Houston v. Shear

210 S.W. 976, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 473
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1919
DocketNo. 5957
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 210 S.W. 976 (Houston v. Shear) 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 v. Shear, 210 S.W. 976, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 473 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinions

FISHER, Special Judge.

Appellant, H. M. Houston, as purchaser under a judgment against the Farmers’ &.Ginners’ Cotton Oil Company, Incorporated, and J. L. Hunter, jointly, brought suit in the district court of Travis county against appellees, H. H. Shear, the Austin National Bank, the Boatmen’s Bank, D. T. Bomar, E. P. Wilmot, and C. R. Laws, as grantees and assignees of such judgment debtors, to redeem certain properties claimed to have been purchased by him at execution sale. From a judgment denying the right of redemption and the cancellation of the several sheriff’s deeds under which he claims title, appellant prosecutes this appeal.

The trial court’s findings of fact are both lengthy and elaborate. For'a consideration of the merit of the several questions raised we do not deem it necessary that there be a reiteration of these findings. Such findings as we conceive to be controlling of the substantive rights involved, supplemented by such as are particularly referred to in the body of the opinion, may be summarized in the following:

Findings of Fact.

(1) On February 17, 1914, J. L. Hunter conveyed to the Farmers’ & dinners’ Cotton Oil Company, a corporation, designated real estate in Travis county, for which it executed, in part consideration therefor, its certain vendor’s lien note for $15,000, which, of contemporaneous date, was transferred by the grantor, J. L. Hunter, to D. T. Bomar.

(2) Subsequent to this transaction, and at various times prior to November 19, 1915, the date upon which certain creditors brought a bankruptcy proceeding against the Farmers’ & dinners’ Cotton Oil Company, said company had executed to the several appellees notes secured by deeds of trust in various amounts on which there was due and owing at the time of trial approximately the sum of $95,000. The parties agreed that at the date,of trial the properties had a value of $85,000.

(3) In addition to the secured indebtedness against the properties, appellees, or certain of them, had paid out, or caused to be paid out, for the protection and preservation of the properties, at the date of trial some $4,396.28.

(4) On November 19,1915, as previously recited, certain creditors filed a petition in involuntary bankruptcy against the Farmers’ ⅜ Ginners’ Cotton Oil Company, alleging as grounds therefor acts of bankruptcy and insolvency. The corporation answered under oath, denying such acts and the fact of its insolvency. Subsequent to the filing of the petition no further action was taken in the proceeding until a composition was- effected with its general creditors, as hereinafter stated, it being agreed that there had been no adjudication of the alleged bankrupt in the proceeding referred .to, that no trustee was ' ever appointed, and that at no time were the : properties of the Farmers’ & Ginners’ Cotton Oil Company ever placed in the actual possession of a bankruptcy court through the agency of a receiver or otherwise.

(5) February 8, 1916,- and subsequent to the institution of the- bankruptcy proceeding, one M. M. Graves obtained judgment in Harris county, Tex., against the Farmers’ & Ginners’ Cotton Oil Company and J. L. Hunter, jointly, for the sum of $273. Execution issued thereon, and the properties in controversy were sold by the sheriff of Travis county, Tex., to appellant on July 4,1916, for the aggregate sum of $85, and properly executed deeds, pursuant to sheriff’s sale, were placed of record in the deed records of Travis county on July 6, 1916. The state court rendering the judgment against th'e Farmers’ & Ginners’ Cotton Oil Company and its code-fendant, J. L. Hunter, had no actual notice of the proceeding in bankruptcy against the former, and it is admitted that no action was taken to stay the proceedings in the state court subsequent to the filing of the petition in involuntary bankruptcy. It appears that appellant was notified of the pendency of the bankruptcy proceedings on the day of sale and shortly prior to his purchase at execution sale.

(6) July 10, 1916, the Farmers’ & Ginners’ Cotton Oil Company, in consideration of the cancellation and discharge of the lien indebtedness against the properties, executed its deed of conveyance to appellees, C. R. Laws, E. P. Wilmot, and B. T. Bom-ar. Subsequently, and prior to February 15, 1917, appellees Laws, Wilmot, and Bomar conveyed the properties which they had acquired to the appel-lee H. H. Shear, who is the real contestant of appellant herein. On the date last mentioned the Farmers’ & Ginners’ Cotton Oil Company filed in the court of bankruptcy an offer of composition with its general and unsecured creditors, which, after appropriate notice and a compliance with other prerequisites, was in all things confirmed by the court, and on March 20,1917, the proceeding against the corporation was in all things dismissed.

Opinion.

[1] Where, as here, lands subject to contract liens are sold on execution against the owner, the purchaser at execution sale succeeds to his rights, and equity confers upon him the privilege of redemption, but only on condition that the rights acquired at execution sale are valid. Willis v. Smith, 66 Tex. 31, 17 S. W. 247; 27 Cye. (Mortgages) p. 1806.

[2] Appellee challenges the validity of the sales under which appellant claims, contending that the same were void: (1) Because of statutory irregularities, accompanied by inadequacy of price; (2) that at the date of sale the properties were in custodia legis, under administration by a court of bankruptcy, [979]*979and that upon a composition proceeding had therein this in legal .effect restored the title to the bankrupt, freed from the claims sought to he maintained by appellant; (3) that the judgment debtor (the Farmers’ & Ginners’ Gotton Oil’ ’.Company) being insolvent, and having ceased to be a going concern at and before the date of the levy of the execution under which the properties were sold, its assets became a trust fund for all of its creditors, and consequently that, appellant could not acquire at sheriff’s sale the title to properties subject ito pro rata distribution among all the creditors; and (4) the validity of the court’s finding that appellant, in seeking to redeem, made no tender of the amounts due and secured by subsisting liens upon property, or expenses or advances paid out by appel-lees, or certain of them, of. them, for their necessary preservation.

We shall review the availability and the validity of these contentions in the order out-: lined.

Statutes governing executions are, for the most part, directory' in their nature. Pearson v. Flanagan, 52 Tex. 266; Odie v. Frost, 59 Tex. 684. And, as stated in Allen v. Pearson, 60 Tex. 607:

“ * * * It is apprehended that under no system would a-more irregularity, when taken in connection with gross inadequacy of consideration, be held sufficient ground for vacating a judicial sale, unless that irregularity in some way conduced to that inadequacy.”

The principle is again reiterated in House v. Robertson, 89 Tex. 687, 36 S. W. 252, in which the Supreme Court says:'

“It is true that inadequacy of price alone is not as a rule a sufficient reason for avoiding a sheriff’s sale * * * under a valid judgment and execution, but, when the price paid for the land at such sale is enormously inadequate and disproportioned to the value of the land sold, slight irregularities will be sufficient to justify setting the sale aside by a direct proceeding for that purpose. Allen v.

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Bluebook (online)
210 S.W. 976, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houston-v-shear-texapp-1919.