Kearby v. Hopkins

36 S.W. 506, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 166, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 300
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 3, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 36 S.W. 506 (Kearby v. Hopkins) 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
Kearby v. Hopkins, 36 S.W. 506, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 166, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 300 (Tex. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

The judgment appealed from vacates a sale of certain land sold by John A. Pope, as substitute trustee, in a deed of trust on the premises; and was rendered on the following facts found by the trial court, which we adopt as our conclusions of fact:

“1. On November 9, 1885, H. M. Spalding executed and delivered to Mrs. Susan M. Knowles a note for §10,000, due five years after date, *169 with interest at seven per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, said note being fully described in plaintiff’s petition.
“0. On the same day, to secure the payment of said note, H. M. Spalding executed and delivered to J. F. Kimball, trustee, a deed of trust in the nature of a mortgage, covering 50x000 feet of land then owned by Spalding, and extending through from Commerce street to Jackson street, in the city of Dallas. This deed of trust is fully and properly described in the plaintiff’s petition, and is duly acknowleged and recorded as alleged by plaintiff.
“3. Prior to February 4, 1891, by a series of mesne conveyances not material to set forth, the title of the west half of said property, being 05x000 feet, became vested in S. B. Hopkins, who, as hereinafter shown, had deeded it to his daughter, Maud Hopkins; and the title to the east half, 05x000 feet, became vested in E. M. Tillman. Hopkins and Tillman, in purchasing, each personally assumed one-half of the mortgage debt. On said date, February 4, 1891, Tillman and Hopkins each owned a divided half of said property, subject to said trust deed, which was past due and unpaid, and which Mrs. Susan M. Knowles still owned. These tracts, for convenience, are hereinafter called the Tillman tract, and the Hopkins tract, respectively.
“4. Hopkins and Tillman, desiring to secure an extension of time for the payment of said mortgage debt, and Mrs. Susan M. Knowles not desiring to carry the debt further herself, Hopkins and Tillman thereupon entered into an agreement with one C. B. Bowling to purchase the note from Mrs. Susan M. Knowles, and grant an extension of time at an increased rate of interest to them, the said Tillman and Hopkins. They, Hopkins and Tillman then paid the interest to February 4, 1891, and the following endorsements were then put on said note, to-wit: ‘Interest paid to February 4, 1891, and principal extended for two years at 10 per cent semi-annual interest; see endorsement below. Without recourse, pay C. B. Bowling or order. [Signed] Susan M. Knowles.’
“Below the above endorsements, the following endorsement was also made at the same time: ‘We, E. M. Tillman and S. B. Hopkins, the present owner of the within mentioned property, desiring this note extended for two years from this date, agree to pay interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum, payable semi-annually as it accrues, and to pay said note promptly on the 4th day of February, 1893, at the office of Murphy and Bolanz, Dallas, Texas; further agreeing, if this note is placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, or if collected by suit, to pay ten per cent addition on the full amount due as attorney’s fees.
[Signed] ‘E. M. Tillman,
‘S. B. Hopkins.’
“On the same day the above agreement was reduced to writing, in a separate instrument, fully describing the note and trust deed, and this separate instrument was signed by Hopkins and Tillman, acknowledged *170 for record, and duly recorded in the records of real estate mortgages for Dallas County. Murphy & Bolanz were a firm of real estate and money brokers in Dallas, and they represented Bowling and Mrs. Knowles in negotiating the transaction, though the papers were signed by the principals in person as above shown. The note was duly delivered to Bowling, and Mrs. Knowles has since had nothing to do with the transaction.
“5. About this time, Tillman organized the Southern Distilling Company, a corporation organized under the Texas statutes, and of which he was the president, manager and principal stockholder, as hereinafter more particularly.shown. The Southern Distilling Co. occupied the Tillman half of the property as Tillman’s tenant, until it purchased the said Tillman half, as hereinafter shown, and after the purchase, occupied the property in its own right until it went out of business. Hopkins, for a time, occupied his half of the property himself, as a place of business, but for some time it has been rented out. The particulars, so far as deemed material to this case, will be more fully shown hereinafter.
“6. On July 2, 1891, there was filed for record in the county clerk’s office of Dallas County, a deed from S. B. Hopkins and wife, Mary B. Hopkins, to Maud Hopkins, a minor daughter of S. B. Hopkins, by a former marriage, conveying to said Maud Hopkins the Hopkins half of said property. Said deed purports to have been executed and acknowledged on October 23, 1888, the consideration recited being one dollar, natural love and affection. Maud Hopkins was, at the date of the record of said deed, eleven years'of age, and has had no guardian of her estate, until after the institution of this suit, her father S. B. Hopkins having all along acted as guardian of both her person and estate, paying the taxes, collecting the rents, and negotiating for the protection of said property, with her full knowledge and consent, it being the only piece of property owned or claimed by her in her separate right. The mortgage for §10,000 being a lien on her property at the time her father transferred it to her, he has assumed and exercised the authority to make any and all necessary arrangements for extending said lien and the 810,000 note aforesaid. After the institution of this suit, said Maud Hopkins had a guardian duly appointed for her estate, to represent and protect her interests herein, who is one W. M. C. Hill, and who has duly intervened herein, setting up her title and rights as shown in his petition of intervention.
“7. Said Tillman and Hopkins paid the semi-annual installment of interest on said 810,000 note as follows: August 5, 1891, 8500; February 6, 1892, 8500; August 8, 1892, 8500; February 14, 18.93, $500; all of which payments were duly endorsed on said note. No other payments of interest were actually made, except as hereinafter described.
“8. On January 28, 1892, E. M. Tillman and wife executed and delivered to the Southern Distilling Co. a deed conveying his one-half of said property to said company, which was duly acknowledged and *171 recorded at the time. The consideration recited on the face of this deed was $32,500, as follows: The assumption by said company of the one-half of said $10,000 note, and four vendor’s lien notes for $5000 each, due in two, three, four and five years respectively, after date, and one vendor’s lien note for $7500, due in six years after date; all of said notes being negotiable in form, made by the Southern Distilling Co., payable to E. M.

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Bluebook (online)
36 S.W. 506, 14 Tex. Civ. App. 166, 1896 Tex. App. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kearby-v-hopkins-texapp-1896.