First Nat. Bank of Bryan v. White

91 S.W.2d 1120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1936
DocketNo. 1693.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 91 S.W.2d 1120 (First Nat. Bank of Bryan v. White) 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 of Bryan v. White, 91 S.W.2d 1120 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, Chief Justice.

This suit was instituted by appellee, Mrs. D. D. White, individually and as the duly qualified survivor of the community estate of herself and her deceased husband, D. D. White, against the Manhattan Life Insurance Company, a corporation, and appellant, the First National Bank of Bryan, Tex., a federal banking corporation, to recover the sum of $1,753 on an insurance *1121 policy issued by said company on the life of her said husband. Appellee alleged that her said husband, on March 3, 1917, assigned said policy to appellant to secure his indebtedness to it; that thereafter, on October 10, 1931, he and appellant entered into a written agreement by the terms of which it agreed that if he would make an assignment of the business of the White Motor Company, a business then and there owned and conducted by him, to Wilson Bradley as trustee for his creditors, that it would release him from all his indebtedness to it; that he had made said assignment and was thereby released from all such indebtedness. The life insurance company made default. Appellant filed an answer in which it alleged that it held said policy under an assignment from the deceased White to secure his indebtedness to it; that such indebtedness was evidenced by a note in the sum of $5,400; that said policy was the only security from which such indebtedness could be collected; that said policy belonged to it or to the creditors of the estate of D. D. White, deceased; and that it, by reason of its assignment, had a su-' perior right to the proceeds thereof. Appellant further alleged that while it did agree that deceased White should make such assignment to Wilson Bradley as alleged, that it was expressly stipulated in such agreement that secured claims should be paid first; that such assignment was never carried out and it did not receive anything therefrom, and that the same was by judicial decree held ineffective and declared to have never been consummated in the manner provided by law for statutory assignments; that its agreement that such assignment should be made as aforesaid was entirely without consideration and therefore null and void, or that, if any consideration ever existed, it had wholly failed.

The case was tried to a jury. The court overruled a motion by appellant for an instructed verdict in its favor and submitted certain special issues, in response to which the jury returned findings in substance as follows:

(1)It was the intention of D. D. White and the First National Bank, acting by and through its president, H. O. Boatright, in the execution of the instrument in writing dated October 10, 1931, that the same should operate as a release of said White’s indebtedness to said bank.

(2) There was a consideration from said White to said bank for the execution of said instrument.

(3) The consideration from said White to said bank for the execution of said instrument did not fail.

The court rendered judgment in favor of appellee as survivor of the community estate of herself and her deceased husband and also in her individual capacity against the Manhattan Life Insurance Company of New York, a corporation, for the sum of $1,753, the amount due on the policy sued on herein, and also rendered judgment canceling all right, claim, title, or interest of appellant in and to the proceeds of said policy.

Opinion.

Appellant, by various assignments of error, insists that the court should have instructed a verdict awarding it a recovery for the amount due on said policy. It contends, by propositions thereunder, that appellee’s deceased husband was estopped by a prior judgment to assert that he had made a valid assignment of his business or properties to Wilson Bradley as trustee for the benefit of his creditors. Appellant, on October 10, 1931, held an assignment from said White of said policy to secure his indebtedness to it in the sum of $5,400. On that day appellant, acting by its president, H. O. Boatright, and joined by the Fidelity Finance Company and D. W. Howell, executed and delivered to said White the following instrument: “We, the undersigned, creditors of White Motor Company, Bryan, Texas, owned by D. D .White, hereby agree that if said D. D. White makes assignment of his business to Wilson Bradley, trustee, that we will abide by the amount we receive from the assignment and as far as the undersigned are concerned, the White Motor Company and D. D. White will be released from any and all further liability by virtue of his indebtedness to the undersigned, with the understanding secured claims will be paid first.” Said White thereafter, on October 13, 1931, acting in the name of White Motor Company, a business owned and conducted by him as hereinbefore recited, executed an assignment to Wilson Bradley, trustee, conveying to him all the property and assets of said motor company in trust for the benefit of the creditors thereof, and recited therein that said motor company, owned by him as aforesaid, was unable to pay in full *1122 its several creditors and desired to make a fair distribution of the property and assets of said company among its creditors. The testimony shows that the trustee or as-signee, Wilson Bradley, took charge of all the property of the business conducted under the name of said motor company and that he kept a small but active bank account in his name as such trustee. The validity of said assignment is not challenged by appellant otherwise than by its contention of estoppel by judgment. Such an estoppel is held to exist when a particular issue involved in a pending suit has been determined in a prior suit between the same parties not based on the same claim or demand asserted in such pending suit. 26 Tex.Jur. p. 14, § 354.. Appellant’s plea, on which its claim that appellee is estopped to assert the validity of such assignment is based, is in the following words: “Said assignment was by judicial decree of this court in cause No. 12048, held that it never in fact became effective and was never consummated in the manner provided by law for statutory assignments. Wherefore, this defendant here and now pleads that' said agreement for said assignment, if any, was entirely without consideration and therefore null and void.” No further allegation in that connection was made. Appellant did not offer the judgment in said cause No. 12048 in evidence, but contends that the court was required to take judicial notice thereof. Appellant, in a bill of exception complaining of the refusal of the court to instruct a verdict, copied the original petition in said cause and the judgment of the court therein, and showed that such judgment was rendered in the same court before the same judge who presided at the trial of this cause. As shown by said judgment so copied, D. W. Howell was plaintiff in said suit and D. D. White, Wilson Bradley, and certain persons claiming labor liens on the property of said motor company were the only parties defendant. Said plaintiff sought recovery against White for unpaid rent for the premises occupied by him doifig business as White Motor Company as aforesaid, and for foreclosure of his landlord’s lien on all the property subject thereto. He alleged that Wilson Bradley was claiming some title or interest in said property by virtue of an assignment or sale, and prayed that such claims be subordinated to his rights in the premises. No other or further reference to the assignment under which Wilson Bradley claimed was made.

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91 S.W.2d 1120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-bryan-v-white-texapp-1936.