Keystone Pipe & Supply Co. v. Wright

37 S.W.2d 227, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 253
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 10, 1931
DocketNo. 12409.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 37 S.W.2d 227 (Keystone Pipe & Supply Co. v. Wright) 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
Keystone Pipe & Supply Co. v. Wright, 37 S.W.2d 227, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 253 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

The Keystone Pipe & Supply Company instituted this suit against Y. O. E. Wright and R. I. Owen, as partners, and the First National Bank of Wichita Falls, to recover a balance of $2,808.06 claimed to be due for oil well supplies sold by plaintiff to the partnership firm, and for foreclosure of a statutory furnisher’s lien as against them and *228 also against the defendant hank on two oil leases held by the partnership at the time said supplies were sold, and on which Hie same were used. It was alleged that defendant bank was claiming some interest in the leases but that the same was inferior to the lien claimed by plaintiff.

A judgment by default was rendered in plaintiff’s favor against defendants Wright and Owen for its debt, but plaintiff was denied a foreclosure of lien as against the defendant bank, and from that decree it has prosecuted this appeal.

The supplies sold by plaintiff were used by Wright and Owen on two oil leases situated in Archer county which they owned; and on December 24, 1927, plaintiff filed in the office of the county clerk of that county its claim of a statutory lien on those leases for the supplies so furnished. The lien claimed was under and by virtue ot the provisions of article 5473, Rev. Oiv. Statutes, and the steps taken to fix the lien were under and by virtue of the provisions of articles 5476, 5453, 5455, and 5467.

By the terms of article 5473, one furnishing supplies) or material used for such purposes as Wright and Owen used the supplies purchased by them is given a lien upon the supplies so furnished, and upon the lease upon which they are used; and article 5453 provides that one who furnishes such material under a contract with the leaseholder which is not in writing, may fix said lien by filing an itemized account of his claim supported by an affidavit showing that it is just and correct and that all lawful offsets, payments, and credits known to affiant have^ been allowed. Article 5455 prescribes a form to be used for such affidavit, and that form was followed by plaintiff in the steps taken by it in the present suit; the affidavit containing the statement that the supplies were furnished to Wright and Owen under a contract with the ■plaintiff; and it is to be inferred that that contract was in parol'.

Article 5467 reads as follows:

“When labor is performed by the day or week, then the indebtedness shall be deemed to have accrued at the end of each week during which labor is performed. When material is furnished, the indebtedness shall be deemed to have accrued at the date of the last delivery of such material, unless there is an agreement to pay for such material at a specified time.”

The principal question presented here for our determination is whether or not the affidavit so filed by the plaintiff was filed within the time required by article 5467, just quoted.

As noted above, the affidavit claiming the lien was filed for record in the office of the county clerk of Archer county, on December 24, 1927, and the account'attached to the affidavit as a part thereof shows numerous items of supplies sold to Wright and Owen on divers dates, beginning November 26, 1920, and ending November 22, 1927. In the account so filed with the county clerk, the following items are charged as accruing during the year 1927:

2/12 int. on noto $1000.00 from 1/13 to 2/13.$ 6 66
3/12 int. on note $1000.00 from 2/12 to 3/2. 6 66
4A1 int. on not© $1500.00 int. 2/11 to 4/11. 20 00
7/20 int. on note $1500.00 from 4/11 to 7/20. 33 00
S/15 int. on note $522.23 from 7/15 to 8/15. 3 48
3/14 int. on note $2300.00 from 7/15 to 9/15. 30 06
12/16 H 1848 l-¾," steel lip union .10
1 ¾ x 2" bile Nipple .20
1 ⅛ x 8 Blk Nipple .08
1 ⅜, Mclit coupling .05 .25
Balance_$2808 06'

• And the same with the balance stated is the concluding page of the account. The first item shown in the account at its beginning is the following: “1926 cr. bal. bit. forward $2223.83.” But nowhere in the account are those credits itemized. Nor was there any pleading or proof as to when those credits arose, or when or how they were applied on •the items charged against Wright and Owen.

In plaintiff’s petition it was alleged that Wright and Owen executed to plaintiff their promissory note for the principal sum of $2,300, dated July 15, 1927, drawing interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees; that the same was executed on their said account with plaintiff and there was a prayer for recovery of principal, interest, and attorney’s fees on that note, in the aggregate sum of $2,648.00. The petition also prayed for recovery upon an alleged contract in writing executed by Wright and Owen to pay plaintiff the sum of $254.79 for 15 joints of 6-3/8” casing, and in the account filed the item for that casing is included as a charge made on October 28, 1927; and that item, together with the note for the principal sum of $2,300 with principal and interest and attorney’s fees, represented the full amount for which plaintiff sued; and $2,S08.06, alleged as the balance due on said account, was the full amount for which a lien was claimed. The alleged contract to pay $254.79 was introduced by plaintiff, and instead of being a contract of sale, it was a lease in writing, of date October 28,1927, of the casing, and by its terms Wright and Owen agreed to pay rentals for the use of the casing and to return it to plaintiff at the expiration of the lease. It further provided that the pipe was to he used by Wright and Owen on a lease held by them on the W. M. Miller farm Denton county school lands. The lease also gave the lessees the right to purchase the pipe for a stated price, and in the event that option should he exercised, then the lessor would execute ,to them a bill of sale therefor. In that connection, however, the leáse further stipulated as follows:

*229 “It is expressly understood, however, that this right is purely optional, and that the lessee has not and shall not -have any title or interest, legal or equitable, in or to said property under this contract unless and until said option is exercised and said price i>aid.
“All indebtedness becoming due from lessee to lessor under this agreement shall bear interest at the rate of 8 i>er cent, per annum from and after the time when such payments become due. If lessee should convert the above described property or any part thereof to. his own use and benefit, or if lessee should fail to return or surrender said property or any part thereof .to lesso*r when under the terms of this contract said property is returnable to lessor, then lessor shall be entitled to interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from the time when said property is returnable to lessor, upon the value thereof which said value is hereby fixed at the purchase price of which lessee has option to purchase hereunder.”

I. E.

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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W.2d 227, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keystone-pipe-supply-co-v-wright-texapp-1931.