Hatt v. Walker

33 S.W.2d 489
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 16, 1930
DocketNo. 10683.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 33 S.W.2d 489 (Hatt v. Walker) 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
Hatt v. Walker, 33 S.W.2d 489 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

This suit was instituted November 3, 19¾2, by appellant, George A. Hatt, against appel-lee and his trustee, H. W. Walker, who died before the trial of said cause, and having no interest therein appellant’s suit against said trustee and his estate was dismissed. Ap•pellant’s cause of action was for an injunction to restrain appellee and his trustee from proceeding with the foreclosure of the vendor’s liens upon the following described real estate, viz., lots Nos. 11 and 12 in block 1, east half of lot 4, and also lots Nos. 5 to 10, inclusive, in block 11 third installment of Mt. Vernon, an addition to the city of Dallas, located in Dallas county, Tex., under the powers of sale contained in certain deeds of trust executed by appellant to said Walker, as trustee, for the use and benefit of ap-pellee.

. As grounds for the relief sought, appellant alleged: That-the trustee was attempting to foreclose on the lots described in said deeds of trust, for a greater indebtedness than was actually due, in that, credit had not been given for certain payments made on the notes secured thereby; that by agreement with appellee, he was' entitled to certain discounts on said notes with which he had not been credited; that on or about July 23, 1918, when he purchased from appellee 20 shares of stock in the Burk-Electra Petroleum Company, appellee entered into a written contract with him, whereby appellee agreed that, if appellant would invest any sum up to $5,000 in oil stocks, under the direction of ap-. pellee, and appellant should not be pleased with his investment, appellee would purchase said stock from appellant, and pay appellant therefor the amount invested by him, with interest at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum compounded; that prior to October 3, 1922, appellant had elected to return the stock purchased by him under the direction of appel-lee, viz., 30 shares in the Burk-Electra Petroleum Company and 20 shares in the Sherman-Dallas Oil Company, and asked that the amount due under said alleged agreement be offset against his indebtedness on the purchase price of said lots, and that he have judgment against appellee for the excess. The injunction, as prayed for by appellant, was granted upon his petition.

Thereafter, appellee filed his original answer, in which he alleged that appellant was entitled to credit for payments made on the vendor’s lien notes, as alleged in his petition, but denied that he had agreed to give appellant discounts upon said notes, as claimed by *491 Mm. Appellee also admitted lie had executed a contract on July 23, 1918, to appellant, whereby he agreed to purchase certain oil stock from appellant (purchased by appellant under his direction) if appellant was was not pleased therewith, and to pay him the amount of his investment with 10 per cent, interest; however, appellant denied that said'contract was unlimited as to time of duration, as claimed by appellant, but that same was limited for a period of one year from its date as the time in which appellant had the right to exercise his option to rescind the purchase so made by him, on the ground that he was not pleased with the stock so purchased; and further alleged that said contract was applicable only to the stock of the Burk-Electra Petroleum Company, ‘and had no application whatever to the Sherman-Dallas 1 Oil Company, or to the stock of the Walker Consolidated Petroleum Company, for which appellant had exchanged the stocks purchased by him in the Burk-Electra Petroleum Company and the Sherman-Dallas Oil Company. Appellee further alleged that, even if the contract was as alleged by appellant, he had forfeited the1 right of claiming the benefit of such privilege before the filing of this suit, having failed to exercise said privilege within a reasonable time after the purchase of said stock by him, and could not now claim the benefits thereof. Under appropriate allegations, appellee also prayed for judgment against appellant for the amount due on the vendor lien notes sued upon, and for the foreclosure of his liens existing to secure the payment of same, on the above-described real estate.

The pleadings of both appellant and ap-pellee were amended and supplemented from time to time before the case came to trial upon its merits; however, the above, taken from the original pleadings, presents the substantial issues in the case. As an aid to a ready and comprehensive view of the case, we make the following chronological statement of the facts giving rise to this litigation:

• On four separate occasions, between April 21, 1915, and March 18, 1916, appellant purchased from appellee the above-described 8½ lots, for an aggregate consideration approximately $9,775. Said lots were sold under four separate contracts, and appellant made payments on said contracts of purchase, to and including October 21, 1919, at which time appellee executed four deeds conveying the said 8⅛ lots to appellant. Said deeds recited an aggregate unpaid purchase price of $6,863.52, and in each the vendor’s lien was retained to secure the unpaid balance. Appellant also executed four series of vendor lien notes, each series containing four notes of $42S.97 each, maturing one, two, three, end four years after date, respectively, being the unpaid balance of the purchase price of the lots. Said four series of notes were secured respectively by four deeds of trust executed by appellant to one H. W. Walker, trustee, covering in the aggregate the 8½ lots so purchased. Subsequent to the execution of the deeds to said lots and down to October 1, 1920, appellant made payments on said notes, but since that date no payments, either of principal or interest, had been made. During October, 1922, two years after appellant had made payments on said notes, either of principal or interest, the trustee I-I. W. Walker, at the request of appellee Walker, the holder and owner of said notes, advertised for áale said 8⅜ lots, under the power of sale contained in the deeds of trust.

On or before July 23, 1918, appellant ana appellee entered into another business transaction entirely unrelated to the transactions above set out. At that time, appellant purchased from or through appellee 20 shares of stock in the Burk-Electra Petroleum Company, a Texas corporation, paying therefor its par value of $2,000. On March 3, 1919, appellant purchased 5 additional shares of stock in said corporation for a consideration of $500, and on May 3, 1919, an additional 5 shares at the same price. On December 3, 1919, appellant also purchased from or through appellee 20 shares in the Sherman-Dallas Oil Company, also a Texas corporation, paying therefor its par value of $2,000. Whether these stocks were owned by appellee individually or constituted part of the treasury stock of said corporations, respectively, does not definitely appear from the record.

Appellant received cash dividends of 2 per cent, per month upon his stock in the Burk-Electra Petroleum Company from the time of his purchase down to March 5, 1920, aggregating upon his 30 shares of stock in said company the sum of $960; he also, received dividends upon his 20 shares in the Sherman-Dallas Oil Company, from the time of his purchase to March 5, 1920, but the amount thereof does not appear in the record.

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33 S.W.2d 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hatt-v-walker-texapp-1930.