Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Scott

45 S.W. 26, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 22, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 176
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 45 S.W. 26 (Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Scott) 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
Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Scott, 45 S.W. 26, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 22, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 176 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

—This is a suit by the Farmers and Merchants National Bank to recover from Henry C. Scott and others a street railway located in Waco, known as the Waco Dummy Street Railway. The appellant alleged that it became the owner, by purchase at execution sale, of the property of one W. J. Hobson; that Hobson, at the time of the sale was the owner of the Waco Dummy Street Railway, and that the appellant, who had previously obtained a judgment against Hob-son, had the property levied upon by execution and sold, it becoming the purchaser thereof at the sale.

The appellees, in reply, alleged that the property at the time of the sale was in the possession of the District Court of McLennan County, through its receiver previously appointed by order of that court, and that the sale under execution to the appellant was unauthorized, because the property then was in custodia legis. They further pleaded that the property, previous to the sale to Hobson, had been sold and transferred by deed from the Waco Dummy Street Railway Company to the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company, á private corporation operating a street railway and light plant in the city of Waco, and that Hobson, at the execution sale, purchased in recognition of this right, and, at the time, he really purchased for the benefit of the Waco Electric Railway and *23 Light Company, and he held the Dummy property in trust for that company. They further allege that previous to the execution sale, and while the property was still in the hands of the receiver, the District Court of McLennan County entered an order requiring all the property of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company to be sold by the receiver, and alleged that the Waco Dummy Street Railway Company was, at that time, a part of the property of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company; that the sale was made, and appellee Scott became the purchaser of all the property of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company, which included the Waco Dummy Street Railway, and that that sale was by order of the court confirmed.

The court below, in effect, instructed the jury to return a verdict against the plaintiff upon the ground that, at the time it purchased the property under execution sale against Hobson, it was in the custody of the court through its receiver, and for that reason the execution sale was unauthorized.

It appears from the facts in the record that the Waco Dummy Street Railway Company, in November, 1891, executed a deed of trust on its property to one Robert H. Rogers, trustee, to secure a debt due from it to the Citizens National Bank. The property was sold under that trust deed, and W. J. Hobson bid it in and deed was executed to him on the 7th day of June, 1892.

The appellant, the Farmers and Merchants National Bank, obtained a judgment in 1894 against J. W. Hobson, and in March, 1895, caused execution to be levied on the Dummy Street Railway property as the property of W. J. Hobson. That property was sold on the 7th of May, 1895, by the sheriff, to the appellant. Again in July, 1895, the appellant caused another execution to be issued and levied on the same property, as the property of W. J. Hobson, and it was sold at sheriff's sale under that writ, in August, 1895, tó the appellants. Previous to this, in February, 1894, in a suit by one Early against the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company, wherein he asked for the appointment of a receiver of the property and effects of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company, the court made an order appointing the receiver, and required him to take possession of the property of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company. The receiver took possession of the property of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company, and also took possession of the Dummy Street Railway. The inventory returned by the receiver did not mention the Dummy Street Railway, or attempt to describe it, but it is shown that the receiver did take charge of and operate that property as a part of the system of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company. During the pendency of this receivership the Metropolitan Trust Compaq of New York intervened and sought to foreclose a certain mortgage on the property of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company. There were other interventions filed, which do not as yet appear to have been disposed of.

On the 5th day of April, 1895, the District Court rendered a final *24 decree by which the property of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company was ordered to be sold. That decree contained a description of the Waco Dummy Street Railway, as well as the property of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company. An order of sale was issued upon this decree on April 4, 1895, commanding the commissioner to sell all the property and effects of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company. On May 7, 1895, a sale was made of all the property, franchises, and privileges of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company, according to the terms of the order, to the appellee, Henry C. Scott. On the 9th of May, 1895, a decree was entered confirming that sale, and the commissioner directed to execute a deed to the purchaser, Henry C. Scott. On May 11, 1895, the commissioner, in pursuance of this decree of confirmation, executed a deed to Scott, conveying all the property, effects, rights, privileges, and franchises of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company.

It further appears that, “it was admitted that on the day of confirmation of sale to Henry C. Scott of the Waco Electric Railway and Light Company’s property and franchises, above set out, that said Scott went into full and complete possession of the entire railway line and property of the said Waco Electric Railway and Light Company and the Waco Dummy Street Railway Company’s line, and has held possession ever since, by himself and those claiming under him, and that the receiver was discharged in November, 1895, and the court has taken no actual control or possession of said property since said sale to said Scott, or entered any further decrees in said cause in which said property was sold. But the final decree of said Nineteenth Judicial District Court, which was in evidence in the record in said cause of Eugene Early v.

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.W. 26, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 22, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-merchants-national-bank-v-scott-texapp-1898.