Davidson v. Guarantee Life Ins. Co.

220 S.W. 582, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 376
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1920
DocketNo. 7789.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 220 S.W. 582 (Davidson v. Guarantee Life Ins. Co.) 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
Davidson v. Guarantee Life Ins. Co., 220 S.W. 582, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 376 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

GRAVES, J.

In this cause a general demurrer was sustained by the trial court to the cause of action declared upon, and a challenge of the correctness of that action is, in effect, the only question presented on appeal. Due to the fact that the plaintiffs below did not sooner disclose the oral character of the agreement they sued upon, this ruling was not made until after the evidence had first been gone into and they had been permitted by trial amendment to their pleadings to so allege, but since it finally was, and the case disposed of in that manner, the *583 stage of the hearing at which that action was taken becomes unimportant; neither is it thought essential that separate statement be made of the contents of their different pleadings, but only that — in testing the sufficiency of their allegations as against the general demurrer — the proper substance and effect of them all be given. That will now be undertaken.

Davidson and Lard sued the two insurance companies, the Guarantee Life of Houston and the Farmers’ Life of Denver, in debt' for the sum of $5,155.61, alleged to have become due to them from each of the companies as a result of these transactions:

On August SO, 1911, being then the owners of slightly more than 26,000 acres of land in Duval county, Tex., upon which they owed in liens against it the sum of about $81,665.-74, they borrowed from the Guarantee Life $90,000 with which to pay off and discharge these liens, giving it their note for that amount to run for five years, bearing 8 per cent interest per annum from date, and secured by a deed of trust in the company’s favor upon the land, it being at the time agreed between the parties that the insurance company should use the $90,000 so borrowed from it in discharging the $81,665.74 in liens against the land, in paying a $5,000 brokerage fee to itself for making the loan, and such other properly chargeable sums against the borrowers as might be necessary to free the land of all incumbrances, any left-over surplus to be paid to them.

Subsequently, on April 25,1912, at the special instance, request, and solely for the accommodation of the Guarantee Life, to enable it to make its surplus account show $6,925 more in assets, Davidson and Lard signed and delivered to it — in lieu of the former $90,000, one at 8 per cent, interest— a new note for $96,925, dated back to September 1, 1911, to run five years from that date at 6 per cent, interest per annum, at the same time also executing and delivering to Lee O. Ayars, trustee for the insurance company, a deed of trust upon the land to secure its payment. Then follow these aver-ments:

“VII. Plaintiffs allege that the sum of $6,925 was added to the face of said substituted note, which represented the amount necessary to be added to the $90,000 note in order to cover the difference between the interest at the rate of 8 per cent, and 6 per cent, per annum on $90,000 for the full term of five years, and plaintiffs allege that it was fully agreed and understood by and between plaintiffs and said defendant Guarantee Life Insurance Company, acting by and through its duly authorized agents and representatives, at the time of the delivery of said note for $96,925, as aforesaid; that if said land was sold by plaintiffs, or said note paid prior to the maturity thereof, the said defendant Guarantee Life Insurance Company would account to the plaintiffs for whatever amount of said sum of $6,925, which was added to the face of said note, as aforesaid, as interest, that had not been exhausted in the payment of the $90,000, at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from September 1, 1911, to the date of such sale of said land or payment of said note.
“VIII. Plaintiffs further say that on the 11th day of December, 1912, they sold said 26,119.26 acres of land, situated in Duval county, Tex., known as the Gray ranch, to the Continental Trust Company, a corporation having its principal office at Houston, Tex., and on said date conveyed the same to Lee C. Ayars, trustee, with the full knowledge and consent of the defendant Guarantee Life Insurance Company, the said Lee C. Ayars, as trustee, assuming the payment of said $96,925 note, executed by plaintiffs, as aforesaid, the interest on said note having at that date been fully paid by plain- , tiffs up to and including September 1, 1912, and as such trustee executed and delivered to plaintiffs his certain promissory note for the sum of $110,575.75, due and payable two years after date,' with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent., per annum, which said note was then and there sold, transferred, and assigned by plaintiffs to the said Continental Trust Company, without recourse, in exchange for 5,529 shares of the capital stock of the said Continental Trust Company, at the rate of $20 per share; that when plaintiffs made said sale of said land to the Continental Trust Company and conveyed the same to the said Lee C. Ayars, trustee, on the 11th day of December, 1912, as aforesaid, 15 months and 10 days ef the five years for which said $90,000 loan made by the defendant Guarantee life Insurance Company was to run had expired, and at that date the sum of $1,769.30 of the $6,925 which was added to the face of the new note for $96,925, as aforesaid, had been consumed in the payment of interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum on said $90,000 loan, leaving a balance due plaintiffs of $5,155.61.”

Before actually conveying the land to the Continental Trust Company under this sale of December 11, 1912, however, and as a condition precedent thereto, it was further mutually agreed between that company, the Guarantee Life, and Davidson' and Lard that the trust company would then assume and at its maturity pay the $96,925 note, and that the insurance company would from the date of this assumption thereof relieve the makers of any further liability or responsibility on the note, and within a week or two would pay them the $5,155.61 rebate due therefrom. The verbal nature of the agreement from which the debt claimed was said to have resulted was thus alleged in the final paragraph of the trial amendment above referred to:

“The note for $96,925 and the deed of trust securing the same was not intended by the parties thereto to be the entire contract or the written evidence of the entire agreement between the parties, but were only intended as evidence of the indebtedness and its security. The obligation assumed by the defendant Guarantee Life Insurance Company to account to plaintiffs for whatever amount of the said $6,925 *584 that had not been exhausted m the payment of the interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum on the $90,000 actually loaned to the plaintiff, as aforesaid, which was the basis for plaintiffs cause of action, was at the suggestion and request of the defendant Guarantee Life insurance Company intentionally omitted from the writing, and left to rest in parol.”

Liability against the other insurance com->any involved, the Farmers’ Life of Denver, Llolo., was charged to have arisen by virtue of its later acquirement of the assets and assumption of all of the obligations of the guarantee company, including the one here sued upon.

Did the court below err in holding that no recoverable right was asserted in these pleadings, and in refusing to hear any evidence thereunder? As in the beginning suggested, that is the only issue here.

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Related

Howell v. Connecticut Fire Insurance
257 S.W. 178 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1923)
Guarantee Life Ins. Co. v. Davidson
234 S.W. 883 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1921)
Waters v. Byers Bros. & Co.
233 S.W. 572 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
220 S.W. 582, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidson-v-guarantee-life-ins-co-texapp-1920.