Fant v. Sullivan Co.

124 S.W. 691, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 392, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 612
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 5, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 124 S.W. 691 (Fant v. Sullivan 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
Fant v. Sullivan Co., 124 S.W. 691, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 392, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 612 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

— F. Groos & Co., bankers, sued Lucie A. Fant individually and as independent executrix of the estate of D. R. Fant, her deceased husband, J. M. Chittim and Archie Parr, individually and as a firm, Floyd McGown as receiver of the estate of J. M. Chittim, and D. Sullivan and W. C. Sullivan as individuals and as the banking firm of D. Sullivan & Co., alleging that about May 18, *393 1899, Chittim & Parr entered into a lease contract with D. E. Fant, deceased, whereby certain land was leased to them in Hidalgo County, known as the Big Santa Eosa Pasture, containing about 89,360 acres, for a period of five years beginning on May 1, 1899, and ending on April 30, 1904, at an annual rental of 17% cents an acre, the sum of $250 annually to be reserved out of the rent money for sinking wells and erecting windmills; that on or about November 30, 1901, D. E. Fant assigned the lease contract to F. Groos & Co., to secure said firm in amounts due or to become due them by the said Fant; that on May 1, 1903, D. E. Fant executed his promissory note for $12,000 to F. Groos & Co. due one year after date, and on October 23, 1903, said Fant and H. Bren del executed their promissory note to said firm for $4,132.64, which notes were not paid, and F. Groos & Co. claimed a first lien on the rent money, which was alleged to be $15,388. It was further alleged that after the institution of this suit Floyd Me-Gown had been appointed receiver of the estate of J. M. Chittim and had, acting under judicial orders, sold certain live stock to which the lien for the rent money had attached and had been directed to retain in his possession $15,000 until it could be shown to whom the same belonged. That on or about May 1, 1904, D. Sullivan & Co. and D. Sullivan and W. C. Sullivan had entered into the possession of the Big Santa Eosa Pasture as privies in the estate of D. E. Fant, but with notice of the prior and superior lien of F. Groos & Co., and that they were liable and bound to carry out and execute the contract of D. E. Fant, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to a foreclosure of their lien on the property for the satisfaction of the debt due them by D, E. Fant. It was further alleged that Chittim & Parr and D. E. Fant were insolvent at the time the notes and rents became due.

Sullivan & Co. denied any liability to Groos & Co., and sought to recover of Chittim and Parr the amount of the rent money and from the receiver the money held by him, and also asked for judgment for the amount of the rent from Lucie A. Fant, individually and as executrix, in case the claim of the plaintiffs should be held superior to theirs. It was alleged by Sullivan & Co. that when the lease contract was entered into between Fant and Chittim & Parr, on May 18, 1899, Fant owed Sullivan & Co. large sums of money, and that when the assignment of the lease took place on November 30, 1901, he was still indebted to them, all.of such indebtedness being secured by deeds of trust; that on February 9, 1903, all of said debts were put in one note of $260,000, which was to become due on February 9, 1904, and was secured by a deed of trust dated February 24, 1903, which included the property which was the subject of the lease contract; that the amount of the note was not paid and there was a foreclosure on the deed of trust, and the land in question, with other lands, was sold to D. Sullivan & Co. for $100,000, which was credited on the debt of D. E. Fant, and that the sale was afterwards confirmed by Fant and wife to Sullivan & Co. and “they thereby acquired the title to the Big Santa Eosa ranch and the reversion thereof under the lease contract and the rents thereafter due from Chittim & Parr, aggregating, as above stated, $14,945.77; or in the alternative they have the right to foreclose their liens upon said rents and have them *394 applied to the discharge of the debts so secured and now due from D. R. Pant. Sullivan & Co. also alleged a former suit1 between them and Lucie A. Pant, in which the latter had sought for an accounting, that in that suit Lucie A. Pant recovered of them certain “monies and properties set out in said decree,” and that no claim was set up in that suit by Mrs. Pant to the rents involved in this suit “and their right to establish such a claim and title, if any they had, is res adjudicata and barred by said judgment.”

J. M. Chittim and Floyd McGown, his receiver, admitted that the sum of $14,995.77 was due from Chittim on the lease contract on April 30, 1904, and that the receiver had in his hands, subject to the order of the court that appointed him receiver, more than enough to pay off the claim of plaintiffs, and they asked that the right to the money be determined by the court. Parr answered that Chittim had assumed the debt and asked that it he paid out of money in the hands of the receiver, and for judgment over against Chittim for the amount of any judgment rendered against him.

Lucie A. Pant admitted the right of the plaintiffs to recover the amount of the lease money due on April 30, 1904, and in answer to the claims of Sullivan alleged that all indebtedness due by D. R. Pant to Sullivan & Co. had been fully paid, and that the latter had never held title in their own right to the lands leased to Chittim & Parr; that the purchase of the lands at the foreclosure sale and the confirmatory deed thereof of Pant and wife were made for the purpose of placing the lands of D. R. Pant and Lucie A. Pant in the hands of Sullivan & Co. to he held in trust for them to satisfy their indebtedness, attorneys’ fees and expenses in executing the trust, and that what remained was to he the property of Lucie A. Pant; that an accounting was held between Sullivan & Co. and the Pants in cause No. 19,375, in the Fifty-Seventh District Court, wherein the Pants were plaintiffs and Sullivan & Co. defendants, and that a decree was rendered therein on May 31, 1907, in which it was adjudged that the entire indebtedness of Pant to Sullivan & Co. had been fully paid off and discharged, and awarding to Mrs. Pant a judgment against Sullivan & Co. for $65,841.01, and that she recover of Sullivan & Co. a large amount of land which included practically all the lands leased to Chittim & Parr, a small portion thereof having been sold to pay debts to Sullivan & Co., and the Big Santa Rosa Ranch was at the. time this suit was filed held and owned by Lucie A. Pant, and that judgment was pleaded as res adjudicata of all matters between Sullivan & Co. and the Pants.

The cause was tried by a jury and the court instructed a verdict in favor of Groos & Co. against Lucie A. Pant, executrix, for the sum of $16,131.60 with interest and attorneys’ fees, and against Chittim & Parr as a firm and individually for $14,945.77 and interest, and against the receiver for $14,960.75, to be applied as a credit on the Pant indebtedness to plaintiffs. The court also instructed the jury that if Sullivan & Co. had notice ■ of the assignment of the lease to Groos & Co., their verdict should he for the latter, and that if they did find for Groos & Co., they should find in favor of D. Sullivan & Co. against Lucie A. Pant, independent executrix of the estate of *395 D. R.

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Related

Galbreath v. Farrell
275 S.W. 238 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
124 S.W. 691, 58 Tex. Civ. App. 392, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fant-v-sullivan-co-texapp-1910.