J. M. West Lumber Co. v. Lyon

116 S.W. 652, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 648, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 684
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 652 (J. M. West Lumber Co. v. Lyon) 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
J. M. West Lumber Co. v. Lyon, 116 S.W. 652, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 648, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 684 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

This is an action of trespass to try title brought by appellees, Cecil A. Lyon and J. S. Pice, receivers for the Kirby Lumber Company, against appellants, J. M. West Lumber Company and South Texas National Bank, to recover the Daniel Turney 640-acre survey of land in Polk County. The appellant South Texas National Bank answered by general denial and plea of not guilty, and pleaded that it was an innocent purchaser, for valuable consideration, without notice of the title claimed by appellees and their grantors; and further, that the appellees’ grantor, the Grand Lodge of Texas, was guilty of loches in withholding its deed from record, and that it was therefore estopped from claiming title to the property sued for.

Appellant J. M. West Lumber Company answered by general denial and plea of not guilty; and specially, that it purchased the land in controversy from appellant South Texas National Bank by warranty deed, and prayed judgment over against appellant South Texas National Bank, on its warranty, should the appellees recover the land from appellants.

The case was tried by the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered for appellees for the land sued for, and in favor of J. M. West Lumber Company against South Texas National Bank on its warranty for the sum of $2,180, with interest from date at six percent per annum. Both defendants have appealed from this judgment.

The trial court filed, at the request of appellants, the following conclusions of fact, which we find to be supported by the evidence:

“1. The origin of the case was in a deed of trust executed- by Allen & Williams, and Allen & Co., and allied firms, of all of which Sam Allen was a member, given the Grand Lodge of Masons of Texas, April 1, 1895, to secure $10,000 borrowed from that body.

“2. In 1896 the same firms, becoming insolvent, or at least financially embarrassed, made a deed of trust to one Percy Allen for the protection of their creditors, who were numerous, and held in the aggregate claims to a large amount.

“3. An arrangement was made for a settlement with the creditors, the debts being largely scaled and divided into classes, and the Sam Allen Lumber Company was formed and took over the property and assumed the indebtedness, and on April 1, 1897, the trustee, Percy Allen, conveyed to the Lumber Company so formed all the assets which had been conveyed to him, retaining what is termed a Vendor’s lien,’ and it seems a committee of the creditors was to supervise or look after the matter of handling the assets.

• “4. It being deemed desirable to sell certain lands in Tyler County encumbered by the aforesaid deed of trust to "the Grand Lodge of Masons, the creditors’ committee gave permission, and the Grand Lodge consented on condition that other lands be substituted for those sold, and it was so arranged, and in March, 1898, a deed of trust to conform to said arrangement was given the Grand Lodge on two tracts of land in Polk County, one "of which is involved in this suit.

*652 “5. In June, 1900, the Sam Allen Lumber Company, being unable to throw off the burden of inherited financial embarrassment, was thrown into bankruptcy by its creditors.

“6. On August 25, 1900, the Grand Lodge of Masons asked for an order of the bankrupt court to sell all lands upon which it had "deeds of trust to secure the $10,000. Notice of the application was duly given and the same was set for hearing before the referee in bankruptcy on September 12, 1900.

“7. On the latter date, no objection having been made, the sale was ordered for the first Tuesday in November, 1900, of the Tyler County lands at public sale in Tyler County, and the Polk County lands, including the tract in controversy, was ordered sold at private sale, both sales to be for cash.

“8. The sale was duly made and reported, and the sale to the Grand Lodge of all the lands, including that in controversy, was duly approved, and deed ordered made to the purchaser, the Grand. Lodge, from which, by a regular chain of conveyances, the lands passed to the plaintiffs, who sued for one of the tracts in Polk County.

“9. On January 29, 1901, the South Texas National Bank and other creditors, payment of whose debts the Sam Allen Lumber Company had assumed, applied to the bankruptcy court for an order foreclosing the ‘vendor’s lien’ retained by Percy Allen, trustee, when he conveyed to the Sam Allen Lumber Company.

.“10. The court of bankruptcy made an order to the effect that the ‘vendor’s lien’ was recognized and foreclosed, and it appearing that a sale of all the property covered by the lien had already been ordered for February 1, 1901, a sale of the property described in the application was ordered at the same time, and sale was made.

“11. Under the proceedings above cited the Grand Lodge got a deed from the trustee in bankruptcy in November, 1900, and the South Texas National Bank got a deed in February, 1901, under the sale made February 1, 1901.

“12. The Grand Lodge’s deed was recorded in Polk County on February 23, 1901, while the bank’s deed was recorded February 21, 1901.

“I find that at the time the South Texas National Bank purchased the land in controversy from the trustee in bankruptcy and received the deed therefor, that it paid the consideration recited in said deed without actual notice of the sale of said property to the Grand Lodge of Texas.

“I find that J. E. McAshan bid on and purchased the land in controversy for the South Texas National Bank, and that where the name of S. E. McAshan appears in the order of the bankruptcy court confirming the sale was a clerical error, and should have been J. E. Mc-Ashan, who was acting for the South Texas National Bank. I do not consider this a material matter—that is, one affecting the main issue.”

Predicated upon these fact findings the learned trial judge reached the following conclusions of law:

“I do not attach any great importance to the so-called ‘vendor’s lien’ retained by Percy Allen, trustee, because he had no better right than his grantors, the insolvent- firms, had, and he took the property subject to the primary lien given in 1895 to the Grand Lodge to secure the debt of $10,000,

*653 “I do not think the rights of the Grand Lodge were lessened or those of the defendants strengthened or increased by the substitution of the Polk County lands for some of the Tyler County lands, as that arrangement was equitable and fair, and its purpose obvious and reasonable.

“I do not think the question of notice by record of'deed is essential to be considered in determining the case, nor the question of proving by paroi that the sale under which the bank claims, though reported to have been made to J. E. McAshan and confirmed to S. E. McAshan, was in fact made to the former and that the former bought for the bank.

“I hold that when the property was sold on the first Tuesday in November to the Grand Lodge, the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court over it was at an end, and that any subsequent sale was of no effect, and that the bank was bound to take notice of the proceedings of the court under the decrees of which it bought.”

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 652, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 648, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-m-west-lumber-co-v-lyon-texapp-1909.