Gilmer v. Ferguson

148 S.W.2d 984
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1941
DocketNo. 4082.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 984 (Gilmer v. Ferguson) 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
Gilmer v. Ferguson, 148 S.W.2d 984 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

PRICE, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from an interlocutory order of the District Judge of Brewster County appointing a receiver for seven rent cottages situated in the City of Alpine in a suit wherein Nellie C. Ferguson, individually and as independent executrix of the estate of her husband, was plaintiff, and J. W. Gilmer and others were defendants.

In this opinion Mrs. Ferguson will be hereinafter designated as plaintiff, and J. W. Gilmer as defendant.

Plaintiff sought to set aside a certain trustee’s deed conveying the property in question to defendant and to recover such property. A receiver was sought as an ancillary remedy to the final relief. The trustee’s deed in question was alleged to have been executed and delivered by Milton Gilmer, as substitute trustee, to J. W. Gilmer in the foreclosure of the deed of trust securing a note of plaintiff to the Great Southern Life Insurance Company, upon which, at the time of the foreclosure sale, July 2, 1940, there was a balance of $1,797.46 due. A fraudulent sale and purchase were averred. The market value of the property was alleged to be $10,000, and the amount realized on the sale $1,910; that the purchase of the property for an inadequate price was brought about by a fraudulent and collusive agreement between the trustee, Milton Gilmer, who was the son of defendant, and the defendant. It is further alleged that defendant was insolvent and that unless a receiver was appointed to take over said property and manage the same and to collect the rents, plaintiff was in danger of losing the rents and the property in danger of being materially injured, portions thereof removed, and the property as a whole reduced in value by defendant’s use and management. The prayer of the petition was for a receiver to collect and preserve the rents, for the cancellation of the trustee’s deed, and the recovery of .the property by the plaintiff, and judgment for all rents collected by defendant from the time of his taking possession of said property to the time that same be restored to the plaintiff, and that plaintiff recover of the receiver'the amount of rents collected by such receiver.

Defendant’s answer was somewhat lengthy. Suffice it to say that it specially traversed all the material allegations in plaintiff’s petition, specially pleaded facts showing the regularity of the sale, and that same was in all respects fair and regular; insolvency was likewise denied, and it was specially pleaded that if plaintiff were entitled to recover, defendant was entitled to be reimbursed in the sum of $1,910, and averred that he owned property in his own name and right subject to execution of the reasonable value of fifty thousand dollars in excess of his debts.

In view of the fact that this is an appeal from an interlocutory order and the case stands for final trial on the merits, we shall, as far as possible, refrain from a discussion involving the merits on final trial.

The court, on motion of defendant, made findings of fact and conclusions of law. Same are comprehensive and complete and will conduce to a better understanding of the issues involved. Omitting the caption, they are as follows:

“Findings of Fact
“I find that on the 1st day of September, 1932, the plaintiff, Mrs. Nellie C. Ferguson, was the owner of the following described property situated in the City of Alpine, Brewster County, Texas, to-wit: Being a part of lots one (1), two (2), and three (3), Block One (1), Hancock Addition to the City of Alpine, in said county, and the west one-half (½) of Lots three (3), four (4), and five (5), Block Twenty (20), Original Townsite of Alpine, Texas, upon which are located seven residence cottages; that on said date she executed a deed of trust to W. S. Horne, as trustee for the use and benefit of the Great Southern Life Insurance Company, to secure a debt of $4,250.00.
“2. That on or about the 4th day of June, 1940, Milton Gilmer, of Alpine, Texas, was appointed substitute trustee.
*986 “3. That on the 2nd day of July, 1940, the debt had been reduced to $1797.46.
“4. I -further find -that on July 2, 1940, the above described property was struck off at a trustee’s sale by Milton Gilmer, as substitute trustee, to his father, J. W. Gilmer, one of the defendants in this cause, for the sum of $1910.00.
“5. I further find that on July 2, 1940, the property had a reasonable rental value of $135.00 per month, and was then and had been for some time prior thereto, regularly rented for the aggregate sum of $135.00 per month.
“6. I further find that on July 2, 1940, the property had a market value of, and was reasonably worth the sum of $10,000.
“7. I further find that after the property was advertised for sale and prior to the date of sale, July 2, 1940, the plaintiff, Mrs. Nellie C. Ferguson, had reached an understanding with a representative of the Great Southern Life Insurance Company to reduce the principal debt to $1700.-00 and to renew and extend the same; that she was anticipating and waiting for the return of the representative with the necessary renewal papers on the sale date, July 2, 1940; that she received notice of such sale but gave the matter no attention, because of the arrangement made for the extension and renewal of her debt.
“8. I further find that Milton Gilmer, the substitute trustee, was advised that the debt would be renewed and extended if reduced to $1700.00, and to renew the same upon such terms if approached by the plaintiff, Mrs. Nellie C. Ferguson; that the trustee, Milton Gilmer, did not know of the agreement had with the representative of the company by Mrs. Ferguson, nor did Mrs. Ferguson approach him on the matter of renewal prior to the date of the sale.
“9. I further find that Milton Gilmer, the trustee, had instructions from the company to cause some ■ one to bid for it at the sale a sum not to exceed $1900.00; that he, immediately preceding the sale, requested Boss Miller, the janitor in the Court House building, to attend the sale and to bid on the property, but not in excess of $1900.00. Fie did not advise Boss Miller for whom he was to bid. There were no bidders at the sale other than Miller and J. W. Gilmer.
“10. Milton Gilmer, the trustee, had done abstract work over a period of years for the plaintiff, Mrs. Ferguson, and saw her more than once personally after the posting of notice of sale and prior to the day of sale, but never at any time advised her of the sale nor the hour when the same would take place; J. W. Gilmer, the trustee’s father, had been advised by the trustee, on-request, of the date and hour of sale and the maximum authorized to be bid for the company.
“11. I further find that the rents on the property are likely to be permitted to deteriorate and depreciate, and that likewise the property is of such character as to permit of easy alteration and change and depreciation and deterioration, and that the same should be retained and preserved in its present condition and available and subject to the present character of use and occupancy. '
■ “Conclusions of Law
“1.

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148 S.W.2d 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmer-v-ferguson-texapp-1941.