Collier v. Ford

81 S.W.2d 821, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 417
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 14, 1935
DocketNo. 10073.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 81 S.W.2d 821 (Collier v. Ford) 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
Collier v. Ford, 81 S.W.2d 821, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 417 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

The appellants, J. A. Collier and wife, sued the appellees, D. A. Ford, Ford Realty Com *822 pany, and Lone Star Realty Company, to cancel certain deeds passing between tbe appel-lees affecting tbe premises in the city of Houston occupied and claimed by the appellants as their homestead, and'to remove consequent clouds upon their alleged title thereto, further claiming $5,000 damages.

The appellees answered appellants’ declared-upon cause of action with a general demurrer, general denial, and a plea of not guilty; then, becoming actors themselves, they countered with a cross-action in trespass to try title for the property against appellants, alleging that they were the owners thereof and that appellants were unlawfully .withholding same from them, further asking nominal damages and costs.

These answering pleadings of the appellees were replied to by appellants with a general demurrer, general denial, and a plea of not guilty.

After hearing the evidence for both parties, the trial court refused different motions of the appellants for peremptory instructions in their favor, but granted like motions of the appellees for such instructions in their own behalf, and entered final judgment in favor of all the appellees on appellants’ original cause of action, to the effect that the latter take nothing, and further ordered that the appellee Lone Star Realty Company not only recover the title and possession of the property from the appellants, but that it have also a recovery of $677.34 against them as for rent thereon from January 5th of 1932 to the date of this trial.

The appeal of the appellants from that judgment is now regularly before this court.

Preliminarily the material facts briefly and generally stated are:

Ben Neff, on November 30, 1928, had purchased the property from D. A. Ford, executing as a deferred part of the consideration therefor his vendor’s lien note thereon for $6,500, to mature five years after its date, with interest thereon payable semiannually; the note being secured by a deed of trust of even date therewith, also carrying the lien in favor of W. P. Hamblen as trustee for the use and benefit of Ford.
Thereafter, on the 11th day of August of 1930, the appellants bought the property from Neff and moved into the same for occupancy as their homestead,, not assuming the payment of the $6,500 outstanding Neff indebtedness thereon, but buying expressly subject thereto; subsequently, D. A. Ford assigned the note and deed of trust securing same to Mrs. L. E. Noble, who at the time of the execution of the deeds herein sought to be canceled was the sole owner and holder of both such note and deed of trust, her grantor therein, D. A. Ford, having continued, however, to act as her agent with reference to such property at all times; the deed of trust provided that, should Hamblen, the original trustee, be unable or refuse to act as such trustee, a successor or substitute trustee was to be in writing appointed by the then holder of the indebtedness; the deed of trust also contained this pertinent provision: “It is expressly agreed that the recitals in the conveyance to the purchaser shall be full evidence of the matters therein stated, and all prerequisites to the said sale shall be presumed to have been performed.”

. On the 5th day of January of 1932, D. A. Ford, purporting to act as such substitute trustee under this deed of trust, and under recitation that the maker of the note had defaulted on interest due, on which account he had been requested by the holder of the note to do so, sold the property to the appellee, the Ford Realty Company, for the sum of $1,-000, the deed evidentiary thereof reciting, among other things, this: “Whereas the said Ben Neff made default in the interest and taxes, on said note, which interest became due on May 30,1931, (he only paid the sum of $30.00 on said interest payments) and Mrs. L. E. Noble, owner and holder of said note and lien on said property securing the same, has requested me on account of such non payment to sell said property as Substitute Trustee.”

Thereafter, on the 30th of January of 1932, the Ford Realty Company, acting by D. A. Ford, as its president, conveyed the property to the Lone Star Realty Company; the two deeds thus described being the ones the appellants sought to cancel by, this suit, under averments that they were illegal and void, and constituted clouds upon their title to the land.

Appellants’ grounds of attack upon the two deeds and the proceedings in pari materia therewith were, in effect, these:

(1) The sale by Ford as substitute trustee was invalid, because the deed of trust provided that, upon default on the indebtedness thereby secured, it should only be made upon request of the trustee by the then holder of the note, which was not complied with, in that Mrs! Noble, who was such owner and holder, made no such request.

(2) No proper demand having been first made upon Hamblen, the original trustee, to act, nor any refusal by him to do so having *823 been shown, the appointment of Ford as a substitute trustee and the sale by him as such were both void.

(3) Substitute trustee Ford was then president of the company to which his sale was made, also personally owning one-half of its corporate stock, which facts invalidated the same; the trust deed not providing that any such sale might be made.

(4) The deed of trust having provided that “notice, as is or may be required by law” must be given in advertising the property for sale, and no personal notice of the sale having ever been given to the grantor, Neff, or his assigns, such provision was not complied with, and the sale in consequence was ineffective.

(5) Mrs. Noble, the holder at all times of the note, through D. A. Ford as her agent, having accepted from them part payments of interest in default, led the debtors (appellants) into believing that the property would not be sold, and thereby waived the strict requirements as to prompt payment contained in the deed of trust, and became thereafter estopped in equity from having the property sold out nevertheless as under such requirements.

(6) The grossly inadequate price of $1,000 at the substitute trustee’s sale of property admittedly then worth $4,500 or $5,000, coupled with the other infirmities alleged, supra, required the setting aside thereof.

(7) The deed of trust providing that failure to pay interest when due should mature the whole indebtedness of both principal and interest, or either, at the holder’s option, being harsh provisions and not self-executing, entitled appellant debtors to notice of the exercise of such options and advance demand upon them for compliance therewith, neither of which having been given, the sale of the property, in the absence thereof, was invalid as against their rights.

(S) Appellee Ford’s testimony (1) that he had notified appellants after November 5th of 1931 that he was going to sell them out under the deed of trust, and (2) that the $65 monthly payment received by him from appellants on 5th day of January of 1932, was for rent rather than interest, under a new agreement made after November 5th of 1931, and appellant J. A. Collier’s denial of both statements, raised material issues of fact for the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W.2d 821, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collier-v-ford-texapp-1935.