Hunter v. Abernathy
This text of 188 S.W. 269 (Hunter v. Abernathy) 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.
Opinion
This suit was brought by appel-lee in the justice court against H. B. and J. W. Hunter, to enforce the collection of a promissory note for $125, payable to him, with interest and attorney’s fees. Appellants Goldman, Lester & Co. were made parties defendant on the theory that they had converted two bales of cotton described in the mortgage given by H. B. Hunter to appellee to secure the note. These appellants appealed from the judgment in the justice court against them to the county court, where the case was again tried, and judgment rendered against them for $117.50, $100 for the value of the cotton alleged to have been converted and $17.50 interest. To the pleadings of plaintiff alleging conversion, appellants Goldman, Lester & Co. entered a general' denial. From said judgment appellants have prosecuted this appeal.
The facts, briefly stated, as evidenced by the findings of the court and jury, show that the Hunters executed and delivered the note sued upon to appellee, and that H. B. Hunter, in order to secure it, gave a mortgage to appellee on 60 acres of cotton to be raised during the year 1912 on the Petty farm in Coleman county. Prior to the execution of this mortgage, H. B. Hunter had given a mortgage to one Bell for the first three bales of cotton to be raised on that farm during said year to secure an indebtedness due him, and had likewise given a mortgage on the fourth, fifth, and sixth bales to be raised on that farm during the same year, to Paddle-ford & Son, to secure a debt due them; both of which mortgages were executed and duly recorded before appellee’s mortgage was given and recorded. Only three bales of cotton were raised on this farm during the year in question, one of which was sold by H. B. Hunter to one Stacy, and is not involved herein. The other two bales were shipped by him through E. F. Gordon as agent of Goldman, Lester & Co., factors and commission merchants, to that firm at Houston, who sold same, remitting the proceeds, less their commissions and transportation charges directly to H. B. Hunter. It likewise appears from the evidence that the debt secured by the mortgage to Bell had been paid off.
Finding no error in the proceedings of the trial court, its judgment is in all respects affirmed.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
188 S.W. 269, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-abernathy-texapp-1916.