Day v. Grayson County State Bank

153 S.W.2d 599, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 705
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 10, 1941
DocketNo. 2346
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 153 S.W.2d 599 (Day v. Grayson County State Bank) 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
Day v. Grayson County State Bank, 153 S.W.2d 599, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 705 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

HALE, Justice.

Grayson County State Bank instituted this suit against M. R. Webster and Robt. E. Day, alleging that on March IS, 1938, Day executed and delivered to Webster his promissory note in the sum of $1,800 to become due on September 15, 1938, and that Webster endorsed said note over to the bank; that on April 13, 1938, Day executed a chattel mortgage covering four automobile trucks for the purpose of securing the payment of said note, which mortgage was immediately filed for registration and was then transferred and assigned to plaintiff. It sought judgment against each of the defendants on said note, together with foreclosure of its lien.

Webster answered with a general denial and alleged that the note sued upon was made payable to his order at the instance of plaintiff and his endorsement of the same was procured through fraud in that plaintiff and Day each represented to him that the chattels covered in a certain mortgage dated March 17, 1937, securing the bank in the payment of a prior note, were still in existence and that the proposed renewal note was secured by said mortgage, when they knew such chattels had been sold by agreement between plaintiff and Day; that if he should be held liable to plaintiff, notwithstanding the fraud practiced upon him, then his liability as endorser was secondary and he had been released from secondary liability because the bank had voluntarily released the security described in the mortgage dated March 17, 1937, without his knowledge or consent, and the value of the security thus released was in excess of the amount of the note sued upon. By way of cross-action against plaintiff and Day, he alleged that he was the owner of certain notes executed by Day aggregating $1,423.16, which were secured by a chattel mortgage on the trucks upon which plaintiff was seeking a foreclosure and that his lien on said trucks was prior and superior to the lien asserted by plaintiff. He prayed that plaintiff take nothing against him and, in the alternative, if he be held liable to plaintiff as endorser of the note sued upon, that he recover an equal amount over against Day as the maker of said note; and as cross-plaintiff he prayed for judgment against Day on his notes, together with foreclosure of his mortgage lien, and that his lien be declared superior to that of plaintiff.

Day answered with a general denial and plead affirmatively that the mortgage asserted by plaintiff was unenforceable because there was no consideration for its execution and that plaintiff was not the owner of said mortgage because the same was never transferred, assigned or delivered by Webster to the bank. He further alleged that plaintiff had wrongfully and [601]*601maliciously sued out a writ of sequestration and had thereby taken from him the possession of his trucks, and he sought recovery of the bank on his cross-action for his claimed actual and exemplary damages.

Plaintiff filed supplemental petitions, answering the pleadings of defendants with pleas of estoppel, alleging that on March 17, 1937, defendants borrowed from it the sum of $2,500 representing that they intended to use said money to purchase the Bramlet Transfer & Storage Company (hereinafter called Storage Company) and operate the same as a partnership; that defendants executed their joint chattel mortgage covering certain automobile trucks and all equipment then belonging to the Storage Company in order to secure the payment of their joint note No. 3389 for $2,500, dated March 17, 1937, payable to plaintiff, to become due on September 15, 1937; that on September 15th the sum of $700 was paid on said note and the remaining balance of $1,800 was renewed by Note No. 5476 signed “Bramlet Transfer & Storage Company, by Robt. E. Day,” to become due on March 15, 1938; that plaintiff prepared the note sued upon and endorsed upon it, “This note is a renewal and extension of notes No. 3389 and 5476 and covers same security”, and delivered said note to Day for execution by him and Webster; that said note was thereafter signed by Day and endorsed by Webster and delivered to the bank by Day and “plaintiff accepted the same as endorsed and as written and allowed the renewal and extension of said indebtedness”; that Webster, as alleged in his pleading, had purchased the first lien upon the trucks against which plaintiff sought foreclosure, but that plaintiff was not aware of such facts at the time it accepted the note herein sued upon.

The jury found on special issues that (1) on March 15, 1938, Day and Webster were partners in the operation of the Storage Company; (2) Webster knowingly consented to Day’s disposing of the trucks originally mortgaged to secure the note dated March 17, 1937; (3) plaintiff did not represent to Webster as an inducement to procure his em-dorsement of the note sued upon that it would be secured by the same security as the prior notes No. 3389 and 5476; (4) Webster, in endorsing the note sued upon, did not rely upon the representation made in said note that “this note is a renewal and extension of notes No. 3389 and 5476 and covers same security”; (5) the partnership between Webster and Day was not dissolved before the chattels given as security on note No. 3389 were disposed of; (6) plaintiff had no notice of the dissolution of the partnership before the chattels given as security for note No. 3389 were disposed of; (7) the reasonable cash market value of the trucks originally mortgaged to the bank was $1,500 at the time when they were disposed of by Day. The court rendered judgment (1) for $1,800, with interest and attorney’s fees in favor of plaintiff and against Webster and Day jointly and severally, with foreclosure of the lien on the trucks in controversy; (2) for $1,423.16, with interest and attorney’s fees in favor of Webster against Day, with foreclosure of lien; (3) directing that the trucks be sold and the proceeds applied first, to the satisfaction of the judgment in favor of plaintiff, and second, to the judgment in favor of Webster, and third, that the remainder be delivered to Day; (4) that except as specifically decreed all relief sought by any party against any other be denied. From this judgment Webster and Day have each appealed.

By appropriate assignments appellant Webster contends that the foregoing findings of the jury numbered from 1 to 6, inclusive, are each contrary to the undisputed evidence and are without proper support and that the judgment rendered upon such findings is therefore erroneous. He further asserts that since he was only an endorser on the note sued upon, his liability, if any, was secondary and in any event he should have been given judgment against Day for any amount adjudged against him. He complains because the trial court found in its decree of foreclosure that his mortgage lien was inferior and subordinate to that of ap-pellee bank, contrary to the agreement between the parties. He also complains because the trial court refused, upon his timely request, to submit to the jury for their determination the issues as to whether there was any consideration for the execution of the mortgage sued upon, or as to whether said mortgage was ever delivered to him.

It is elemental that when a case is tried to a jury, it is the duty of the trial court to submit in the charge to the jury, upon seasonable request, all ultimate controlling issues of fact raised by the pleadings and tendered by the evidence. Moreover, when the jury has made its findings on properly submitted issues, such findings will not be disturbed on appeal unless they are so manifestly against the overwhelming weight and preponderance of the competent [602]*602admissible testimony as to be clearly wrong.

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.W.2d 599, 1941 Tex. App. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-grayson-county-state-bank-texapp-1941.