aggregate of $849.06, being city, county, and state delinquent taxes paid by him on the Fitzhugh street property, under his obligations in his deeds of trust to the prior lienholder; pleading the failure of' plaintiff Bargaimes to do so under terms of the deed of trust securing the $1,988 note above mentioned. The answer of plaintiff to this cross-action; filed December 9, 1935, was a reafirma *906 tion of the allegations of his original petition, and a denial of the affirmative claims of defendant Coke, Jr.

A trial to the merits before the court was had November 18, 1935, the issues therein being the amount of credits plaintiff Bargaimes was due on said $1,988 note, whether the same was fully' paid, and the status of the accounts between .the parties; also whether Coke, Jr., was entitled to a lien judgment against the Fitzhugh street property on account of the $849.06 tax payment alleged. The court, after hearing the evidence and argument of counsel, took the case under1 advisement, and on January 20, 1936> on his own motion, appointed W. T. Henderson “to audit the records of both the plaintiff and defendants herein, and make proper report to this court within- due time.” On March 23d following, Mr. Henderson filed his report as auditor, the defendants Coke, -Jr., et al. immediately filing their objections and exceptions thereto, which were by the court overruled and exceptions taken. On April 28, 1936, the court made findings presumably on said auditor’s report, and entered judgment, giving Bargaimes additional credits to those admitted by Coke, Jr., and shown on the note, as follows: (1) Merchandise delivered to Coke, Jr., by Bargaimes, $92.79; (2) cash paid to Coke from time to time by Bargaimes, $122.13; (3) rents collected by Coke and the Maple Lawn Lumber Company on the Lemmon avenue property, while in possession, $1,246; further, that a balance on account was due from Bar-gaimes'to defendants Coke in the sum of $370.62, but that the entire principal and interest on the $1,988 note had been paid on October 7, 1933, prior to the filing of suit. The judgment canceled and, held for naught cross-defendant Coke’s deed of trust lien to secure the $1,988 note, also denied his subrogation lien for taxes paid of $785, but rendered a personal judgment in favor of such defendant and against Bargaimes for the last-named amount, with interest, and the $370.62 above, a total of $1,209.57, with legal interest from date of judgment. All costs, including the receivership expense and auditor’s fee of $100, were taxed against all defendants generally; and against R. K. Coke, Jr., especially; to all of the terms of such judgment, defendants appealed; plaintiff Bargaimes filing an appeal, and a cross-assignment of error as to the personal judgment against him for the $785, amount of taxes paid on the-Fitzhugh street property. -

' Defendants’ 23 assignments of error and 38 propositions thereunder complain principally of the judgment of the trial court, where the items of $92.79 for merchandise, $122.13 cash, and $1,246 rents, were credited to the plaintiff Bargaimes; also in the finding that Coke, Jr., was a volunteer in the payment of the $785 tax item and not entitled to subrogation. Defendant Coke’s contentions are mainly .dependent upon a determination of the correctness of the credits and findings just stated. We will jpretermit any discussion of the sufficiency of' plaintiff’s answer to defendants’ cross-action under the provisions of articles 2004, 2005 and 2014, 2015, R.S. Such pleading was filed some time after the trial of November 18, 1935, the plaintiff therefore interposed no answer to defendants’ affirmative claims at time of trial, except the statutory general denial. Article 2005, R.S. It may be .that the pleading in question was sufficient under Key v. Jones, Tex.Civ.App., 191 S.W. 736, 737, writ refused together with the informal manner in which'the trial proceeded. Be this as it may, we are desirous of finálly concluding this litigation, as all facts, direct and collateral, touching the issues at hand, .have been fully, if not voluminously, developed.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W.2d 904, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 1103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coke-v-bargaimes-texapp-1938.