Houston Loan & Investment Co. v. Norwood

39 S.W.2d 916, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 1931
DocketNo. 9554.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 39 S.W.2d 916 (Houston Loan & Investment Co. v. Norwood) 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
Houston Loan & Investment Co. v. Norwood, 39 S.W.2d 916, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1136 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

LANE, J.

Prior to February 23, 1929, Hamman Nor-wood placed in the hands of one N. B. Judd $4,500, with the understanding that Judd was to loan the same to one Earl C. Doty and to take a lien on property in Broadmoor adr dition to the city of Houston, Tex. Judd negotiated a loan of said $4,500 to Doty. In his effort to prepare or to have prepared .the papers evidencing such loan and fixing a lien on lot 35, block 2, of Broadmoor addition to secure payment of the loan, Doty gave Mrs. Warrendorff, his stenographer, a memorandum, telling her to prepare a note for the sum of $4,500 to be executed by Earl C. Doty to Hamman Norwood, wherein there was to be recited that: “This note is secured by deed of trust of even date herewith on the following described property, to-wit: Lot No. Thirty-five (35) in Block No. Two (2) of Broadmoor, an addition to the City of Houston S. S. B. B. in Houston, Harris County, Texas, according to the plat of said subdivision which is recorded in Vol. 6, page 42, of the Map Records of Harris County, Texas, to which reference is here made.” She was also directed to prepare a deed of trust upon the lot so described, which would secure payment of said note.

Mrs. Warrendorff prepared the note in manner and form as directed, but by mistake she prepared a deed of trust in which she described lot 4 in block 16 of the Broadmoor addition, instead of lot 35, block 2, as she was told to do.

Earl Doty signed such note and deed of trust and acknowledged the deed of trust on the 23d day of February, 1929, and delivered them to Judd. This deed of trust was filed for record March 8, 1929.

On the 28th day of January, about one month prior to the execution of the note and deed of trust above mentioned, for and in consideration of $5,450, to be paid to him by Sam Houston Mills, a part of which was then and there paid in cash and a part thereof being later evidenced by two promissory vendor’s lien notes, one for $3,750 and the other for $850, executed and delivered to him by Mills, Doty agreed in writing to erect a dwelling house and garage on lot No. 4 in block 16, Broadmoor addition, and to deliver such premises to Sam Houston Mills, retaining, however, the vendor’s lien to secure payment of the two notes. Mills’ contract for the purchase of the property described was for the purpose and intent to make it his home, he being at the time the head of a family. In addition to the • improvements placed on the lot by Doty, Mills had also made some improvements thereon and was engaged in making such improvements at and before the time Norwood got his deed of trust.

Judd, who negotiated the loan to Doty for Norwood, knew at the time the deed of trust was given by Doty to Norwood that Doty had contracted to sell lot 4, block 16, to Mills and wife. He testified in this suit as follows: “At the time I was making up this note and deed of trust for Mr. Norwood to give him a lien on lot 35 in block 2, I knew that Mr. Doty has sold or contracted to sell to Mr. Mills and wife lot 4 in Block 16.”

Work in making the improvements mentioned by both Doty and Mills began in the early part of February, 1929, and before the 15th of said month.

On the 1st of April, 1929, Doty formally, by his warranty deed, conveyed to Mills said lot 4 in block 16, together with all improvements thereon, retaining in such deed the vendor’s lien to secure payment of the two notes aboive mentioned. Such deed was filed for record on the 11th day of May, 1929.

*917 On the 1st day of April, 1929, Doty, for a valuable consideration, transferred the $3,-750 note executed by Mills to Houston Loan & Investment Company.

It is conceded that prior to the time the deed of trust in which lot 4 in block 16 was described such lot had been conditionally sold to Mills and wife and that it was at such time their homestead, and the court so found in the trial of this case.

Some time after the deed of trust mentioned had been executed, delivered, and filed for record, Judd, who was charged by Norwood with the duty of making the loan to Doty and of preparing all necessary papers relative thereto, was informed by parties who furnished the material and labor to build a house on lot 35, block 2, that they had liens on such lot and improvements thereon; whereupon Judd, for the first time, discovered that lot 35, block 2, was not described in the deed of trust mentioned and that lot ¾, block 16, had been by mistake described in such deed of trust. After such mistake had been discovered, Norwood, contending that notwithstanding such mistake he had an equitable lien on lot 4, block 16, by virtue of his deed of trust superior to rights of Houston Investment Company, the owner and holder of the vendor’s lien note executed by Sam Houston Mills; that if he was not entitled to a foreclosure of his lien on the property as against Mills and wife, he was entitled to an equity in the note superior to the claim thereto of Houston Investment Company, brought this suit against Earl C. Doty to recover upon the §4,500 note executed by Doty to him, against Sam Houston Mills and wife, Genevieve Mills, who were asserting homestead rights in said lot 4, block 16, and against Houston Investment Company, to whom the §3,750 vendor’s lien note executed by Mills had been transferred, to foreclose his asserted deed of trust lien on said lot 4, block 16. Several other parties were made parties defendant, but as they are not parties to this appeal no further notice or mention of them is necessary here.

Plaintiff alleged the execution and delivery of the §4,500 note and deed of trust above mentioned by Doty to him. He alleged that on the face of the note a lien is provided securing same on lot 35 in block 2, Broadmoor addition to the city of Houston. He prayed for judgment upon his note against Doty, and for judgment decreeing the lien, right, title, and interest of plaintiff in' lot 4, block 16, superior to that of each and all of the defendants ; that he have judgment for a foreclosure of. his lien on said lot 4, block 16; for an order of sale, etc.; for costs of suit; and for ■ such other relief to which he may be entitled in law or equity.

1 ■ -Houston Loan & Investment Company answered by alleging that prior to the execution of the deed of trust held by the plaintiff in which lot 4 in block 16 is described, Doty, the then owner of said lot, entered into a contract with Sam Houston Mills and wife to build a house for them on such lot and to convey the house and lot to Mills and wife in consideration of §5,450; it alleged the execution of the §3,750 vendor’s lien note by Mills, which had been transferred to it by Doty; it alleged the execution and delivery of a deed by Doty to Mills and wife, conveying to-them said lot 4, in block 16; it alleged the loan made by the plaintiff to Doty on the 23d day of February, 1929, the execution of the §4,500 note by Doty to plaintiff, and the fact that in said note a lien was expressly given on lot 35, block 2, Broadmoor addition, to secure payment of the note; it alleged the mistake made in inserting a description ■ of lot 4, block 16, in the deed of trust given by Doty to the plaintiff where the intention was to describe lot 35, block 2; it prayed for a cancellation of the deed of trust in which lot 4 in block 16 is described, and for such other and further relief to which it may be entitled in law or in equity.

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W.2d 916, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-loan-investment-co-v-norwood-texapp-1931.