First Nat. Bank of Mt. Calm v. Roller

299 S.W. 917, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 876
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 1927
DocketNo. 510. [fn*]
StatusPublished

This text of 299 S.W. 917 (First Nat. Bank of Mt. Calm v. Roller) 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 Mt. Calm v. Roller, 299 S.W. 917, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 876 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

BARCUS, J.

This suit was prosecuted by H. C. Roller against P. C. Wilie, Mrs. C. R. Menefee, First State Bank & Trust Company 'of Mt. Calm, First National Bank of Mt. Calm, and G. W. Thomason to recover judgment on two vendor’s lien notes for $500 each, and to foreclose a deed of trust securing a note for $2,121.25 on three tracts of land, one containing 98 acres, one 83 acres, and one 100 acres. Mrs. Menefee was sought to be held liable on the notes by reason of having indorsed same, said notes having been payable to the First National Bank of Mt. Calm, which had without recourse indorsed and sold same to appellee Roller. Mrs. Mene-fee answered, pleading coverture, and upon her filing her plea of coverture appellee Roller amended his petition, praying for judgment against the First National Bank of Mt. Calm, on its indorsement if it should develop that Mrs. Menefee was not liable by reason of coverture. The First State Bank for answer alleged that the property had been transferred to it by P. C. Wilie in satisfaction of certain indebtedness which Wilie owed said bank, and that in order to protect its title it had 'been compelled to pay certain debts and liens against the land, totaling $4,680, and that by having paid same it was subrogated to the rights of the holders of said first lien notes. George W. Thomason pleaded the statute of limitation, he having been the original signor of the vendor’s lien notes. The First National Bank pleaded limitation as against the claim of appellee Roller on its indorsement, and fprther alleged that it indorsed the notes without recourse and was not therefore liable. All of the parties alleged that Mrs. Menefee was es-topped from pleading coverture and prayed that she be held on her indorsement.

The cause was tried to the court and resulted in a judgment sustaining Thomason’s plea of limitation, from which there is no appeal ; rendering judgment for Roller against P. C. Wilie for the amount sued for, from which there is no appeal; rendering judgment in favor of the First State Bank of Mt. Calm for.$4,680, with a foreclosure of a first lien on the 83 and 98 acre tracts; rendering judgment for Mrs. Menefee on her plea of coverture; rendering judgment in favor of Roller against the First National Bank for $4,500, with interest from January 3, 1922, at 8 per cent.; and providing that the lands should be sold and the proceeds of the 83 and 98 acre tracts be applied first to the payment of the $4,680 judgment of the First State Bank, and the remainder of the proceeds from said two tracts and the proceeds from the sale of the 100-acre tract be applied on the judgment which Roller obtained against Wilie, and that, if said lands did not sell for sufficient to pay the entire judgment rendered in favor of Roller against the First National Bank, he have execution for the remainder against said bank. There were some other parties to the litigation who were dismissed and are not necessary to be mentioned.

The First National Bank excepted to that portion of the judgment which authorized a recovery against it. Roller excepted to the judgment in so far as it gave the First State Bank a first lien on the two tracts of land, and in so far as the trial court refused to give him judgment against Mrs. Menefee.

Appellant and Roller each complain of the action of the trial court in sustaining Mrs. Menefee’s plea of coverture. We overrule these assignments. Mrs. Menefee’s husband died in 1911. On November 9, 1920, she and W. J. Edwards were married at Waxahachie, and the next day Mrs. Edwards, née Menefee, went to the home of her daughter, Mrs. P. O. Wilie, near Mt. .Calm, and did not thereafter at any time visit or live with Mr. Edwards,'and about three years thereafter he died. None of the parties involved in this litigation were in any way advised of or knew of the marriage of Mrs. Menefee to Mr. Edwards until long after she had indorsed the notes in controversy. At said time she had an account with the First National Bank and the First State Bank of Mt. Calm in the name of Mrs. C. R. Menefee, and continued same, and continued to manage her farms and business affairs as she had in the past. In December, 1920, after she and Mr. Edwards were married in November, the First National Bank required P. C. Wilie, who was a son-in-law of Mrs. Menefee, to either pay or give security for some notes which it held against him. At that time he was obligated to the First National Bank on three vendor’s lien notes for $500 each, secured by lien on the 82 and 98 acre tracts, and $2,121.25 which was unsecured. In order to secure the bank Mr. Wilie executed a deed of trust on the three tracts of land and had his mother-in-law, Mrs. Menefee, indorse the three vendor’s lien notes and sign with him as surety the $2,121.25 note. At that time there were outstanding liens against the land for $4,680, which were prior and superior liens to the *919 ones held by the First National Bank. In the summer of 1921 the First.National Bank, through its cashier, Mr. Hillyer, took up with Mrs. Menefee the question of her paying the notes, but without any definite refusal on her part to pay and without her having paid same. In December, 1921, the First National Bank insisted on Mr. Wilie’s paying the notes, and he, made arrangement to have appellee Roller take up the three vendor’s lien notes and the $2,121.25 note secured by the deed of trust, and said four notes were, about January 3, 1922, transferred and indorsed to Roller by the First National Bank of Mt. Calm without recourse, appellee Roller paying said bank for said four notes the sum of $1,500. The record shows that Mr. Roller and his wife had some family troubles which resulted in her filing suit for divorce and .having a receiver appointed for all of Mr. Roller’s estate. The receiver, Louis M. Seay, brought this suit in June, 1924, seeking to recover on the last two .of the vendor’s lien notes and the $2,121.25 note. Sometime after the suit was brought Mr. and Mrs. Roller settled their matrimonial differences, the receiver was discharged, and Roller was substituted as plaintiff ■ in this suit. It appears that no action was taken in this suit until in 1925, when Mrs. Menefee, after being served with citation, filed her answer pleading her ¿overture as a defense against the cause of action as alleged by the various parties against her. It appears that this was the first time that Roller was in' any way informed of or knew of Mrs. Mene-fee’s marriage to Edwards, or of her having been a married woman at the time she indorsed the notes.

Under the statutes and holdings of our courts, a married woman, when she is abandoned by her husband or when he fails to support her,» can, under certain conditions, convey her separate property and make obligations that will be binding upon the community estate. Wright v. Hays, 10 Tex. 130, 60 Am. Dec. 200; Crowder v. McLeod (Tex. Civ. App.) 151 S. W. 1166; Bradley v. Gilliam (Tex. Civ. App.) 260 S. W. 289; Keys v. Tarrant County Building & Loan Ass’n (Tex. Civ. App.) 286 S. W. 593. Article 4623 of the Revised Statutes, 1925, however, provides specifically that:

“The wife shall never be the joint maker of a note or a surety on any bond or obligation of another without the joinder of her husband with her in making such contract.”

This statute is as plain as the English language can make it, and under its provisions a married woman cannot, without her husband joining her, bind herself by an indorsement or by a suretyship on any obligation. Red River Nat. Bank v. Ferguson, 109 Tex. 287, 206 S. W. 923; George v. Dupignac (Tex. Civ. App.) 273 S. W. 934.

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299 S.W. 917, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-mt-calm-v-roller-texapp-1927.