Guaranty State Bank of Goose Creek v. Brill

268 S.W. 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 1924
DocketNo. 8386.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 268 S.W. 260 (Guaranty State Bank of Goose Creek v. Brill) 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
Guaranty State Bank of Goose Creek v. Brill, 268 S.W. 260 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by appellee against H. Martin, A. Y. Pace, and the appellant, to recover damages for the alleged conversion by defendants of an automobile truck belonging to appellee.

Plaintiff’s petition alleges in substance that he was the owner of a certain Wichita 2-ton truck which he purchased from the defend‘ant H. Martin about the 25th day of July, 1921, for the sum of $2,050, executing in part payment therefor two promissory notes in the sum of $150 each, dated July 25, 1921, and due, respectively, in 30 and 60 days from date, said notes being payable to the order of H. Martin, and that after its purchase he operated the truck in the transfer and carrying business between Houston and Goose Creek, and his net earnings from such operation was $240 per week; that about August 23, 1921, he saw defendant Martin at Goose Creek relative to paying off the notes, and said Martin told him that the notes had been sold to the defendant bank; that the plaintiff, about September 13, 1921, saw the defendant A. V. Pace, who was cashier of said bank, and that Pace informed him that the bank had purchased the notes, and that the first note was past due; that Pace stated the bank would extend the first note for 60 days if the plaintiff would pay $50 on the same; that several attempts were made by the plaintiff to see the defendant Pace with intention of paying off the first note, but on each occasion the said defendant ,was out; that about the 15th of September, 1921, the plaintiff was arrested and placed in jail in Houston, Tex., whereupon he turned over the said truck to one Price to operate for him, and that about said time the defendants Martin and Pace, as agents acting for said bank, took possession of said truck by exercising intimidation and force upon the said Price: that the plaintiff was dispossessed of the said truck and the same was converted to the use of the defendants.

Plaintiffs prayed for damages against the defendant bank in the sum of $4,000, the alleged value of the truck, and $240 per week from the date of the seizure of the truck to the date of the rendition of judgment, such sum being the alleged loss sustained by plaintiff by being deprived of the use of the truck in his carrying business, and the further sum of $5,000 as exemplary damages for the alleged wrongful and malicious seizure and conversion.

In the alternative, he prayed that should it be found that the defendants Martin and Pace were not acting for the defendant bank in the seizure and conversion of the truck, and that the bank was not liable therefor; that he have judgment “against defendant H. Martin or defendant A. V. Pace, either or both, as the case may be, in the amounts alleged above, and that the allegations made against the defendant bank apply and relate to said defendants Martin and Pace.”

The petition admits plaintiff’s indebtedness on the notes for $300 ’ given by him in part payment of the purchase money for the truck, and asks that said sum and the interest due thereon be credited upon any judgment he may recover against either the bank or the defendants Martin or Pace.

The defendant Martin answered by a general demurrer and numerous special exceptions, the nature of which need not be here stated, and by a general denial. He further specially denied the allegations of the petition- that he had sold the notes described in plaintiff’s petition to the Guaranty State Bank of Goose Creek, or to the defendant A. V. Pace, and averred “that said notes were never transferred, assigned, or otherwise disposed of by defendant to any one, but that he is, was, and always has been the sole owner of' said notes and both of them.” He also *262 specially denied the allegations of the petition that plaintiff was making the sum of $40 per day by the operation of the truck, and that said truck was worth the sum of $3,000 and avers that plaintiff was not making anything by the operation of the truck, but same was being operated at a loss at the time it came into the possession of defendant, and that it was not worth more than the sum of $300.

The answer then specifically denies that the truck was forcibly or wrongfully taken from the possession of plaintiff’s agent, L. 6. Price, as alleged in plaintiff’s petition, and avers in substance that the delivery of the truck to defendant by Price was not induced by force or threat on the part of defendant, but that Price voluntarily drove the truck to the garage of Wright & Herbert in Goose Greek, and took their receipt therefor to be held by them subject to the order and control of defendant. That said truck was thus peaceably turned over to defendant in compliance with the terms of a mortgage thereon executed, by plaintiff to secure the notes described in plaintiff’s petition. That, by the express terms and provisions of the mortgage, if default was made in the payment of the said notes, or if the holder of said notes should at any time 'feel unsafe or insecure in their payment for any cause—

“then said mortgagee, or his assigns, agent or representative is authorized at his option to declare all of said notes due, and to take actual possession of said property, and to sell same at public auction, for cash, at the courthouse door in Goose Creek, Harris county, Tex., with or without having possession of said property at said sale, after having given notice of the time, place, and terms of said sale, as the law now requires for sale of personal property under execution, and to apply the proceeds derived from such sale to the necessary and 'proper expense of such sale, then to the payment of said notes then remaining unpaid, the balance, if any, to be paid to said mortgagor or his order, as more fully set forth in detail in said chattel mortgage, a copy of which is hereto attached and marked Exhibit A, and made a part and portion hereof for the same purposes and to the same extent as if fully set forth herein.
“And in this connection defendant alleges, and would show the court, that the said two notes had not been paid, and that he had exercised his option for declaring the same due and payable as provided for in said notes and in his said mortgage; that defendant felt insecure for the reason that said truck was being used in such a manner that it was materially injuring same, and subjecting the same to unusual hazard in that same was being operated upon the highways without any tire on one of the rear wheels, and that plaintiff and his agents were greatly abusing and mistreating said property; that defendant felt that unless he exercised his power of sale as provided in said mortgage that the value of his security wold be greatly lessened and would not be sufficient to pay off his indebtedness in the sum as hereinbefore alleged; and that, under the terms of his mortgage as provided for in said notes, the defendant herein had the right to take actual possession of said property, and that after coming into possession of said ear he had the right to exercise the power of sale therein granted and given unto him to sell said property as therein provided for.”

It is then averred that after due notice as provided in the mortgage the truck was sold at public outcry before the courthouse door at Goose Creek on November 2, 1921, between the hours of 10 a. m. and 4 p. m. to one M. P. Minter, who bid therefor the sum of $300', which was the highest and best bid.

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Bluebook (online)
268 S.W. 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guaranty-state-bank-of-goose-creek-v-brill-texapp-1924.