First Nat. Bank of Canadian v. Jones

209 S.W. 468, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 282
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 1919
DocketNo. 1478.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 209 S.W. 468 (First Nat. Bank of Canadian v. Jones) 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 Canadian v. Jones, 209 S.W. 468, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 282 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HALE, J.

Appellant bank sued appellee Jones to recover upon a promissory note, for the sum of $7,866, and to foreclose a chattel mortgage upon certain cattle therein described, executed by the said Jones to secure payment of the note. By amended original petition he made H. D. Creath, T. J. Kelly, and J. K. Lunn parties defendant, upon the ground that they were claiming some interest in the mortgaged property. By agreement, Lunn was dismissed from the suit, and is not a party to this appeal. Appellee Creath ■answered, alleging in substance that he held a prior mortgage upon the cattle in question to secure a note in the sum of $14,450, dated April 16, 1917, which had been renewed July IS, 1917; that said debt was not paid; that his mortgage was recorded in Wheeler county at the time of the execution of the mortgage ; that he learned for the first time that the cattle had been removed from Wheeler county, since the institution of the suit or a few days prior thereto. He prayed for judgment and a foreclosure of his mortgage. Ap-pellee Kelly answered, alleging in substance that he was the owner-of all the cattle described in the plaintiff’s petition, except 40 cows and their increase, branded with a cross on the right hip; that he executed the mortgage declared upon by Creath. He prayed for judgment decreeing him the title and possession of the cattle, subject to Creath’s lien.

By first supplemental petition plaintiff replied to the answers of the defendants Creath and Kelly, first by general denial, and specially alleging that Creath’s mortgage did not cover the cattle in question; that they were not described in said mortgage; that appellant’s mortgage was taken in good faith, without any knowledge that the defendants had any claim whatever upon the cattle; that defendant Jones had been in possession of said cattle for a long time, holding them in Hemphill and Lipscomb counties, using them as his own, shipping some of them to market and having the proceeds of the sale thereof remitted to him in his own name, all of which was done with the actual knowledge of his codefendant Kelly; that there was no circumstance to put it upon inquiry as to the claim of said defendants; that the defendants permitted the said- Jones to handle the cattle as his own, clear of all liens, which fact misled plaintiff to its damage, and but for which it would not have loaned it money and taken said cattle as security; that the cattle were located in Hemphill county early in the spring of 1917, and had been in said county over four months, without any mortgage of record against them, or any indication of ownership in any other person than Jones; that if the defendant ever had any mortgage upon said cattle, it was recorded only in Wheeler county; that after the institution of the suit, and after defendant Jones had fled the country, defendant Kelly came to Lipscomb county, where the cattle were then located, and converted 86 cows and 40 calves, covered by plaintiff’s-mortgage of the value of $5,500; that the defendant Kelly knowingly permitted said cattle to remain in the possession of Jones and'without Oreath’s mortgage being filed in either Hemphill or Lipscomb counties, within four months after the removal of same from Wheeler county, which acts constituted fraud and misled plaintiff to its damage. The prayer was for judgment against Kelly for the value of the cattle converted by him, and that in the event the defendant Creath recovered said cattle, or any part of same, that it have judgment over and against defendant Kelly for such amount. Creath and Kelly filed their supplemental answer, alleging in substance that plaintiff’s mortgage covered 224 cows, branded J on the left hip, clear of incumbrance, except $8,000 to T. J. Kelly, and that plaintiff had actual notice of a prior lien upon said cows, which *469 lieu is the lien owned by the defendant Creath. There was a trial before the jury, to whom the case was submitted upon special issues; the issues and answers thereto being as follows:

“(1) Were the cattle branded + on the right hip, taken by C. B. Haynie, the receiver in this case, the property of J. K. Lunn? Answer: Yes.
“(2) At the time J. T. Jones executed the mortgage dated October 25, 1917, to tbe First National Bank, did he own the 224 cows described in said mortgage as branded J on left hip? Answer: No.
“(3) If you answer the foregoing question in tbe negative, then state who owns said cattle. Answer: T. J. Kelly.
“(4) If you have stated that T. J. Kelly owned said cattle, then were the acts and conduct of the said T. J. Kelly with reference to said cattle such as to lead an ordinarily prudent person to believe that the said cattle belonged to J. T. Jones, or that he had the right to mortgage them? Answer: No.
“(5) Are tbe cattle involved in this suit branded J on left hip part of the same cattle described in the mortgage from Kelly to Creath, dated April 16, 1917? Answer: Yes.
“(6) Did the defendant Kelly own the cows and calves taken by him from the Jones place in Lipscomb county to bis place in Wbeeler county, at the time he took them in November, 1917? Answer: Yes.
“(7) At and before the time J. T. Jones gave the mortgage in controversy to the First National Bank, did the defendant Kelly know that tbe defendant Jones was handling the cattle in controversy, exercising complete control over the same? Answer: No.
“(8) Did T. J. Kelly so conduct himself as to reasonably induce the officials of the First National Bank to believe that J. T. Jones was the real owner of the cattle involved herein? Answer: No.
“(9) Did T. J. Kelly know that Jones bad mortgaged tbe cattle involved in tbis suit to the First National Bank of Canadian, Tex., prior to the time Jones abandoned tbe cattle? Answer: No.
“(10) Were the cattle claimed by the First National Bank under their mortgage against Creath and Kelly tbe property of T. J. Kelly, on October 25, 1917? Answer: Yes.”

Several other issues were submitted, which we think are immaterial under the view we take of the case.

[1] The first three assignments in appellant’s brief are based upon the alleged action of the court in overruling certain exceptions; but, since the transcript contains no order showing that the court ever considered or ruled upon the exceptions, these assignments must be disregarded. We will not undertake to consider the assignments in detail, or in the order presented. Appellant attacks the claim of ownership asserted by Kelly and the validity of Oreath’s mortgage, asserting that it is void as to appellant because the cattle are defectively described, and because of the failure of Creath to file the mortgage in Hemphill county within the statutory period. If it be true that Kelly is the owner of the cattle, and by his acts or failure to assert his claim at the proper time he is not estopped from claiming the cattle as against appellant, it will not be necessary to consider the question of the sufficiency of the mortgage and its registration.

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Bluebook (online)
209 S.W. 468, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-canadian-v-jones-texapp-1919.