John H. Belcher & Elmore-Cooper Live Stock Commission Co. v. Cassidy Bros. Live Stock Commission Co.

62 S.W. 924, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 60, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 29
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 6, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 62 S.W. 924 (John H. Belcher & Elmore-Cooper Live Stock Commission Co. v. Cassidy Bros. Live Stock Commission Co.) 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
John H. Belcher & Elmore-Cooper Live Stock Commission Co. v. Cassidy Bros. Live Stock Commission Co., 62 S.W. 924, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 60, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 29 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

CONNER, Chief Justice.

Overruling all assignments that question the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and judgment in appellee’s favor, we find, as briefly as we can state them, that the facts established by the verdict, judgment, and evidence are, that on the 24th day of November, 1897, W. J. Belcher, doing business with his brother, J. B. Belcher, a silent partner, purchased from the firm of Cobh •& Frazier about 800 stock cattle of the same general classes as specified in the several mortgages hereinafter mentioned. Of this number 625 were branded Q on the shoulder and with various other brands not necessary to notice, and 150 head were branded O on the shoulder and t — ' on the thigh, but with no other brands. The said 625 cattle were on said day duly mortgaged to Offutt, Elmore & Cooper, a live stock •commission company of Kansas City, Mo., to secure the sum of $9360 advanced to W. J. Belcher with which to make said purchase. On the 10th of March, 1898, W. J. Belcher duly mortgaged to Elmore & Cooper, who in the interim had succeeded the firm of Offutt, Elmore & Cooper, ■said 150 cattle branded OH to secure $2500 advanced to him and which was also used in payment of the stock of cattle purchased of Cobb & Frazier. The original mortgage and the obligation secured thereby was renewed at several times not necessary to notice by taking new obligation and new mortgage executed by W. J. Belcher until on November 21, 1898, when W. J. Belcher again renewed it by executing new obligation and mortgage to Elmore & Cooper for the sum of $9861.28, being the principal and interest due on the original mortgage to Offutt, Elmore & Cooper. This mortgage, as we construe it in the light of the *61 evidence, covered and was intended to cover said 625 cattle and their increase only, with perhaps some others not included among said 150 cattle branded Of — ' > or their increase. On December 22, 1898, said mortgage for $2500 on said 150 cattle not having been paid, and W. J. Belcher being unable to pay the same to the then holders, who before maturity and in due course of trade had acquired the same from Elmore & Cooper, the defendant in error, the Cassidy Bros. Live Stock Commission Company, a private corporation, advanced to W. J. Belcher the sum of $10,007, and to secure the same took a mortgage from W. J. Belcher on 616 cattle; of which 212 were branded O on left shoulder and H on left thigh; the 212 being said original 150 cattle in that brand and the increase thereof. In this transaction the $2500 mortgage and obligation with accumulated interest was taken up, canceled, and surrendered to W. J. Belcher. This mortgage to defendant in error was made to cover not only the cattle therein described, but also all accretions, additions, and increase thereof. It also appears that there were several subsequent renewals in like manner as before described of the said mortgage to Elinor & Cooper dated November 21, 1898, in some of which, particularly the one remaining unpaid at the time of the intervention hereinafter stated, the terms were sufficiently comprehensive to include all cattle involved in this suit.

The said debt and mortgage of December 22, 1898, to defendant in error not having been paid, it instituted this suit May 23, 1900, against W. J. Belcher, J. B. Belcher, and plaintiff in error John H. Belcher, who, in the meantime, had become the purchaser of the entire stock of cattle herein involved, and prayed to recover their debt and to foreclose their said mortgage lien on some 304 cattle sequestrated by them. Plaintiff in error, the Elmore-Cooper Live Stock Commission Company, as successor to the rights of Elmore & Cooper, intervened, and together with the Belchers set up the original mortgage to Elmore & Cooper with the several renewals thereof; prayed to have the same established, and in substance insisted that said mortgage was superior to that of defendant in error, and that in fact none of the cattle sequestrated and claimed by defendant in error as subject to its claim was covered by the descriptive terms of its mortgage. Defendant in error answered and alleged among other things, in substance, that if the cattle claimed and originally mortgaged to it could not be identified, it was because such cattle had wrongfully been intermingled and confused with others of the stock by intervener and defendants, and prayed that an equitable apportionment of the general herd be made, and for general relief.

The cause was submitted to a jury upon special issues. The court, upon the return of the verdict, rendered judgment thereon for defendant in error against W. J. and J. B. Belcher for the balance claimed to be due, and against all of the defendants and intervener, foreclosing its lien; the judgment reciting that of the cattle originally mortgaged to the plaintiff 205 head and their increase were in the hands of defendants and that said cattle were described as follows: “123 cows, 38 two- *62 year-old heifers, 1 two-year-old steer, 37 three-year-old heifers, 22 yearling steers and 22 yearling heifers, and that said cattle were branded Of— and other brands, and were mixed with 786 head of other cattle in said pasture, making in all 1090 head,” etc., and that intervener was entitled to a mortgage on 786 head of said cattle. It was therefore decreed “that plaintiff’s lien as it existed on the 22d day of December, 1898, be and it is foreclosed as to said 304 head of cattle of the class and kinds of cattle hereinabove described, and that an order of sale issue directing the sheriff or any constable of Archer County to seize and sell as under execution an interest of 304 head, the fair average of all of said cattle * * * ; and to put the purchaser at said sale in possession of 304 head of cattle selected out of the classes and kinds of all of said bunch, and that such sale- may be made passing to the purchaser all the right, title, and interest of defendants and intervener in and to said cattle.”

The defendants and intervener filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and notice of appeal was duly given by plaintiffs iff error. The defendant John H. Belcher and the intervener alone have appealed .and assigned errors.

The verdict of the jury expressly established the • following facts: That on November 21, 1897, W. J. Belcher had in his possession the 625 cattle then mortgaged to Offutt, Elmore & Cooper, and so had and possessed the 212 cattle branded Of— December 22, 1898, as described in the mortgage thereon then given to defendant in error; that at the time of the trial John H. Belcher then had in his possession, covered by appellee’s mortgage, 123 cows, 61 calves, 37 three-year-old heifers, 44 yearlings, 38 two-year-old heifers and one two-year-old steer, as claimed by defendant in error; that the said original 212 cattle mortgaged to defendant in error had been mixed with other cattle branded OV, OT or O (covered by intervener’s mortgage) by W. J. and J. B. Belcher, so that the cattle covered by the two mortgages “can not be separately described without dividing them.” We understand this to mean, in view of the evidence, that the specific cattle described in defendant in error’s mortgage (save seven head that were found and identified) have been so branded, mixed, and intermingled by W. J. Belcher and J. B. Belcher as that they can not now be certainly identified and pointed out by means of the original Of— brand.

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Bluebook (online)
62 S.W. 924, 26 Tex. Civ. App. 60, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-h-belcher-elmore-cooper-live-stock-commission-co-v-cassidy-bros-texapp-1901.