Hydraulic Casing Pulling Co. v. Brown

297 S.W. 770, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 650
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1927
DocketNo. 531.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 770 (Hydraulic Casing Pulling Co. v. Brown) 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
Hydraulic Casing Pulling Co. v. Brown, 297 S.W. 770, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 650 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

*771 STANFORD, J.

Spit by C. L. Brown against W. M. Skinner, B. L. Walkup, A. L. Volmer, and tbe Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company, Inc., alleging he sold to W. M. Skinner certain casing pulling machinery, fully described, for $1,580, evidenced by a series of notes executed by the said Skinner, and that a mortgage was retained on said property to secure the payment of said notes; and alleging facts intended to show that the said B. L. Walkup, A. L. Volmer, and Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company, Inc., became liable for said notes by having purchased said property and assumed the payment of said notes, or by having converted said property, etc. The ease was tried before the court without a jury and judgment rendered for defendant in error. A more detailed statement of the ease will be made in the course of this opinion.

Under their first assignment plaintiffs in error A. L. Volmer and B. L. Walkup contend the court erred in overruling their special exception to paragraph 2 of plaintiff’s petition, wherein the plaintiff alleges as follows: “That the purchasers thereof assumed and became, bound for the payment of the balance due of the said notes due said Brown,” because it does not allege that said assumption was part of the purchase price and so comes within the statute of frauds. The question here presented is immaterial, in that recovery was not had upon the ground that any one of said defendants bought said property and as a part of the purchase price assumed the payment of the notes due Brown, but recovery was had upon other grounds in no way related to the question here involved. So it is not necessary to, and we do not, decide the question here presented. A. Harris & Co. v. Caldwell (Tex. Civ. App.) 276 S. W. 298.

Under their second proposition plaintiffs in error contend the judgment does not conform to and is not supported by the pleadings. Defendant in error alleged, in substance, that Skinner sold the property to B. L. Walkup and A. L. Volmer, or to the Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company, Inc., or the same was sold by said Walkup and Volmer to the Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company, Inc., after same was transferred to. them by Skinner, etc.; and, further, in substance, that Walkup, Volmer and the Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company, Inc., converted said property to their own use while charged with said lien; that they took possession of said property and were using same in pulling casing and receiving pay for the use of same; that while same was in their possession and while they were using same they negligently allowed same to be partially destroyed by fire, etc., and that all of said parties became liable jointly and severally for the value of said property so converted while charged with said lien to the extent of said debt sued for, etc. Defendant in error further alleged, in substance, that Skinner, Walkup, Volmer, and

Baird formed a partnership known as the Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company; that said property was conveyed to said partnership by Skinner, and said partnership accepted same, and said partnership used and treated same as partnership property; that said partnership incorporated under the name of the Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company, Inc.; and that said machinery was conveyed by said parties to said corporation and same was accepted by said corporation and became and was treated as assets of said corporation and stock issued on same, etc., and while being so used and treated by said corporation and its said promoters was partially destroyed by fire, etc. The record discloses that Skinner was adjudged a bankrupt and said property was listed as a part of his assets and turned over to the trustee of his estate, and that by order of said bankruptcy court the fire damage was repaired and said property delivered to Skinner, to be by him operated for the benefit of his estate, and it was being so operated at the time of the trial. Skinner, having been adjudged a bankrupt, was dismissed from the suit, The trial court by its judgment established defendant in error’s debt in the sum of $1,563.26 as against W. M. Skinner, and his mortgage lien against said property to secure said amount, and foreclosed said lien, and rendered personal judgment jointly and severally against B. L. Walkup, A. L. Volmer, and the Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company, Inc., for the sum of $1,563.26, but directed the sale of said property under order of sale and the proceeds applied to said $1,563.26, and that execution issue against said last-named parties for any balance. Order of sale was issued, said property sold and bought in by defendant in error, the proceeds applied, and execution issued against plaintiffs in error for the remainder. We sustain the above proposition to the effect that defendant in error’s pleading is insufficient to support the judgment. The title to the property being in Skinner, he had the right to sell same to Walkup and Volmer, or to the Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company; or, if he sold to Walkup and Volmer, they had the right to sell to said Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company; or, if Skinner formed a partnership with said other parties, he had the right to sell same to said partnership, or, in other words, put same in as his contribution to the partnership assets, and, if so, said partnership had the right to incorporate and receive said property as a part of its assets. Of course, defendant in error’s mortgage being of record, and no objection on his part, said sales and transfers were subject to his rights under said mortgage. So said sales and transfers, if made as alleged, did not amount to a conversion on the part of any of said parties. Baldwin Motor Co. v. De Ford (Tex. Civ. App.) 282 S. W. 832, and cases cited. The allegation that said property was partially destroyed by fire while in the possession of said plaintiffs in error is *772 insufficient as a basis for a judgment for conversion, in that there is no allegation of the amount of such damage, if any. There is no allegation nor evidence of the value of said property before or after its partial destruction, nor at any other time. The fact that said property was damaged by fire while in the possession of plaintiffs in error, even if being wrongfully held by them and caused by their negligence, would not render them liable as for conversion for the amount of defendant in error’s debt, regardless of the extent of said damage.

There is another reason why the judgment against plaintiffs in error Walkup, Volmer, and the Hydraulic Casing Pulling Company is erroneous and cannot stand. This was a suit by defendant in error against Skinner to recover on notes and to foreclose a mortgage on certain machinery, fully described in defendant in error’s petition. Judgment was rendered establishing the amount due on said notes at $1,563.26 and foreclosing said mortgage on all of the property included in said mortgage. The order of sale and the sheriff’s return on same show that all of said property — every item composing said hydraulic casing pulling machine, as described in defendant in error’s petition and in the judgment of foreclosure — was sold under said order of sale and bought in by defendant in error.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 770, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hydraulic-casing-pulling-co-v-brown-texapp-1927.