Continental State Bank v. Pepper

106 S.W.2d 654, 130 Tex. 71
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1937
DocketNo. 6606.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 106 S.W.2d 654 (Continental State Bank v. Pepper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental State Bank v. Pepper, 106 S.W.2d 654, 130 Tex. 71 (Tex. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Smedley,

of the Commission of Appeals, delivered the opinion for the Court.

*74 Plaintiffs in error after trial before a jury in district court recovered judgment against defendants in error for the title and possession of a tract of 100 acres of land in Gregg County. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment in so far as it denied recovery to defendants in error Eggleston, Joins, Anderson and Kaufman, and rendered judgment in their favor for the mineral interests claimed by them. 60 S. W. (2d) 1089.

Continental State Bank purchased the land at trustee’s sale foreclosing a lien, and thereafter leased the land for oil, gas and other minerals to Amerada Petroleum Corporation. Pepper and wife were the owners of the land incumbered by the deed of trust lien and other liens at the time of the trustee’s sale. The other defendants in error have a mineral lease and conveyances of mineral interests from and under Pepper and wife executed after the trustee’s sale. The controversy is determined in favor of plaintiffs in error by our conclusion, after careful consideration of the record and the many briefs, that the trustee’s sale was valid.

The deed of trust was .executed by W. W. Hamilton and wife' to secure a promissory note in the sum of $1,400.00, dated February 22, 1919, and due March 1, 1926. Mrs. Hamilton, after her husband’s death, conveyed the land to W. M. Harris, who assumed payment of the $1,400.00 note, and on February 10, 1923, Harris and wife conveyed the land, subject to the indebtedness evidenced by said note, to plaintiff in error, Continental State Bank. W. L. Perdue, cashier of said bank, became the owner of the note and the lien securing it.

On May 15, 1926, the Continental State Bank sold and conveyed the land to defendant in error D. G. Pepper, the deed reciting Pepper’s assumption of the $1,400.00, the payment of $205.00 in cash, and the execution by Pepper of his note to the bank for $1,640.00 payable in annual installments of $205.00 and secured by vendor’s lien. The bank in connection with the sale of the land undertook to induce the Federal Land Bank to take up and extend the $1,400.00 note, entering into negotiations for that purpose before the deed was made to Pepper. The Land Bank, after considering Pepper’s formal application for the loan to be secured by a first lien on the land, advised Pepper in writing on June 7, 1926, that it would make him a loan of $1,000.00 from which would be deducted a stock subscription of $50.00 and that it would be necessary for him, in order to avail himself of the loan, to pay the remainder of the existing indebtedness or arrange with the holder thereof to carry the balance as a second lien. Pepper on June 12, 1926, sent *75 the Federal Land Bank his written acceptance of the loan as offered.

Pursuant to the foregoing negotiations Perdue, the owner of the $1,400.00 note, executed to the Federal Land Bank on June 17, 1926, a formal assignment of $950.00 of the note and a conveyance of the lien securing the indebtedness assigned, the instrument expressly providing that the note or part thereof assigned to the bank and the amortization note in the sum of $1,000.00 executed by Pepper should be and remain a first and superior lien on the land and that the remainder of the debt represented by the note held by the grantor should be and remain a second and inferior lien. Perdue retained the $1,400.00 note and it was credited, as the assignment provided, with the $950.00 paid him by the Federal Land Bank.

On the same date, June 17, 1926, Pepper and wife executed to the Federal Land Bank their promissory note in the principal sum of $1,000.00 payable on the amortization plan in sixty-nine semiannual payments and their deed of trust conveying the land in controversy to M. H. Gossett, trustee, to secure payment of the said note. The deed of trust recites that the note which it secures was executed in extension of $950.00 of the $1,400.00 note and that the balance of $50.00 is for money advanced by the bank to the mortgagors to pay for stock incidental to the loan and that the mortgagors agree that the Federal Land Bank is subrogated to all the liens, superior title, etc., held, owned or possessed by the owner or holder of the note, whether released or transferred.

There was no extension to any definite time of the $450.00 balance due on the $1,400.00 note held by Perdue. According to the jury’s finding Perdue agreed to carry this balance temporarily until it could be determined whether the Federal Land Bank would increase the loan, provided Pepper would pay interest on such balance, would move on the place, and pay all installments and interest on the $1,640.00 note that he had executed to the Continental State Bank. These conditions Pepper did not perform; and Perdue on January 10, 1928, requested F. W. Bartlett, who was named as trustee in the deed of trust executed by Hamilton, to advertise the land for sale under the terms of the deed of trust. Upon Bartlett’s refusal to act and resignation Perdue by written instrument executed March 9, 1928, appointed B. C. Todd substitute trustee to sell the property under the said deed of trust. Todd advertised the land for sale, sold it at public auction to Continental State Bank for $150.00 on April 3, 1928, and executed his deed conveying the land to the bank. The sale and the conveyance were expressly made sub *76 ject to the outstanding first lien held by the Federal Land Bank. That bank was not notified of the sale and did not join either in the appointment of the substitute trustee or in the request to make the sale.

Defendants in error attack the trustee’s sale on several grounds. They concede that the balance of $450.00 owned by Perdue after his assignment of $950.00 of the note to the Federal Land Bank was secured by lien upon the land, but contend that the lien securing such balance could not be foreclosed by trustee’s sale, that it was a junior mortgage without power of sale. It is argued that the phrase contained in the assignment, “hereby transferring and assigning unto said bank all the right, title and interest held and owned by grantor in and to the indebtedness above described, together with all and singular all liens, superior title, rights, equities and interest in and to said land now owned or held by the grantor to secure the payment of said indebtedness,” had the effect of divesting Perdue of every interest, right and remedy that the Hamilton deed of trust gave him as the owner of the $1,400.00 note except the second and inferior lien that a subsequent paragraph of the assignment saved to him. We do not so construe the assignment. The words quoted immediately follow that part of the instrument which assigns to the Federal Land Bank $950.00 of the $1,400.00 note. The words “indebtedness above described” and “said indebtedness” have reference to the $950.00 assigned. The liens and other rights are transferred to the Federal Land Bank in so far as they secure and are incidental to that part of the note assigned, — such construction being consistent with, if not required by, the rule that the lien is incidental to the debt and inseparable from it. Pope v. Beauchamp, 110 Texas 271, 276, 219 S. W. 447; West v. First Baptist Church, 123 Texas 388, 404, 71 S. W. (2d) 1090. The entire debt was not assigned by Perdue, nor was the entire lien assigned. The lien was incident to the entire debt and the power of sale was incident to the entire lien.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W.2d 654, 130 Tex. 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-state-bank-v-pepper-tex-1937.