Gardner v. Planters' National Bank of Honey Grove

118 S.W. 1146, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 572, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 25, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 1146 (Gardner v. Planters' National Bank of Honey Grove) 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
Gardner v. Planters' National Bank of Honey Grove, 118 S.W. 1146, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 572, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 260 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

LEVY, Associate Justice.

—Appellee, as claimant of $1,000.77, the net proceeds of the sale of certain cattle, and for recovery of the same and to have the rights of each of the parties growing out of the transaction settled and adjusted, brought the suit in the District Court of Fannin County, Texas, against the appellants Davis & Hamm and S. H. Gardner as trustee of the estate of G. F. Kewberry, bankrupt. The petition alleged that on August 31, 1907, said Davis & Hamm, a partnership and doing business as commission merchants in Tarrant County, Texas, as agent of G. F. Hewberry, sold a certain lot of cattle which had been shipped and consigned by Kewberry to them for sale on commission, the property of Kewberry, and after deducting freight, commissions and other expenses there remained in their hands the sum of $1,000.77, the net proceeds of such sales; that the said net proceeds was the property and money of the appellee; that appellee had theretofore advanced said TSTewberry the money with which to buy said cattle, under a contract entered into between it and TSTewberry, by the terms of which it was agreed, for a valuable consideration, that all cattle purchased by TSTewberry with the money advanced by appellee should stand as security for the repayment of such money, and that the net proceeds of’ all sales of such cattle should be paid directly to appellee to be applied in payment of the debt owing by TSTewberry on account of money advanced by appellee; “that Davis & Hamm knew of such agreement between plaintiff and TSTewberry on August 31, 1907, at,the time they received the proceeds of such sales from the purchasers of said cattle, and they knew of the existing agreement between plaintiff and TSTewberry to the effect that such proceeds should be paid by Davis & Hamm to plaintiff, and not to TSTewberry;” that thereafter, on September 31, 1907, said TSTewberry was duly adjudged a bankrupt in the District Court of the Hnited States for the Eastern District of Texas, and on October 8, 1907, said Gardner was duly appointed or elected trustee of said bankrupt’s estate End qualified as such, “and afterwards on October 15, 1907, said Gardner represented to said Davis & Hamtii that said bankrupt court had ordered them to turn over said $1,000.77 to him as trustee aforesaid; and on or about the same day Davis & Hamm, without the knowledge or consent of plaintiff, paid said money to said Gardner, trustee, who still has it in his custody as such trustee, claiming that same belongs to said bankrupt’s estate, and denies the right of plaintiff thereto.” It was alleged that the Bankrupt Court had made no such order nor was appellee in any way a party to said bankrupt proceedings, but that Davis & Hamm relied upon said representation of *577 said Gardner in making such payment, and in fact did not know to the contrary.

Appellant Gardner plead to the jurisdiction of the court, and Davis & Hamm filed a plea of privilege, each of which pleas was overruled by the court, and they defended by general denial and special defenses.

It was substantially proved in the record that about January 1, 1907, the appellee bank and G. F. Newberry made an agreement, which was, in substance, that the appellee would furnish him money with which to buy cattle and hogs, and that he would ship out and sell the same along as he would accumulate small lots, and that the live stock so bought would stand for the money so advanced, and as sales should be made the net proceeds from the sales should be paid to the appellee and not to Newberry, and which money should belong to the appellee to the extent necessary to cover the advances; that the appellee would advance the money by paying Newberry’s checks, thus making an overdraft at the bank. This arrangement between them was to continue as long as agreeable to Newberry and the bank. It did continue until the appellee’s rights asserted in this case accrued. Newberry was insolvent when the agreement was made, and with no property subject to execution, and so continued thereafter; but he adhered strictly to his agreement with the appellee bank. As further security, and as evidenced by this agreement, Newberry gave the bank a mortgage on all his cattle and hogs and on those to be bought with the appellee’s money, on March 2, 1907. About June 10, 1907, the bank released this mortgage, for the sole purpose of allowing the appellant Davis & Hamm to obtain a mortgage on the cattle that Newberry then owned to secure a loan they were then making him, with the agreement with Newberry that it would not change his arrangement with the appellee bank; and immediately Newberry gave the appellee bank a new mortgage on all the cattle to be purchased with the money furnished by it. The money loaned by the appellant Davis & Hamm paid Newberry’s debt to this appellee bank; and soon thereafter Newberry began to buy more cattle with the appellee bank’s money, and on August 19, 1907, Newberry shipped a lot of cattle to the market at Fort Worth; Texas, consigned to appellant Davis & Hamm, which Davis & Hamm sold on the open market on August 21, 1907; and the net proceeds of that part of the cattle which Newberry had bought with the appellee bank’s money since June 10, 1907, amounted to the net sum of $1,000.77, and was in the possession of appellant Davis & Hamm on August 21, 1907, and at which time T. W. Trout sued Newberry for a debt and garnisheed the appellant Davis & Hamm, who refused to turn this money over to the appellee bank on their demand, but who were informed that appellee bank claimed and owned this money and that Newberry claimed no part of it as the appellee bank’s advances to him exceeded these particular proceeds. Previous to this time also, during that year, Newberry had informed appellant Davis & Hamm of his arrangement with the appellee bank. On the 15th of September, 1907, Newberry filed his petition in the District ,Court of the Hnited States for the Eastern *578 District of Texas, and was adjudged by that court a bankrupt on September 17, 1907; and on October 7, 1907, the appellant Gardner was appointed trustee of the estate of said bankrupt, and qualified immediately thereafter. In October, 1907, Gardner as trustee demanded of Davis & Hamm the $1,000.77, and they sent him their check in payment thereof. Gardner, trustee, and Trout, at the time and previous thereto, each knew of the bank’s claim to the said particular proceeds. Trout had dismissed his garnishment. There appears in the recorcj, as offered by the appellant, the following ex parte order of the referee in bankruptcy: “In the District Court of the United States- for the Eastern District of Texas. In the matter of G. F. Newberry, bankrupt, in bankruptcy, at Sherman, in said district, on the 8th of October, 1907. It appearing to the court that Davis & Hamm Commission Company of Fort Worth, Texas, have in their possession a large sum of money belonging to said bankrupt’s estate, to wit, $1,000.77, it is therefore ordered that said S. H. Gardner, trustee in said bankruptcy, demand of said Davis & Hamm Commission Company said sum of money.” '

The trial was'by jury, and upon their answers to the special issues submitted judgment wa-s entered by the court. The judgment as entered on the findings of the jury, omitting formal parts, is:' “It is adjudged by the court that plaintiff, The Planters’ National Bank of Honey Grove, Texas, a corporation, recover of the defendants W. D. Davis and A. B.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 1146, 54 Tex. Civ. App. 572, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-planters-national-bank-of-honey-grove-texapp-1909.