Frees & Son v. Baker

16 S.W. 900, 81 Tex. 216, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1341
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 26, 1891
DocketNo. 6905.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 16 S.W. 900 (Frees & Son v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frees & Son v. Baker, 16 S.W. 900, 81 Tex. 216, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1341 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

GARRETT, Presiding Judge, Section B.

This was an action to try the right of property. On December 1, 1885, Frees & Son, plaintiffs in this suit, filed a suit in the District Court of Dallas County against. Stockbridge & Teague, of San Saba County, for the sum of *218 $820.10, and levied an attachment on the goods in controversy on the 4th day of December, 1885. Defendant in error Geo. Baker claimed the goods. Plaintiffs tendered issue that the goods were the property of Stoclcbridge & Teague, and as such were subject to their writ. The claimant replied that he was a purchaser of said goods in good faith, for a full, fair, and valuable consideration, and was in possession thereof when the attachment was levied; that the consideration was that claimant should assume the payment to plaintiffs of four certain promissory, notes executed by Stoclcbridge & Teague to them, on which claimant was suret3r, for the sum of $391.91 each, dated July 22, 1885, and due January 22, 1886, April 22,1886, and on dates afterward; that' he had paid the note due January 22, 1886, and was ready and willing to pay the others as they matured; that claimant was solvent and worth in excess of exemptions $50,000, while the .aggregate amount assumed by him for said goods was about $1600 and interest; and that said sale was not made with the intent to defraud the creditors of Stoclcbridge & Teague. To this answer the plaintiffs demurred generally, and. pleaded further that Stoekbridge & Teague were insolvent at the time of the sale, which was or might have been known to the claimant; that claimant was not surety on any note then due; that of the four notes alleged to have been assumed two were secured by a deed of trust on land belonging to Stoekbridge, and that the claimant had failed to pay any of said notes except the one due January 22, 1886; that when conveyed the property was worth $2000; that the goods were in fact the property of Stoclcbridge & Teague when they were levied on; and that the conveyance was made to defraud their creditors, they and their claimant acting together with such common intent, and hence the sale was pretended and void. The case was tried without a jury, and on May 21, 1886, judgment was rendered in favor of the claimant. J. Frees, one of the plaintiffs, having died after judgment, the writ of error was sued out by W. J. Frees as surviving partner.

Stoekbridge & Teagne were dealers in musical instruments and supplies at San Saba, and owed the plaintiffs for goods six promissory notes for $391.91 each, bearing date July 22, 1885, and payable two, four, six, eight, ten, and twelve months after date. The two first were unsecured. The others were signed by the claimant as surety; the two last being also secured by a deed of trust on land belonging to Stock-bridge. Beeves, a witness for the plaintiffs and their agent, testified that it was intended that Baker should sign the first four notes, but that by mistake he signed the last four, leaving the first two unsecured. There is no other direct evidence on this point, and no explicit finding of the court thereon. Plaintiffs’ suit against Stoclcbridge & Teague in which the attachment was issued and levied on the goods in controversy was on the two unsecured notes.

*219 Some time prior to ¡November, 1885, Stockbridge sold out his interest to Teague, the latter assuming the debts of the firm. Teague paid Stockbridge no money, but took the goods to pay the debts. Beeves was sent by plaintiffs from Dallas to San Saba to see Stockbridge and Teague about securing or collecting the two first notes then due. He found Teague in possession of the stock of goods sold by plaintiffs to Stockbridge & Teague. Beeves wanted the notes paid or secured. After an effort during the day to raise money Teague met Beeves at his hotel about 8 o’clock that night, and found that he had prepared a bill of sale for the stock to plaintiffs in consideration of the two unsecured notes amounting to about $800. Teague declined to take that amount, but offered to let plaintiffs have the goods at invoice price, to pay the two unsecured notes first, the balance to be credited on the notes on which Baker was security. This Beeves refused to do. Teague then went down town and sold the goods to Baker, made him a bill of sale, and delivered to him the keys of the store. The consideration was that Baker assumed payment of the four notes on which he was security, amounting to about $1600, and released Stockbridge & Teague from all liability thereon. Baker was worth at the time about $50,000. He paid the note due January 22, 1886. Very little of the stock had been sold at the time of the sale or when this case was tried. Baker testified that he bought the stock of goods in order to protect himself as the surety of Stockbridge & Teague. He had'notice that Beeves was trying to buy the goods for plaintiffs. Plaintiffs’ attachment was issued and levied after the sale. On January 1, 1886, the claimant employed Teague to take charge of the stock and sell it for him. His agreement was to sell the goods so as to net Baker the invoice price, and whatever there was over he was to receive for his services. The invoice price of the stock of goods at the time of the levy was about $2000. At the time of sale they were fairly worth about $1600. ¡Neither Stockbridge nor Teague had any other property subject to execution when the sale was made.

Plaintiffs by their third and fifth assignments of error complain of the findings of the court on the facts of the case, (1) that Baker was surety on four notes, and (2) as to the circumstances attending the sale. The latter finding is clearly supported by the evidence; and the former is not unsupported. ■ If, as according to the testimony of the witness Beeves, Baker signed the two last notes-by mistake, whether or not he would be bound as a surety thereon would be a question of law arising from the facts. This question is not properly before us, neither under the pleadings nor the evidence. Again, if Baker had the right as surety to take a conveyance of a sufficient amount of the goods to protect himself, he could also for any balance of the sum agreed to be paid therefor assume a debt of the seller for which he was not before liable, being bound only to see that such balance was so applied. Ellis v. *220 Valentine, 65 Texas, 532. If he has not paid all that he assumed it is the fault of the plaintiffs who seized the goods under their writ of attachment. They will not be permitted to set aside the sale and apply the goods to their unsecured notes, and at the same time require its terms to be complied with by demanding payment of the notes which were assumed.

“The right of a creditor to receive property from an insolvent debt- or in payment of a debt due to him, if the same be openly done, and more property is not taken than is reasonably necessary to pay the debt, although the creditor may know at the time he so receives the property that he will thereby prevent other creditors from enforcing their claims, and although the creditor may know that the debtor is prompted to give him the preference through motives of friendship, is recognized.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 S.W. 900, 81 Tex. 216, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frees-son-v-baker-tex-1891.