Douglass v. Blount

55 S.W. 526, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 493, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 41
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 55 S.W. 526 (Douglass v. Blount) 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
Douglass v. Blount, 55 S.W. 526, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 493, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 41 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

—This is a suit instituted by E. A. Blount against Isaac Watson, James B. Meikle, Emory A. Cobb, Esther B. Johnson, Julius A. Johnson, W. L. Douglass, B. D. White, and W. S. Swilley, to recover an undivided interest of 1762 acres of land out of the east half of the Hugh Means league in Liberty County. Appellee obtained, judgment for the land sued for.

It was alleged in the petition that on March 20, 1893, W. M. Fortescueconveyed to I. W. Watson the east half of the Means league, in part consideration of which onveyancé Watson executed three promissory notes, two of them for $881 each, due respectively in one and two years, and the-third for $452, due in three years from date, each bearing 8 per cent interest, and each being secured by a vendor’s lien on the land; that E. A. Blount was the owner and holder for value of the two first described notes which Were transferred to him by Fortescue, together with all his right, title, and interest in the land. It was further alleged that Jas. B. Meikle> Julius A. Johnson, Esther B. Johnson, and Emory A. Cobb-were settling up a claim to the land through Watson; that the Beliance Lumber Company, claiming to be the owner of the note for $452 executed by Watson to Fortescue, brought a suit in the District Court of Liberty County against I. E". Watson et al. for the purpose of obtaining judgment on said note and foreclosing the vendor’s lien thereon, but that Fortescue was not made a party thereto, although he was at the time the-owner and holder of the two notes owned by said Blount. That under-the foreclosure proceedings in that suit, W. L. Douglass and B. D. White were setting up a claim to the land. Plaintiff, E. A. Blount, prayed that. *494 he have judgment for an undivided 1752 acres of the land, and offered, in event he recovered the land, to cancel his notes; and in the alternative plaintiff prayed that he have judgment against I. IT. Watson, the maker of the notes, for the amount thereof, interest and attorney’s fees, and that his lien on the premises be foreclosed and the same be ordered sold and divided between the plaintiff and Swilley, Douglass, and White as the court should direct. Watson, Meilde, Cobb, and the Johnsons did not answer, and judgment was rendered against them by default. White disclaimed any interest in the land, but alleged that he had sold his interest to Douglass, who claimed the land through the foreclosure sale in case of Reliance Lumber Company v. Watson et al. Swilley answered that he was the owner and holder of the judgment obtained by the Reliance Lumber Company, which was not satisfied by the foreclosure sale, and prayed that the foreclosure sale be set aside for inadequacy of price, and that the land be partitioned in proportion to the amounts held by them thereon. The cause was tried by the court, and judgment was rendered that Blount recover 1762 acres of the land, and that Douglass recover 452 acres of the land, and it was further provided that Douglass should have the whole of the land by paying off the amount of the two notes owned by Blount at any time within twenty days from the final adjudication of this cause. Blount and Douglass recovered costs against Swilley and the other defendants.

There was no controversy as to the facts, which established that Fortes-cue had sold the land as alleged to Watson, taking the notes as described in the petition, one of which, that for $452, was, before maturity, sold to W. S. Swilley by Fortescue, and which was indorsed by Swilley to the Reliance Lumber Company, B. F. Cameron having joined Swilley in the ' indorsement. In 1896 the Reliance Lumber Company sued Watson, Swilley, and Cameron on the note and obtained a judgment for the amount and for foreclosure of the vendor’s lien on the half league of land. Swilley appealed from the judgment, and the Court of Civil Appeals of the First District reversed the cause as to him because he had not been properly cited, but affirmed it as to the other parties, and as to the foreclosure of the lien. 46 S. W. Rep., 387. In 1897 the land was sold under the judgment, and W. L. Douglass ivas the purchaser for $50. Afterwards for a valuable consideration the judgment was transferred by the lumber •company to Swilley. In March, 1896, Fortescue filed a suit in Nebraska against I. IT. Watson on the two notes for $881, and he pleaded that he had executed the notes for one Emory A. Cobb, and that the land had been transferred to him as a trustee for Cobb, and on that issue judgment was obtained by Watson. Afterwards the notes were transferred to Blount by Fortescue.

In the case of Whitehead v. Fisher, 64 Texas, 638, under facts very similar to those in this case, it was held that the transfer by the vendor of one of two notes secured by an express lien on the land secured to the assignee priority in payment out of the proceeds of the land, and where such assignee sued on his note and procured a foreclosure of the vendor’s *495 lien, the vendor not being a party, and at the foreclosure bought the land, that the superior title passed to the purchaser. In other words, it is stated that the position of the assignor of the note “was in effect that of .a person holding a mortgage to secure two notes given to him for land who might transfer one of them and retain the other. In such cases it is well settled that, without any agreement to that effect, the assignee of one of the notes secured by mortgage is entitled to be paid out of the proceeds of the mortgaged property in preference to the mortgagee who retains one or more notes secured by the same mortgage.” A number of authorities are cited to support the proposition enunciated. It' is stated by Mr. Jones in his work on Mortgages, that in many States it is held “that the proceeds of the mortgaged property should be divided pro rata among all the notes secured by the mortgage, without regard either to the times of their falling due, or the dates of their assignment, unless the assignment shows a contrary intention.” Jones on Mort., secs. 1701,- 1701a. Among the authorities cited in support of the text are three Texas cases: Bank v. Beard, 49 Texas, 358; Robertson v. Guerin, 50 Texas, 317, and Delespine v. Campbell, 52 Texas, 4. In the first named case it was held that the note first maturing was not by that fact entitled to precedence in the appropriation of the proceeds of the land, but that the effect of the transaction originally was to secure all the notes by the same lien. The contest was among the holders of three notes assigned to them, the sole ground of priority alleged being as to the time of maturity of the notes and not as to the dates of assignment.

In the Robertson-Guerin case the question was as to one of two purchase money notes in the hands of different parties having equal rights to their satisfaction out of the land, and it was held that one of them secured no preference 'over the other by suing and procuring a foreclosure without making the other a party. The question of priority as between the vendor who may have assigned the notes and his assignees does not arise in the case, and the question of priority by reason of date of assignment was not discussed.

In the case of Delespine v. Campbell, the latter held, as security for the payment of three promissory notes, a mortgage on three tracts of land. Campbell transferred one of the notes to Delespine, who transferred it to his wife, and they instituted suit against the maker and Campbell as indorser. They obtained judgment against the maker, but not against Campbell.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.W. 526, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 493, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglass-v-blount-texapp-1900.