Easterwood v. Willingham

47 S.W.2d 393
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1932
DocketNo. 10943
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 47 S.W.2d 393 (Easterwood v. Willingham) 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
Easterwood v. Willingham, 47 S.W.2d 393 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

JONES, C. J.

Appellant, John AW Easterwood, on August 5, 1929, instituted suit in trespass to try title to 52 acres of land in Henderson county, against appellees, R. E. L. Willingham and wife, Bessie Willingham, the parties all residing in Henderson county. A judgment adverse to appellant was entered, and the appeal is duly prosecuted to this court. The following is a sufficient statement of the facts:

The term, “appellee,” will refer to R. E. L. AVillingham, and the term, “appellees,” will refer to Willingham and wife. On October 7, 1924, appellee, then a single man, executed a valid deed of trust to Andrew Kingkade, as trustee for the benefit of Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Company, a corporation with its principal offices in Oklahoma City, to secure an indebtedness to the said farm mortgage company, evidenced by a note, executed by ap-pellee in the principal sum of $200. On the same date, appellee executed a second deed of trust'to Kingkade, as trustee for the benefit of the Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Company, to secure the payment a series of ten notes executed by appellee to the farm mortgage company, in the sum of $7 each, the first note due December 1, 1925, and the others due ■respectively on December 1st of each year thereafter to and including December 1, 1934. The first deed of trust created a first lien to secure the payment of the $200 note against the 52 acres of land in question, situated in Henderson county and described by metes and bounds in the deed of trust. The second deed of trust created a second lien on the same land'-to secure the payment of the series of $7 notes.

On January 27, 1928', appellant purchased from Theresa Ephriam, the then owner, the $7 note maturing December 1, 1928, and duly recorded the transfer of the deed of trust lien in Henderson county. Theresa Ephriam purchased this note from the Oklahoma Farm Bjlortgage Company on May 1, 1920, and such purchase was evidenced by a written transfer of the same date. All of the instruments, creating or transferring a lien on said land, here mentioned, were duly recorded in Henderson county. The annual interest on the $200 note was payable on December 1st of each year. Some time prior to the maturity of the said annual interest and the $7 note in issue, appellee received notice thereof from the Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Company, and prior to December 1, 1928, sent to the Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Company a postal money order for $20, reciting in a letter that i't was in payment of the $13 interest note and the $7 note which would mature December 1,1928. Such payments from December 1, 1925, to this 1928 payment had been made in the same way.

On December 14, 1928, appellee received a l'etter from the former vice president df the pklahóma Farm Mortgage Company, which in 1920 had been placed in the hands of a receiver, stating, in effect, that he had been given credit for the $13 payment of interest on the $200 note, but returned to appellee the $7 for payment of the note, by means of his personal check, stating that such note had been transferred to appellant, and that payment should be made to him. This was the first knowledge appellee had of appellant’s ownership. Appellee at once went to see appellant in the town of Athens, Henderson county, and offered to pay him the $7, stating that he did not know until he got the letter from the representative of the Oklahoma Farm Mortgage Company that appellant was the owner of the note. Appellant declined to accept payment and referred ap-pellee to his attorney, H. A. Justice. Appel-lee at once called on the attorney in his office and was informed that appellee was in default of payment, and that by the terms of the note he would now have to pay the $50 attorney fee contracted ’ for therein, in addition to the $7. This appellee declined to do and several times thereafter offered to pay the $7 due on the note, but each time it was declined. The trustee in the second deed of trust declined to act, and appellant, acting under authority of the deed of trust, appointed his attorney, H. A. Justice, substitute trustee. The substitute trustee advertised the land for sale, under the power of sale clause in the deed of trust, and sold, same, at the appointed time and place, to appellant for $7, as the highest bidder, and said trustee’s deed was duly executed to appellant. No notice, either verbal-or written, was given appellee that such sale was to take place, and appellee was not present when the sale was made, and knew nothing of same until he received written notice, stating that Easterwood was the owner of the land by virtue of the substitute trustee's deed, and demanded possession of the land. Appellee declined to surrender possession of the land, on which he and his wife were living as their home, and declined to recognize the validity of the trustee’s deed. This suit resulted. AAThen the land was sold by the substitute trustee, it was sold subject to the $200 indebtedness and subject to the remaining $7 notes.

This record establishes the fact that appellant is the owner of the land, unless the substitute trustee’s deed is invalid, and its validity depends upon the existence of.the fact that appellee was legally in default in payment of the $7 note, for such default is a necessary precedent to the exercise of the power of sale given in the deed of trust.

Appellant’s pleading was only in the form of trespass to try title. Appellee’s answer consisted of a plea of not guilty and specific pleas denying that he had been in default, alleging the facts heretofore stated, and tendering into court the amount of the note.

The case was submitted to the jury on [395]*395special issues, after the refusal of the court to give either party a requested peremptory instruction. In answer to these special issues, the jury found, in effect: (1) That appellee mailed a post office money order to the Oklahoma Earm Mortgage Company, for the purpose to pay the $7 note in question; (2) that said money order was mailed in time to reach the Oklahoma Earm Mortgage Company on December 1, 1928; (3) that appellee, at the time he sent said post office money order, did not know that appellant owned the $7 note, or that it had been transferred to him; (4) that when appellee found out that appellant owned said $7 note, he offered to pay the same to appellant as soon thereafter as he could reasonably do so; (5) that the 52 acres of land in question, on March 5, 1929, the day of the trustee’s sale, was of the reasonable cash value of $1,040. These findings are all supported by evidence and are adopted asi the findings of this court.

Appellee, in his pleadings, tendered to appellant the sum of $7, the amount alleged to be due appellant on the note in question, and paid such sum into court, in full satisfaction of the note and the deed of trust lien securing same. On these findings the court entered the following judgment: “It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court that the plaintiff, John W. Easterwood, take nothing by reason of this suit, and that he be denied any foreclosure upon the land involved herein, and that the defendant, R E. L. Willingham, have judgment cancelling and holding for naught deed from H. A. Justice, as substitute trustee, to John W. Easterwood, of record in vol. 142, pp. 419-20-21, of the Deed Records of Henderson County, Texas, and that he have judgment for all costs in his behalf expended.”

This judgment should have given appellant judgment for the $7 paid into court by appellee, and it is amended to that extent.

Appellant properly raises in this court his right to peremptory instruction.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W.2d 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/easterwood-v-willingham-texapp-1932.