Lane v. First Nat. Bank of Canyon City

155 S.W. 307, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 361
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 155 S.W. 307 (Lane v. First Nat. Bank of Canyon City) 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
Lane v. First Nat. Bank of Canyon City, 155 S.W. 307, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 361 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HUFF, O. J.

The appellee, First National Bank of Canyon, brought suit in the district court of Lubbock county against C. C. Lane, R. I. Tubbs, and Cora L. Tubbs on two vendor’s lien notes, each for the sum of $750, payable to J. J. Dillard, or his order, dated February 26, 1909, due in one and two years from their respective dates, each bearing interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, with the usual stipulation for 10 per cent, attorney’s fees, and also to foreclose a vendor’s lien on lots 1, 2, 7, and 8 of block 16, Dillard’s subdivision of survey 1, block E2, in Lubbock county. The ease was tried, without the intervention of a jury, 'before the trial judge, who rendered judgment against C. C. Lane and R. I. Tubbs for the amount of the notes, principal, interest, and attorney’s fees, and foreclosed the vendor’s lien against the above-mentioned lots as to C. C. | Lane, R, I. Tubbs, and Cora L. Tubbs, and also gave judgment against J. J. Dillard for said sum of money in favor of R. I. Tubbs on Tubbs’ cross-petition, bringing Dillard into the suit, and in which he asked for such judgment. The trial court did not file conclusions of fact and law, and the case is before us alone upon the statement of facts and the record as made in that court. C. C. Lane, R. I. Tubbs, and Cora L. Tubbs bring the case by appeal before us. The case will be understood by recitation of the material facts.

On the 26th day of February, 1909, C. C. Lane purchased the lots in question from J. J. Dillard, and as part of the purchase price executed the two notes for $750 each, retaining in their face the vendor’s lien on the lots above mentioned, and the lien was also retained on said lots in the deed from Dillard to Lane. On the 24th day of August, 1909, C. C. Lane conveyed the lots to R. I. Tubbs for the recited consideration of $1,000 cash, and one note for $1,000, dated February 26, 1909, and due August 26, 1909, assumed by Tubbs, and the further consideration of the assumption of the payment of the two notes for $750 sued on in this case. On the 8th day of April, 1909, J. J. Dillard executed his note for $3,620.50, due 120 days after date, to the appellee, the First National Bank of Canyon. This note was sent to the appellee and received at its banking house in Canyon City by due course of mail, with the two notes for $750, sued on, attached as collateral security. The notes so executed and attached were received by appellee in April, 1909, soon after the 8th day of April. At the time appellee came into possession of the two $750 notes, they were indorsed on the back of each by J. J. Dillard in blank. On the 2d day of October, 1909, J. J. Dillard executed a release of the vendor’s Hen on the lots in question, which was retained in his deed to C. C. Lane and in the notes to secure the payment of the two $750 notes,, “reciting that said notes had been paid to the said Dillard, the legal and equitable holder and owner of said notes at the time of the payment, releasing all of the lien that he had on said property by virtue of being the owner of said notes.”

R. I. Tubbs, by his testimony, shows that he bought the lots from C. C. Lane and paid him $3,500 therefor, $1000 cash and assumed a $1,000 personal note of Lane’s, which he afterwards paid, and also assumed the payment of the two $750 vendor’s lien notes, payable to the order of J. J. Dillard. He paid the- notes to J. J. Dillard some few days before the release was executed by Dillard. At the time he did so, Dillard stated to him that he did not have in his possession the two notes; that they were up at the bank, and Dillard promised to get them. He stated he was trading Dillard in payment of the *308 two notes another note, and at the time they reached the agreement he did not have his note with him. The next time he came to town he brought his note with him and indorsed it over to Dillard. Dillard then told him he did not have his notes, and had forgotten to get them and did not have them. After he indorsed his note to Dillard, Dillard executed the release, and he (Tubbs) thought no more about it until suits' were brought. He stated he had no aetual notice that ap-pellee had held the notes by transfer or as collateral, or that they had been transferred to any one else. .

[1] J. J. Dillard testified that he placed the notes with the Eirst National Bank of Lubbock, as collateral, with other notes; that he did not place these notes with the' appellee as collateral. They were indorsed by him in pencil, and were placed with the Lubbock bank that it might know his assets. He testified he never did instruct the Lubbock bank to deliver these notes to the appellee as collateral security, and that he was not consulted about it. He states that he went to the Lubbock bank, after learning the notes were in its hands, and tried to substitute the note he got from Tubbs for the two notes sued on, and the bank could not find them and came to the conclusion at that time that they were at Canyon City, and were up as collateral with the appellee for the note he owed it. Pie then tried to have the note he got from Tubbs substituted for his two notes with appellee, but his offer was declined. He further testified on cross-examination: “For this reason I say that the First National Bank of Lubbock was evidently acting as my agent. I had no transaction with the First National Bank of Canyon, only through the First National Bank of Lubbock. They came to me, or I went to them; at any rate, there was an agreement arrived at, by which they were to get certain money at Canyon City, and nothing was said about the collateral, and they had the collateral in the bank, and they made the distribution of it, and distributed it as they saw fit.”

In cause No. 435, First National Bank of Canyon v. J. J. Dillard, in the district court of Lubbock county, wherein appellee sought judgment against Dillard on the $3,620.55 note, together with another note, Dillard, in his answer thereto, alleged that he had placed up the two vendor’s lien notes herein sued on, and that they were delivered by Dillard to the appellee as collateral security. It is not stated in the answer on which note it was given as collateral security, whether the $3,020.55 or the $2,745.40, the other note in that suit.

The president of the appellee bank, L. T. Lester, testified: His bank got Dillard’s $3,020.55 note through the Lubbock bank, and that when it came the two $750 notes were attached to it as collateral. That ap-pellee made a loan to Dillard in the amount of $3,600. This loan was effected through the Lubbock bank. The Lubbock bank inquired ' of appellee whether it would make ‘the loan, and appellee'agreed to do so if the collateral was sufficient. The Lubbock bank sent the Dillard note with the two vendor’s lien notes and two Handley notes for $1,000 each, attached as security, and the money was then paid into the Lubbock bank.

We find in support of the judgment of the trial court, that 'Dillard authorized the First National Bank of Lubbock to negotiate a loan for Dillard with appellee, and that he executed his note for $3,620.55, payable to appellee, and that Dillard indorsed the two notes sued on in blank and authorized the same to be attached to the $3,620.55 note as collateral security -thereof; thereupon they were sent to appellee, which loaned to him the amount evidenced by the note, which was paid for Dillard into the Lubbock bank.

Appellee did not authorize Dillard to collect the two vendor’s lien notes for $750, and if he did so he did it without authority from appellee.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 S.W. 307, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-first-nat-bank-of-canyon-city-texapp-1913.