Duenkel v. Amarillo Bank & Trust Co.

222 S.W. 670, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 666
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 5, 1920
DocketNo. 1664.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 222 S.W. 670 (Duenkel v. Amarillo Bank & Trust 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
Duenkel v. Amarillo Bank & Trust Co., 222 S.W. 670, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 666 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HALL, J.

Joseph Fisher, now deceased, formerly owned a section of land in Carson county, and sold it to one F. L. Stokes, and took as part payment eight vendor’s lien notes, the first in the sum of $2,000, the other seven in the sum of $1,571.42 each, payable two, three, four, five, six, seven, and eight years after date, respectively, each bearing interest at 8 per cent per annum, and providing for 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection or if collected by suit. Thereafter, the appellant, Duenkel, purchased said land from Stokes and assumed the payment of said notes. Appellee sued to recover the amount due upon the notes and to foreclose the vendor’s lien, alleging that all of the notes were declared due by virtue of the provision in each of them that-failure to pay any note or interest should, at the election of the holder, mature all of them, and that the plaintiff had so elected to declare all of them due. Plaintiff sued as administrator of the estate of Joseph Fisher, deceased. At the return term of the court the appellant answered by general demurrer and general denial. The record fails to show that the demurrer was ever passed upon by the court.

At the second term the appellant filed his plea in abatement, upon the ground that the suit was prematurely brought, alleging that he had an agreement with Joseph Fisher in his lifetime to extend the first note for $2,000 as to time of payment until November 27, 1918, and that the plaintiff had agreed with appellant that he might take a loan upon the said section of land of $9,000, and apply the same to the payment of the notes in the order of their maturity, and for the balance of the debt a second lien should attach, inferior to the loan company’s lien for the $9,000; that appellant had procured the loan, and upon his offering to perform the said agreement that Messrs. Turner & Dooley had obtained possession of the notes, claiming to have them for collection, and demanded the 10 per cent, attorney’s fees upon them; that by reason of the agreement for the loan, and part payment and subrogation of the lien, that the plaintiff had waived its right to declare any or all of the notes due, or to place them in the hands of an attorney for collection, and was estopped from collecting any of said notes except the ones due by their terms.

Defendant also pleaded in greater detail the agreement to allow him to procure the loan upon the land of $9,000, and apply it in partial payment of the series of notes, and postpone the balance of the notes to a second lien upon the land. It was alleged that the agreement was first made by Joseph Fisher to extend the time of payment on the first note for one year, in consideration of the additional amount of interest; that the agreement for the loan was first made with Glen M. Fisher, who was the administrator of the estate of his father, Joseph Fisher, in the state of Kansas, and that the agreement was he should secure the loan of $9,000 and apply it as stated above; that this agreement was later confirmed and approved by a letter received from Messrs. Turner & Dooley, attorneys for plaintiff; however, that said attorneys, at the same time demanded their attorney’s fees upon all of the notes; that appellant thereupon tendered to plaintiff all of the principal and interest that was then due upon said notes, which the plaintiff refused to accept, and that the administrator, Glen M. Fisher, notified defendant not to pay Turner & Dooley any attorney’s fees, as he or his estate was paying them for their services. It is further alleged that the agreement of the parties constituted a waiver of the right to place the notes In the hands of an attorney and claim attorney’s fees; also a waiver of the right to declare all of the notes due, defendant having relied upon their previous agreement and representations, and having complied with them by procuring the loan, and that had the plaintiff performed the agreement defendant could and would have paid off the-notes that were due. The prayer was that the suit abate and that he recover his costs, or in the alternative that plaintiff should recover only the amount of the notes actually due, without attorney’s fees, and be denied the recovery of the amount of the notes not ypt due.

Upon the filing of the plea in abatement appellee moved to strike it from the record because it was not filed at the first term of the court, and, having been filed after a general demurrer and general denial, was not in due order of pleading. The court sustained the motion, striking the plea in abatement from the record. The bill of exception to this action of the court was qualified by the trial judge in the following language:

“The foregoing bill of exception, No. 1, prepared and tendered by C. A. Duenkel, defendant, has been examined by me and is approved with the following qualification: Defendant offered no proof, either by his own testimony or by that of his counsel, or any one else, that at the February term of said court the parties to this cause had verbally agreed in open court that at said February term the defendant need not file his actual pleadings in the ease in full but might only' file a 'general demurrer and general denial, and that he could file same without prejudice to his rights to file any future pleadings he saw fit, whether in due order of *672 pleading or not. All that was done on said question was an pnsworn statement by defendant’s counsel, I. E. Duncan, to the effect that at the February term of court he understood that counsel for plaintiff agreed with him that he might file his dilatory plea at the next term of this court. This statement was denied by counsel for 'plaintiff, but no sworn testimony was offered by either party. No such agreement as claimed by defendant was made in open court, or in the presence and hearing of the court The court did not refuse to permit defendant to offer any testimony, or to hear testimony concerning such alleged agreement, because none was offered. The statement in the bill that plaintiff offered proof as to the matters contained in said plea in abatement is incorrect. Neither party offered any proof thereon, and, consequently, the court did not refuse to hear any such evidence.”

The bill, with the qualification, was accepted and filed as part of the record, and appellant is bound by the qualification where it conflicts with the facts stated in the bill.

The court also sustained the appellee’s first, second, and third special exception to the defendant’s answer, which are in substance: (1) That the answer is insufficient because it seeks to set-up a pretended agreement between the parties for the compromise and extension of the notes, which constitutes a material change in the security, in this: Its effect would have been to postpone part of the debt to the loan of $9,000 mentioned in the pleading, and would have made said $9,000 a first lien on all of the land; that no such agreement could have been made except under the order of the probate court of Potter county, where the administration is pending, and it is not alleged that any such, order had been procured; (2) that the matters set up constitute a plea in abatement and are not filed in the due order of pleading; (3) tl;at part of the answer which alleges “it would be harsh and inequitable to sell defendant’s land under the present social unrest, same having suppressed the sale of property and the land will not satisfy the debt at forced sale,” is wholly insufficient.

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Bluebook (online)
222 S.W. 670, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duenkel-v-amarillo-bank-trust-co-texapp-1920.