General Electric Co. v. Canton City Ice & Light Co.

136 S.W. 78, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 172
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 11, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 78 (General Electric Co. v. Canton City Ice & Light Co.) 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
General Electric Co. v. Canton City Ice & Light Co., 136 S.W. 78, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 172 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This suit was instituted by appellant against the appellee Canyon City Ice & Light Company to recover upon an indebtedness by promissory note of $2,-019.74, with interest and attorney’s fees, and to foreclose a deed of trust given to secure the same. Appellant also made parties to the suit the First National Bank of Canyon and the Fulton Lumber Company, which were asserting liens on property of the Ice & Light Company, and a receiver was later appointed. After the appointment of the receiver numerous other creditors of the lee & Light Company intervened, and the contest finally became one for priority in payments. The trial was before the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment against the Canyon City Ice & Light Company in favor of all parties for the amounts and liens severally claimed by them, and the receiver was ordered to sell the entire property of the Ice & Light Company, and to apply the proceeds of the sale and of the income arising from the operation of the property, after the payment of the costs of the receivership, in liquidation, first, of the sum' of $704.50, with interest and costs adjudged to the ap-pellee the Fulton Lumber Company; second, of the sum of $73.75, with interest and costs adjudged to intervener and appellee W. H. Hicks for coal furnished the Ice & Light Company during the month'immediately preceding the appointment of the receiver; third, of the sum of $11,674.60, with interest and costs adjudged to the appellee the First National Bank of Canyon; and, fourth, of the sum of $2,503.11, with interest and costs adjudged to the appellant the General Electric Company; The balance of such proceeds, if any, the receiver was directed to pay ratably among the remaining intervening creditors, *79 which we do not deem it necessary to name.

[1] The first assignment that we shall notice is the third in appellant’s brief, wherein complaint is made to the effect that it was error to give the Fulton Lumber Company a preference over appellant out of the income from the operation of the property while in the hands of the receiver and out of the proceeds arising from the sale of the entire property of the Canyon City Ice & Light Company, including its franchises, and we think the complaint is well grounded. The evidence shows without) dispute that the Lumber Company on August 4, 1908, recovered a judgment against the Ice & Light Company'for $625, theretofore contracted to be paid for certain material, with costs of suit and a foreclosure of the materialman’s lien upon block 40, in Heller’s addition to the town of Canyon City. This judgment was amended by a nunc p'ro tune order entered on February 10, 1909, so as to include within the foreclosure proceedings block 24 in the Lair addition to the town of Canyon City, together with the buildings and improvements thereon situated. Prior, however, to the entry of either the original or amended judgment in favor of the Lumber Company, although subsequent to the filing of the Lumber Company’s original account (fixing its materialman’s lien), the appellant Electric Company secured, and on, to wit, June 20, 1908, filed for record the deed of trust sued upon in this suit and established by the court’s judgment. It further appears that block 40, in the Heller’s addition, and block 24, in the Lair addition, are adjoining blocks with no visible marks showing the boundary between them, and that the principal improvements of the Ice & Light Company are situated on said block 24. It also appears that neither appellant nor any of the other parties to this suit except the Ice & Light Company were» given any notice of the proceeding in which the original judgment of August 4, 1908, in favor of the Lumber Company, was amended; the amendment occurring after the institution of this suit on November 29, 1908, and after the appointment of the receiver. It also appears that the account of the Lumber Company, which was recorded and by which its materialman’s lien was fixed, purported to cover only said block 40 of the Heller addition.

Our statute (Rev. St. 1895, art. 1356), provides that, “where there shall be a mistake in the record of any judgment or decree, the judgment may, in open court, after notice of the application therefore has been given to the parties interested in such judgment or decree, amend the same according to the truth and justice of the case and thereafter the execution shall conform to the judgment as amended.” The power to amend a judgment thus given is not limited by the statute to the term during which the mistaken entry shall have been made, but, as stated in Ry. v. Roberts, 98 Tex. 42, 81 S. W. 25, all authorities agree that a court has the continuing power after the adjournment for the-term to correct its minutes and to make them speak the truth by the entry of an order that has in fact been made or a judgment that has actually been rendered. When such amendments are made at a subsequent term, the amended judgment is generally designated as a nunc pro tunc judgment, and will, as between the parties and those having notice thereof, relate back and have effect as of the date of the original entry. See 1 Black on Judgments, § 136; 1 Freeman on-Judgments, § 56. But it is uniformly held, so far as we know, that such nunc pro tune judgments will not affect third persons who have in the meantime acquired rights without notice of the rendition of the amendment. Says1 Mr. Freeman in section 66 of the volume cited: “Courts in determining whether or not to amend or perfect their records are controlled by considerations of equity. If one not a party to the action has, when without notice of the rendition of the judgment or of facts from which such notice must be imputed to him, advanced or paid money or property, or, in other words, has become a purchaser or incumbrancer in good faith and upon a valuable consideration, then the subsequent entry of such judgment nunc pro-tune will not be allowed to prejudice him. Otherwise its effect against him is the same as if it had been entered at the proper time.” Says Mr. Black in section 137 of the volume above cited: “When a judgment is entered nunc pro tunc, its effect, so far as it operates by relation back to the earlier date, must be confined to the rights and interests of the original parties; at least, it will not be allowed to work detriment to the rights of innocent third persons acquiring interests without notice of the renditon of any judgments.” So in 23 Cyc. p. 883, it is said: “An amendment of a judgment will not be allowed to prejudice the rights of third persons such as subsequent judgment creditors, purchasers, or mortgagees who have acquired interest for value, unless where it is taken with notice, or where the amendment is made at the same term at which the judgment was rendered. The order allowing an amendment should contain a saving of the intervening rights of third persons, but the law will make this reservation whether it is expressed or not.” An application of the principle announced by these authorities excludes the Lumber Company from the preferences given it by the court as to the proceeds of the income during the operation of the property by the receiver, and such as arise from the sale of any of the property of the debtor company, except block 40, upon which alone the Lumber Company’s lien extended as against the parties in this suit.

[2] In the fifth assignment complaint is also made of the preference given to the intervener, Hicks, and this complaint also we think well founded. It is not contended that *80

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 78, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-electric-co-v-canton-city-ice-light-co-texapp-1911.