First National Acceptance Co. v. Dixon

154 S.W.3d 218, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 11839, 2004 WL 3021173
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 30, 2004
Docket09-03-504 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 154 S.W.3d 218 (First National Acceptance Co. v. Dixon) 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 National Acceptance Co. v. Dixon, 154 S.W.3d 218, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 11839, 2004 WL 3021173 (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

In a suit filed by Floyd Dixon against First National Acceptance Company, Michael Bramble and Roxanne Bramble, the trial court found lack of consideration for a real estate lien note and deed of trust, found a subsequent transfer to be a partial assignment and the transferee to be subject to defenses against enforcement of the note and deed of trust, set aside a foreclosure sale, and voided the note and lien. First National Acceptance Company raises three issues in its appeal. Because we find the indorsement of the promissory note was not a partial assignment, we reverse the trial court’s judgment.

First National buys “B Paper” loans made by persons with inferior credit. Rather than buy the entire note, First National purchases a stream of payments in what it calls a “partial transaction.” The controversy involves a promissory note, in the amount of $60,000 payable in monthly installments of $653.97 at 10.25% interest, secured by a deed of trust lien on business property of Dixon’s located on Washington Boulevard. Before making its offer, the appellant’s analyst conducted a telephone interview with a person claiming to be Dixon, and verified the information provided by Bramble. Bramble and First National executed an agreement, titled “Purchase and Sale Agreement TX Deed of Trust Partial Purchase Program,” in which First National bought the next 60 installments of the note for $26,790.11. After closing costs, Bramble received a check for $25,635.07. On November 29, 1999, the Brambles executed an indorsement that stated “Pay without recourse to the order of First National Acceptance Company.” The indorsement was physically attached to the note. Thus, the in-dorsement purported to convey the entire note to the appellant, although First National had purchased only 60 payments. According to First National’s corporate representative, had the 60 notes been paid according to the terms of the note, there would have been $30,000 left owing and the note would have “reverted” to Bramble. First National would have received a 16.1 percent return. First National received payments of $1,200.00 and $3,807.62 in May and July 2000, but eventually foreclosed on the property. First National purchased the property for $60,000 at the February 2001 trustee’s sale. Under the terms of the contract, Bramble may be entitled to some of the proceeds on resale of the property by First National. Any rights of the Brambles to any proceeds from any subsequent sale of the land are subject to the claims and defenses of Dixon in this lawsuit.

Floyd Dixon and Michael Bramble were friends. Bramble always talked about business, but Dixon claimed they had no business transactions other than Bramble occasionally assisting at Dixon’s restaurant, and a $2,000 loan Bramble made to Dixon in 1996 in connection with the operation of the restaurant. That loan was secured by a lien on the property involved in this litigation. Dixon testified that he repaid that loan. Dixon did not recall having signed the note and deed of trust in *206 question, but did recall having given Bramble a power of attorney because Bramble was in the process of trying to sell the property for Dixon. Dixon testified, “And I signed some notes, you know, for — to try to get him to sell my property.” He added, “And I was in the cafi one day and I signed some papers, a lot of papers, for Mike.” Bramble dealt in real estate, and Bramble told Dixon that there were a lot of people overseas who wanted to buy American property, and that he thought he could sell the property for $250,000. The property was worth approximately $80,000. Dixon did not recall having spoken to the appellant’s loan analyst. Dixon admitted he received $4,000 of the proceeds from the Bramble/First National transaction. When Dixon started receiving late payment notices from First National, he knew what they were talking about because he had discussed it with Bramble and he had received “a phone call about the loan that Mike and I had together.” He took the bills to Bramble, who told Dixon he would “tae care of it.” When Bramble did not take care of it, Dixon called First National. After Dixon and his wife Carol confronted Bramble, the Dixons made a $1,200 payment to First National.

Carol Dixon testified that she found out about the note in June, and Dixon told him “that was something concerning Michael.” She agreed to pay two payments if Bramble would “take care of the rest.” Later that same month, she was unable to refinance her car because the note appeared on her credit.

Michael Bramble testified that he is a Canadian citizen with some university education. For six months he “had a mortgage company” with a person who possessed a broker’s license, and understood the mortgage industry. He had a conviction for fraud in connection with an immigration consulting service he ran. Bramble admitted that no consideration passed for the note and deed of trust in the Dixon/Bramble transaction. Bramble claimed Dixon executed the papers in 1998 in order to “protect his business from his wife Carol.” Bramble claimed he and Dixon were renovating another property, that he told Dixon they could “apply for mortgage on the note” and use the money to fix the other building. Bramble also claimed that the “McFaddin Street” property was in Bramble’s name because Dixon did not want Carol Dixon to be a part of it. According to Bramble, Dixon was aware of what he was doing from the start, and the loan analyst did talk to Dixon. Roxanne Bramble wrote Dixon a check for $4,000 a few days after Bramble received the proceeds from First National, and Bramble forgave the $2,000 loan. In order to pay the money back to First National, they had to turn the other property, in which he had invested $12,000 of the money he obtained selling the note to the appellant. Roxanne made the $3,307.62 payment to First National. Unfortunately, while Bramble was in Buffalo, the City tore down the McFaddin Street building. Carol then found out, and Dixon stopped cooperating. Bramble complained that First National failed to notify him that they were foreclosing, although he is a part owner of the note.

Attached to the note is an indorsement, “without recourse” but otherwise unqualified. The contract between First National and Bramble reveals that First National paid $26,790.11 for the next 60 payments due on a $60,000 note with a $56,421.38 balance. The parties agree the Dixon/Bramble transaction was a sham and no real consideration existed for the $60,000 note. There is no evidence that First National was aware of the true situation. The trial court found: (1) Bramble transferred only 60 payments of the $60,000 note, not the entire note, and as a result *207 First National became a partial assignee of the note with Michael Bramble; (2) as a partial assignee First National was not a holder in due course; (3) Bramble was not entitled to payment from Dixon; (4) therefore, First National was not entitled to enforce the note or the lien against Dixon. In its first issue, First National argues the trial court erred in holding it was a partial assignee rather than a holder in due course. First National contends that it proved as a matter of law it obtained the note and deed of trust from the original payee, Michael Bramble, joined pro forma by his wife, Roxanne Bramble, paid value for the instrument, and had no notice of any defenses claimed by the maker, Floyd Dixon.

First National had actual possession of a note that had been indorsed to it.

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.W.3d 218, 2004 Tex. App. LEXIS 11839, 2004 WL 3021173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-acceptance-co-v-dixon-texapp-2004.