John M. Bonner Memorial Home v. Collin County National Bank

122 S.W. 430, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 313, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 430 (John M. Bonner Memorial Home v. Collin County National Bank) 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 M. Bonner Memorial Home v. Collin County National Bank, 122 S.W. 430, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 313, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 69 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

BOOKHOUT, Associate Justice.

This suit was instituted in the District Court of Collin County by appellee, the Collin County National Bank of McKinney, against Jno. R. Smith and E. L. Gladney, administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Delia E. Dwyer, deceased, and later, by an amended petition filed August 19, 1907, the John M. Bonner Memorial Home was made defendant. The amended petition alleged that John R. Smith, on December 31, 1901, executed to the plaintiff bank his promissory note for the sum of two thousand three hundred eighty-two and 41/100 dollars ($3,383.41), payable to defendant’s order sixty days after date, with ten percent interest per annum from maturity, and providing for the usual ten percent attorney’s fees. It was also alleged that on December 36, 1901, the said Smith, for the purpose- of securing the payment of said note, executed in favor of said bank a deed of trust, creating a lien upon a certain described portion of the Abner Lee survey situated in Collin County, Texas. The petition further alleged that on or about December 33, 1886, said John R. Smith purchased from Delia E. Bonner and William B. Bonner 300 acres of land in the Abner Lee survey in Collin County, Texas, and for the purchase money thereof executed his four notes each for $635, due on the first day of January, 1888, 1889, 1890 and 1891, respectively; and that the land described in the deed of trust was a portion of said 300-acre tract; that at the date of the execution of said deed of trust a portion of said original purchase-money notes had been paid, the amount so paid and the amount remaining due thereon at the time plaintiff was unable to state. Said petition further alleged that said note sued on and said deed of trust mentioned were executed for the purpose of raising money to pay upon said original indebtedness, and with the understanding that the same should be so paid, and that said money was paid upon said indebtedness; that the money received from the bank, having been used to pay on said indebtedness, the plaintiff bank thereby became subrogated to all of the rights, privileges and benefits of the vendors in said deed and the holders of said notes. Plaintiff further plead that by virtue of the facts stated it had a vendor’s lien upon the land mentioned in the

*315 deed of trust, which it prayed might be established against the land mentioned and for order of sale, etc. The marriage of Lelia E. Bonner, one of the grantors in the deed, to one Dwyer was alleged, and it was further stated that on June 22, 1905, she departed this life testate; and that defendant E. L. Gladney had qualified as her administrator with the will annexed, and that as such administrator he has sold the land described in plaintiff’s petition to the defendant, the John M. Bonner Memorial Home. The petition further sued for rents in the sum of $1,600, and prayed that this amount be offset against any amount defendants might recover on the purchase-money notes.

The John M. Bonner Memorial Home answered by general demurrer and special exceptions, and general denial and special answers. The demurrers were overruled, and, as no assignments of error are predicated on the court’s action in this respect, they need not be further mentioned. The special answers alleged the sale of 200 acres of land by Lelia E. Bonner and William B. Bonner, by their said attorney, John M. Bonner, on the 23d day of December, 1886, to John B. Smith, and the execution of the four purchase-money notes, each for the sum of $625, of said date, each payable to Lelia E. Bonner or order, with twelve percent interest per annum, due on the dates mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, and each providing for ten percent attorney’s fees, and further alleged that the vendor’s lien was specially retained in said deed on the land therein conveyed until said notes were fully paid off and discharged according to tenor and effect; that the first note, due January 1, 1888, was paid off by said Smith, and that on or about the 26th day of October, 1901, said Smith had, by endorsement on the back of the remaining notes, acknowledged his indebtedness and liability thereon, and promised to pay the same on or about January 1, 1902. Each note being endorsed “interest paid to January 1, 1902.” That there was on the back of each of said notes a further endorsement, as follows: “Farmersville, Texas, August 30th. This note is canceled by re-conveyance of 94.85 acres out of the 200 acres of lánd in the Abner Lee survey in Collin County, Texas, on which this note is a lien for the original purchase money. Lelia Bonner Dwyer.” The answer further alleged that on August 20, 1904, said John B. Smith, being unable to pay the above-described three notes, on that date amounting to the sum of $5,691.50, executed and delivered to Mrs. Lelia Dwyer, the owner and holder of said three notes, a deed conveying to her 94.85 acres of land, a part of the 200 acres originally conveyed by her and another to said Smith, which re-conveyance was made in full satisfaction of the said sum of $5,691.50 then due upon the three remaining purchase-money notes given for said original tract of 200 acres of land, -the field notes of which 94.85-acre tract are set out in said answer. Said answer further alleged that at the date of the reconveyance from said Smith to said Dwyer of 94.85 acres of land, that said tract of land so conveyed was of no greater value than the sum of $5,691.50, the amount due on said notes, and was, in fact, of less value, and that the said Mrs. Dwyer received from said Smith said re-conveyance in good faith, without actual knowledge of any claim or lien by plaintiff upon said land, and that said conveyance was received by her solely in satisfaction of her *316 purchase-money notes. There were other pleadings by both parties, but it is unnecessary to set them out at this time. The defendant, John R. Smith, failed to answer, and a default judgment was rendered against him.

The cause was submitted to the court without a jury and a judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff against John R. Smith for $3,413.80, and foreclosure, of its lien was decreed on the land mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, as against both defendants, John R. Smith and the John M. Bonner Memorial Home. Judgment was also entered in favor of the John M. Bonner Memorial Home against said Smith for $5,489.25. The court adjudged a prior lien in favor of the John M. Bonner Memorial Home against said premises for only $1,875.45, and gave the plaintiff bank a second lien for the full amount of its entire debt, and gave the Bonner Memorial Home a second lien for the balance of its debt. E. L. Gladney, administrator, having filed his disclaimer, was dismissed from the suit. The John M. Bonner Memorial Home filed a motion for new trial, in which all of the errors assigned in this record were presented to the court, and which motion was overruled and defendant excepted and gave notice of appeal to this court, and having perfected its appeal, has assigned error.

The first assignment of error reads as follows: “Mrs. Dwyer, the original vendor to whom the purchase-money notes were executed by Smith, and in which deed and notes the vendor’s lien was retained, had the right to rescind in whole or in part and to accept in payment of the remaining purchase money due, a re-conveyance by Smith of all or any part of the land originally, conveyed, and the court erred in not so holding.” Hnder this assignment the proposition is urged that Mrs. Dwyer, the original vendor, owner and holder of all the vendor’s lien notes executed by John R.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 430, 57 Tex. Civ. App. 313, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-m-bonner-memorial-home-v-collin-county-national-bank-texapp-1909.