First Nat. Bank in Lubbock v. Alexander

4 S.W.2d 298, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 237
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 1928
DocketNo. 2974.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 298 (First Nat. Bank in Lubbock v. Alexander) 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
First Nat. Bank in Lubbock v. Alexander, 4 S.W.2d 298, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 237 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

This suit was filed in the District Court of Lubbock county by appellant; as plaintiff, against Mrs. Lulu Morris, A. L. Wasson, and the State National Bank of Big Spring, as defendants. Ollie Alexander was an original defendant in the suit, but he was disposed of by the dismissal of the suit against him, as noted in the first amended original petition, for the reasons that his place of residence was unknown, and that he is openly and notoriously insolvent. On the trial, judgment was rendered that the plaintiff take nothing by reason of its suit against the other defendants (except for the sum of $125 tendered and paid into the registry of the court by the defendant the State National Bank of Big Spring), and for all costs of court, from which judgment the plaintiff has prosecuted its appeal to this court. The plaintiff’s suit is based on a note for $664.55, executed by the defendant Mrs. Morris and the said Alexander. It appears that Alexander was indebted to the plaintiff bank in the amount of the note, the payment of which was secured by a chattel mortgage on certain personal property belonging to Alexander — consisting of six horses and mules and also on the said Alexander crop on the Wright farm in Howard county. It further appears that Mrs. Morris wanted Alexander to become her tenant on her farm in Lynn county. When Alexander approached the bank to know if the bank would carry him for an additional amount, he was told that it would not. Then he wanted to know about moving the stock to Lynn county. This, the bank would not agree to, but required him to pay off the mortgage. Alexander and Mrs. Morris then agreed to execute a joint note if the bank would release the teams, and this proposition was accepted; Mrs. Morris and Alexander signing a new note and the bank then releasing its mortgage. That was on the 12th of December. Some time in January following, the bank was informed that Alexander had not moved to Mrs. Morris’ farm in Lynn county. But the note was thereafter renewed and both Alexander and Mrs. Morris signed it. Mrs. Morris was not present at the time Alexander signed it, but when the bank ’phoned her she came down and signed the renewal note. The bank knew that Alexander had given a mortgage for $1,000 to L. B. Wright, and Alexander told its officers that he had given a mortgage to the bank at Big Spring for a like amount. The bank then demanded a mortgage, and Alexander executed a new mortgage, the one here in question. This last renewal note was for $664.50. Alexander, in July, called the bank over the ’phone and stated that owing to the drought conditions he could not get any more money and he could not make a crop without assistance, and that people were threatening to close him out, and stated that he could sell the place and cover his debts down there, if the bank would release the mortgage, and was informed that the bank would not do this unless it got its money. This conversation was over the ’phone from Big Spring to Lubbock. Alexander called again the next day, and told the plaintiff bank that “they were going to foreclose the mortgage,” and that he had a conversation with the bank, and that he could get the plaintiff bank $100 it if would release its mortgage, and the plaintiff bank again refused to do so.

Mr. Slaton, president of the plaintiff bank, testified further:

• “I also heard from Mr. Currie, or some one from the State National Bank of Big Spring. He called me up and made practically the same statement. Offered to give me $100 to release the mortgage, arid refused to give me $300. Stated that he couldn’t get it because they couldn’t get all of their money. I told him *300 to go ahead and foreclose. On the next day Mr. Currie had a conversation with Mr. Den-man. The substance of his conversation with Mr. Denman was that they would give $125 if we would releaée the mortgage, and that if we didn’t release they would take steps and go ahead and foreclose. I believe he said that there wouldn’t be enough hardly to cover the indebtedness there. I think he said that if we foreclose it will not cover the debts here. After these conversations I tried to get Mrs. Morris on the ’phone and couldn’t get her. So I wired the bank there that we would accept- the $125. Would release the mortgage upon receipt of $125. That is the telegram that was introduced in evidence by Mr. Currie. It was dated the 23d of July. I saw Mrs. Morris on the 27th of July. She came to the bank. I told her about it. About the telephone conversation and what I had done and I told her that was the best we could do. She replied, ‘I expect that’s right.’ Then she went out of the bank and returned and said she wouldn’t do it. She was gone about an hour. She.said that she had reconsidered and that she wouldn’t accept it, wouldn’t consider the release. It was my understanding that she had consulted an attorney. At the time of the first conversation I had with Mrs. ^Morris, I had not received the draft for $12o from the Big Spring Bank that I had wired I would accept. But when she returned and said that she would not consider it, we had received it. After this second conversation with Mrs. Morris, in which she stated that she wouldn’t accept it, I wired the bank that she wouldn’t agree to it. I don’t believe that I had received the $125 at the time I sent the wire to the bank, “"but I received it some time that day. I returned the draft. I returned the identical draft just as it was received'.
“I saw Mrs. Morris on the 27th of July. I saw her before I sent the second telegram. Whatever date I sent the second wire I had seen Mrs. Morris before I sent it. I can’t be positive as to dates, but I had seen her before I sent that wire. I am not sure whether the draft was returned the day we received it, or not. I did not return it personally; I instructed Mr. Bedford to return it. I don’t think I had the draft on July 26th, when I sent the telegram. The note was Alexander’s debt originally. I don’t know whether Mrs. Morris' got anything from that debt or not. She didn’t get anything from the bank. So far as I know she never received any benefit whatever. She told me that Alexander had. not moved on her farm. Alexander also told me that. So far as I know, Mrs. Morris never received any benefit from the signing of that note. When I sent the telegram accepting the offer of $125 for the release of the mortgage, I had not consulted Mrs. Morris, but I had tried to get her over the ’phone. That constituted a release without her knowledge or consent.”

Mrs. Morris also testified;

“I was not in Lubbock on the 23d day of July until about 6 o’clock in the evening. I don’t think that I learned anything' that evening' about Alexander selling out, but I did learn'it the next afternoon. Mr. Wright told me. The first time I' talked with Mr. Slaton was Monday morning. I went in the bank to talk to him, and he said, ‘I expect I have done something that I should not have done.’ And I said, ’What have you done?’ I didn’t know anything about the release at that time, and he went over the various telephone calls that he had had from Big- Spring with the bank and Mr. Alexander. He said that they had told him that the crop was all burned up, and that the bank wouldn’t furnish any more money to work it, and Alexander was forced to sell out, and that he had agreed to release the mortgage for $125. And when he fold me that, I said, ‘And you have released it for $125, and you mean to say that you have released that and expect me to pay the rest of it?’- Just at that time Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 298, 1928 Tex. App. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-in-lubbock-v-alexander-texapp-1928.