Crockett v. Rogers

137 S.W.2d 185
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1940
DocketNo. 5720.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 137 S.W.2d 185 (Crockett v. Rogers) 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
Crockett v. Rogers, 137 S.W.2d 185 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

HALL, Justice. '

This suit was instituted July 13, 1938, by appellant, C. W. Crockett, against Yandell Rogers, Rozel Oil Corporation, L. L. James, and J. D. Stringer, fo.r ¾, interest in the proceeds of the sale of a certain oil and gas lease on 96 acres of land, located in Gregg County, Texas, and to subject certain notes, a part of the proceeds of said sale to the payment thereof. It was alleged by appellant that he, together with appellee Rogers, were joint owners of said oil and gas lease; Appellant’s interest therein which he had theretofore assigned to “Yandell Rogers as a matter of convenience and without any consideration *187 paid whatsoever but to give the said Yan-dell Rogers an opportunity to better handle same and more conveniently operate same both for himself and for the plaintiff; that it was then and there understood that Yan-dell Rogers should proceed to develop the said lease, that he might borrow money for the development thereof and obtain credit in connection with the development of the said lease * * * ”; that after all said indebtedness was liquidated appellant was to own ½ of said lease “or the proceeds thereof.” Appellant alleged further that “thereafter the said Yandell Rogers and/or Rozel Oil Corporation with the consent of plaintiff (appellant, Crockett) sold, transferred and assigned said.lease to the Mar-Tex Oil Company * * A large portion of the purchase price for said lease was .represented by notes referred to hereafter as the Mar-Tex notes. Appellant sought and obtained a receiver to take charge of the Mar-Tex notes, and an injunction prohibiting a multiplicity of suits respecting same. It was stipulated in the court below that Yandell Rogers owned, controlled and dominated the Rozel Oil Corporation and that it was his alter ego, so reference hereafter shall be made to Yandell Rogers alone.

Judgment by default was rendered against Yandell Rogers for the sum of $32,951.64, same being ¼ of the purchase price paid by Mar-Tex Oil Company for said lease. The' judgment provided further:

“that plaintiff’s interest in said notes, now listed with the receiver in this cause, be and the same is hereby fixed and established in said amount.
“It is further ordered that a sufficient number of said notes to satisfy said judgment be transferred and assigned by the receiver, H. S. Gibbs, to the plaintiff to satisfy the judgment. It is further ordered that the receiver, in lieu of selling the notes, in satisfaction of the judgment to plaintiff, may sell the said notes, any and all or a sufficient number of same, to satisfy this judgment, subject to the following limitation: the sale and delivery of said notes or the proceeds thereof in satisfaction of this judgment, shall be suspended by said receiver until the court shall determine the rights, if any, of certain intervenors in said cause.”

Numerous persons were permitted to intervene, each setting up a claim against Yandell Rogers, some of whom claimed a preference lien on the Mar-Tex notes by virtue of certain dealings with Rogers on the faith of his apparent ownership of said notes. Each of the preferred creditors alleged that his claim of priority to the Mar-Tex notes was based upon a valuable consideration'; that each was an innocent assignee or pledgee of the notes from Yan-dell Rogers without notice of any claim to said notes by appellant; and that appellant was estopped to assert any claim to the Mar-Tex notes which would defeat the claim of these preferred creditors. After the entry of the judgment referred to above, and to facilitate a hearing on the numerous claims presented by the various intervenors, the trial court appointed the Hon. Roy Butler Master in Chancery. On January 21, 1939, after a full hearing, the master filed, his report giving priority to the claims of appellees, Bethlehem-International Supply .Company, Roy Davis, H. A. Leverton, Tyler State Bank & Trust Company, W. F. Bridewell, P. H. Dowlearn, Pittsburg Pipe & Supply Company, to the Mar-Tex notes as against appellant, Crockett. These appellees will be hereafter referred to as preferred creditors.

Appellant, Crockett, filed exceptions to the master’s report which were in part sustained by the Hon. Walter G. Russell, District Judge, in the judgment entered by him disposing of the various intervenors. On April 15, 1939, soon after the entry of that judgment, Judge Russell resigned. A motion for new trial was filed by the aggrieved parties and was, on April 22d, granted by the Hon. Bascom Gist who had succeeded Judge Russell. On April 4th, some two weeks before Judge Russell’s resignation, he ordered the receiver to institute suit to foreclose the Ms^r-Tex notes and appointed Grisham & Grisham as attorneys to represent the receiver in said foreclosure suit. On the same day this foreclosure suit was filed he also entered a restraining order against interference with the receiver in the foreclosure, etc. On July 13, 1939, appellant, Crockett, filed suit to foreclose the Mar-Tex notes, and for injunction. That suit was dismissed by the trial court on July 21st.

The case at bar was submitted to the court without a jury, and on July 22d, after a full hearing, judgment was entered by Judge Gist in substantial accord with the master’s report granting priority *188 in the order named to: (1) Tyler State Bank & Trust Company, save as to two notes, one for $700 and the other for $2,000; (2) W. F. Bridewell; (3) Roy Davis; (4) H. A. Leverton; (5) Bethlehem-International Supply Company for Mar-Tex notes No. 20 and No. 21, held by it; (6) P. H. Dowlearn; and (7) Pittsburg Supply Company. These intervenors were given priority to the Mar-Tex .notes over appellant, Crockett, and Crockett was held to be estopped to assert any claim to the Mar-Tex notes until the above-named intervenors were paid. These preferred creditors were first required to exhaust all other collateral held by them, also Yan-dell Rogers’ ¾ interest in the Mar-Tex notes before proceeding against the ¼ interest in said notes belonging to appellant, Crockett. The judgment previously entered by Judge Russell in favor of Crockett against Yandell Rogers for his ¼ interest in the sale price for the oil lease was carried forward and entered in this judgment. The receiver’s suit to foreclose the .Mar-Tex notes was dismissed without prejudice. The receiver was discharged, as was also the master in chancery, the fee of each being fixed by the court below. The injunction theretofore granted was dissolved and the court costs were decreed against appellant, Crockett, and Yandell Rogers. “It being the purpose of this judgment to make a full, final and complete determination of all matters and things at issue herein.”' Appellant duly excepted to the entry of this judgment and the cause is now properly before this court on appeal.

At the outset we are met with numerous objections and exceptions directed to the propositions and assignments of appellant, Crockett, which objections and exceptions, in our opinion, are not without merit, but we have concluded, however, to consider the case on its merits.

Appellant’s fourteenth assignment is, “No case was made by pleading or by proof authorizing priority in payment to the intervening creditors, viz.: Tyler State Bank & Trust Company, W. F. Bridewell, Jr., International Supply Company and/or Bethlehem-International Supply Company, P. H. Dowlearn, H. A.

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137 S.W.2d 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crockett-v-rogers-texapp-1940.