Cook v. Smith

96 S.W.2d 318, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 784
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 17, 1936
DocketNo. 10225.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 96 S.W.2d 318 (Cook v. Smith) 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
Cook v. Smith, 96 S.W.2d 318, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 784 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

It is impossible to make a succinct statement of the nature and result of this suit because of the fact that the pleadings upon which the judgment appealed from was rendered cannot be clearly understood without a résumé of former pleadings and judgments made and rendered by and between the parties hereto with regard to the subject-matter of the suit. The following sufficient statement of these former proceedings a'nd judgments is copied from appellants’ brief:

“On December 11, 1931, the appellee, Fred T. Smith, held as collateral security a vendor’s lien note owned by appellant Cook and wife and executed by Arthur J. Krai and wife, secured by the vendor’s lien on Lots 103 and 1Q4 in W. L. Edmundson’s First Addition to the City of Houston. On said date they filed their petition in the district court of Harris County as plaintiffs, seeking foreclosure of the vendor’s lien, praying for judgment for the amount of the principal, interest and attorney’s fees on the note. Iionerkamp-Poch Lumber Company also joined as plaintiff, setting up a lien of $17,500.00, but affirmatively alleging that it was inferior to the lien held by Smith and the Cooks. Numerous other subordinate lien holders were made parties defendant in the suit. The petition was signed by J. V. Meek and Fred T. Moore ‘Attorneys for plaintiffs, Fred T. Smith, M. Z. Cook and Nellie E. Cook.’ They did not pray for an apportionment of the proceeds between them, although it is set out in the petition that appellee Smith was holding the note as collateral to. Cook’s note 'in the sum of $6000.00. There were no issues between the appellant and the appellee in such suit and no relief sought as against each other, as shown in the petition. There was an agreed judgment in the cause, Smith and Cook jointly recovering judgment against Krai for $9,000.00, it being recited that of the $9,000.00, $7,051.00 was due Smith, and establishing a superior lien as against the other defendants. It was recited in the judgment that Smith was ‘entitled to be paid first out of any money derived from said $8,000.00 note and lien securing the same to the extent of $7,051.00.’ The judgment recited, after ordering execution, that moneys derived from the sale should be applied first to Smith’s debt, second to the balance of the judgment in favor of Cook and Smith, after crediting the amount of Smith’s judgment and the balance to the subordinate lien holders.
“Execútion in this cause was issued and delivered to the sheriff on the 11th day of May, 1932, directing that the proceeds be applied to -the satisfaction of the judgment in favor of Smith and Cook in the sum of $9,000.00, there being no direction as to any apportionment of the proceeds between them. The sheriff made return on the execution, setting forth that he sold the property on the 7th day of June and that Cook bid $9,000.00 and paid the costs amounting to $93.50 and his additional costs of executing the writ and ‘paid me no moneys that I could deliver to Fred T. Smith in accordance with the writ consequently there was no sale. This writ is therefore entitled to no credit except said $93.50 costs paid by M. Z. Cook. This writ is therefore returned not executed.’
“On the 7th-day of July, 1932, an alias execution was placed in the hands of the *320 sheriff. This execution specifically directed the payment of Smith’s claim in the sum of $7,051.00 and then the payment of the balance due Cook under the $9,000.00 judgment and the - balance to the subordinate lien holders. The return showed that on the 2nd day of August, 1932, the property was sold to appellee Smith for $5,000.00, Smith paying the subsequently accruing costs and crediting the $5,000.00 on his judgment.
“On July 27th, after the issuance of the second execution and before the sale of the property, Cook applied to the 55th District Court for an injunction restraining the sale for a reasonable time, alleging that the sheriff had issued to him a deed pursuant to the first sale, and (further alleging) an agreement with Smith for a reasonable time to refinance the same, as hereinafter fully set forth. There was a notice issued of an application for a temporary injunction. On July 29, 1932, two days after, Judge Boyd of the 55th District Court, entered an order denying the application for temporary injunction, it being recited in said order that ‘on this 29th day of July, 1932, came on to be heard plaintiff’s petition in the above entitled and numbered cause, asking for a temporary injunction.’ And after recitation that all parties had announced ready, etc., that the Court was of the opinion that ‘plaintiff has not shown any good and sufficient ground for the issuance of the temporary injunction he prays for’; and further, ‘It is therefore considered, ordered, adjudged and decreed that plaintiff’s said prayer for a temporary injunction is hereby denied, that plaintiff take nothing herein, and that defendants recover their costs.’ This is the only order’ which has ever been entered in this cause.”

The suit in which the agreed judgment was rendered, and the two executions were issued, was No. 195747 upon the docket of the trial court. The suit in which appellants sought to enjoin the sale under the second execution and in which the judgment before set out refusing the injunction was rendered was No. 205897.

In this petition for injunction the plaintiffs, after pleading the agreed judgment rendered in cause No. 195747 and the sale of the land to plaintiff M. Z. Cook on June 7, 1932, further allege the execution by the sheriff of a deed to appellants which was delivered by the sheriff to appellee Smith, and also the procuring by Smith of the issuance of an alias execution under which the land was again advertised for sale. This petition further alleges:

“That there was harmony between them, the said M. Z. Cook and Fred T. Smith, the indebtedness of Cook to Smith being specific and undisputed; and that at the sale of said property under execution on the date of June 7, 1932, plaintiff M. Z. Cook, and defendant, Fred T. Smith, together with their attorney, Fred Moore, went to the said sale to bid in the property with the understanding that plaintiff should bid in the said property for the sum of INTine Thousand Dollars, and with the understanding that plaintiff did not at that time have cash, but that the Nine Thousand Dollars bid should be credited on the judgment against Krai et al., and with the further specific understanding that plaintiff should have a reasonable time in which to secure a loan on the said property or to sell said property and .to pay defendant, Smith, the amount that was due him, and with the further understanding that in doing so, selling the property or borrowing money thereon, plaintiff would have the cooperation of defendant. * * *
“And plaintiff would further show into the court that the defendant has not cooperated with him in his efforts at raising the money to pay off defendant, and that defendant has not allowed plaintiff a reasonable time in which to raise the money; that it is exceedingly difficult to borrow money at this time and has been so ever since the aforesaid property had been in litigation, and that said facts are well known to defendant, Fred T.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 S.W.2d 318, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-smith-texapp-1936.