Coppard v. Glasscock

46 S.W.2d 298
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 1932
DocketNo. 1305-5802
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 46 S.W.2d 298 (Coppard v. Glasscock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coppard v. Glasscock, 46 S.W.2d 298 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

, SHORT, P.- J, .

We adopt the following statement of the nature and result of this suit made in the' application for the writ of error:

“This case was tried in the 37th District Court of Bexar County, Texas, without the aid of a jury. The suit was instituted by M. Cop-pard, Trustee in Bankruptcy for the Glass-cock Leasing Syndicate, against Leon D: ■Glasscock, J. M. Edmondson, O. B. Black, W. D. Glasscock and the Pioneer Oil & Refining Company, a private corporation, for the purpose of setting aside and declaring void a certain deed of trust executed by the Glasscock Leasing Syndicate by W. D. Glasscock, as sole Trustee, in favor of Leon D. Glasscock, as the beneficiary, and for the further purpose of declaring void a purported sale made by the Trustee under the deed of trust while the bankruptcy proceedings were pending and without the sanction of the bankruptcy court, and for the further purpose of setting aside any subsequent transfer of the property conveyed by the Trustee, which transfers were based upon the deed of trust.
■ “All the defendants filed formal answers and there was no controversy as to the rights of the Pioneer Oil & Refining Company. The defendants, Leon D. Glasscock and J. M. Ed-mondson, each pleaded a cross action for damages but neither offered any evidence in the cause.
“The Glasscock Leasing Syndicate was an unincorporated company operating under a declaration of trust with W. D. Glasscock as sole Trustee. W. D. Glasscock, acting as sole Trustee, executed the deed of trust in question in which his son, Leon D. Glasscock, was beneficiary. The only description contained in the deed of trust was as follows:
“ ‘All of the property of said syndicate of whatsoever description and wheresoever situated, including land, leases, royalties, wells, drilling equipment, machinery, power plants, automobiles, etc.’ ”
“This deed of trust was filed in the Deed of Trust Records of Bexar County, Texas, but was not filed in the Chattel Mortgage Records of Bexar County, Texas. The plaintiff in error contended that the above description was so vague and indefinite, and so totally inapplicable to any specific property that the recording of the same was no constructive notice to a creditor with a lien. And, furthermore, the plaintiff in error contended that, since the instrument was not filed in the Chattel Mortgage records, it could not operate as a valid chattel mortgage taking precedence over the claim of a creditor with a lien, which is the status occupied by the Trustee in Bankruptcy. An involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against the Glasscock Leasing Syndicate on the 13th, day of May, 1929, and thereafter, while said .proceedings were still pending in the bankruptcy court, on June 4th, 1929, O. B. Black, as Trustee, offered for sale ‘all of the property of said Syndicate of whatsoever description, and wheresoever situated, including land, leases, royalties, wells', drilling equipment, machinery, power plants, automobiles, etc,’ and sold said property" to Leon D. Glasscock, who was not present, but W. D. Glasscock testified that a representative of Leon D. Glasscock was present. The ■bid at the sale was less- than the amount of [300]*300the mortgage, consequently no money was given by the purchaser.
“By virtue of the above sale the Trustee, O. B. Bláek, executed a trustee’s deed to specific property which belonged to the Glasscock Leasing Syndicate, such property being described in the Trustee’s deed as follows:
“ ‘Furniture and Fixtures located on 8th Floor Brady Building, San Antonio, Texas; 1 Flat Top desk; 1 filing cabinet; 1 safe; 1 adding machine; 1 check protector; 1 typewriter ; 2 power plants; 6 storage tanks, more or less; 1 lease house, and other small buildings; leases; — Klemeke Lease, Somerset Bexar County, Texas, 98 acres more or less, 13 wells and equipment; Gonzales Lease, 50 acres more or less, 3 wells and equipment; Curtis Lease, 32 acres more or less, 2 wells and equipment; and any and all other assets owned by the Glasscock Leasing Syndicate of questionable value.’
“On July 7, 1929, Leon D. Glasscock executed an instrument purporting to be a deed to the Idaho Oil Company giving the same •description as was given in the trustee’s deed, which is to be distinguished from the vague and indefinite description in the deed of trust. The Idaho Oil Company is a corporation in which W. D. Glasscock is President, and W. V. Glasscock and wife, and his daughter, and his son, Leon D. Glasscock, are the only stockholders. . On July 29,1929, the Idaho Oil Company, acting by and through its President, W. D. Glasscock, deeded the property to J. M. Edmondson. Again the description used was not the description used in the deed of trust but the description used in the trustee’s deed. No cash consideration was paid either by the Idaho Oil Company to Leon D. Glasscock or by J. M. Edmondson to the Idaho Oil Company, and W. D. Glasscock has, since January 1, 1928, been operating the three leases mentioned in the trustee’s deed and continued to-operate such leases after the purported sale to Leon D. Glasscock and the later sale to the Idaho Oil Company and the sale to J. M. Edmondson.
“The testimony showed that the value of the property sought to be recovered, was around Ten Thousand Dollars, and that the outstanding debts against the Leasing Syndicate, not including the purported debt to Leon D. Glasscock, was' in excess of Twenty-one Thousand Dollars.
“The trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiff in error. The defendants perfected an appeal and the Court of Civil Appeals reversed and rendered the cause.”

The assignments of error assail the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals substantially on the grounds of the insufficiency of the description of the property sought to be conveyed by the instrument, dated January 2,1928, wherein the trustee of the Glasscock Leasing Syndicate apparently conveyed the property mentioned therein to O. B. Black, trustee, to secure the payment of a promissory note executed and delivered by said syndicate to Leon D. Glasscock,- the note being for ?19,-409.33, the Court of Civil Appeals having held the description sufficient; and that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in holding that the rights of the trustee, appointed by the bankruptcy court, in property conveyed by the bankrupt more than four months before bankruptcy, are not greater than the rights of the bankrupt therein, the plaintiff in error claiming that the Court of Civil Appeals erred, among others, in these two particulars, as well as others. We will discuss these two matters in the order mentioned.

It is a general rule of the law that any description which specifies a property intended to be conveyed, and the instrument furnishes the means of determining the particular property covered by the instrument, or which could be ascertained by inquiry as to what property is owned by the grantor in the instrument,.is legally sufficient. This is true for the reason that the sole purpose of a description of property, as contained in a deed of conveyance, is to identify the subject matter of the grant. 8 R. C. L. p. 1074, § 129.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W.2d 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coppard-v-glasscock-texcommnapp-1932.