Lobit v. Marcoulides

225 S.W. 757, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1067
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 11, 1920
DocketNo. 7905.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 225 S.W. 757 (Lobit v. Marcoulides) 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
Lobit v. Marcoulides, 225 S.W. 757, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1067 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.'

Appellees, Helen Mar-coulides and Mary T. Gonzales, brought this suit against appellants, Louis Lobit and Paul Lobit, as executors of the estate of Joseph Lobit, deceased, and as' individuals, to recover the sum of $5,753.81, which appellees had paid to said executors under protest, and with- the express understanding and agreement that such payment would not affect appellees’ right to thereafter sue for recovery of said sum. The record discloses that on February 19, 1916, the appellants, as executors of the estate of Joseph Lobit, deceased, recovered a judgment in the district court of Galveston county against the appellees for the sum of $15,000, with foreclosure of a mortgage lien upon property of appellees situated in the city of Galveston. An abstract of this judgment was filed in Cameron county on February 22, 1916. On March 9, 1916, an order of sale was issued on the judgment and levied upon the' Galveston property on which the lien had been foreclosed, and the property advertised for sale on April 4, 1916. Before the day of the sale appellee Mrs. Marcoulides, acting for herself and her coappellee, with her attorney, Mr. Elliott Cage, called on appellant Louis Lobit and made an agreement with him in regard to the sale.

The testimony is in direct conflict as to the terms of this agreement, but as the result of the agreement neither the appellees nor their attorney attended the sale, and the property was sold by the sheriff to appellant executors for the sum of $2,800; there having been no other bid at the sale. Appellants resold a part of the property on May 13, 1916, for $5,000, and the remainder on September 29, 1916, for $5,000. This $10,000, after the costs of suit and sale had been deducted therefrom, was credited on the judgment against appellees, leaving a balance due on the judgment of $5,753.S1. There is evidence to the effect that the fair value ,of the property under normal conditions exceeded the amount of the judgment against appel-lees, but at the time these sales were made by appellants, owing to war conditions, there was little or no demand for property in Galveston, and there is no evidence to justify the conclusion that the property could at that time have been sold for more than appellants received for it.

Appellees own a tract of land in Cameron county on which they negotiated a loan of $10,000 in the summer of 1917. When they procured an abstract of the title to this land,. which was necessary to enable them to obtain the loan, they for the first time discovered that the appellants had recorded an abstract of the Galveston judgment in Cameron county. Being unable to obtain the loan without securing a release of this judgment, they demanded such release of appellants, on the *759 ground that, by the terms of the agreement made by them with appellants prior to the sale of the Galveston property under the order of sale, appellants, in consideration of the agreement of appellees not to bid at the sale, and to permit appellants to buy in the property at as low a price as possible, and thus reduce the costs of the sale, agreed to accept the property so bid in by them in full satisfaction of the judgment against appel-lees. Appellants, claiming that they had made no agreement, refused to release the judgment. Appellees then, in order to procure their loan, which they had negotiated at large expense, agreed to pay appellants the amount claimed by. them, with the understanding that they paid it under protest, and such payment should not prejudice their right to sue for its recovery. Appellants reteived the money under this express agreement, and so stated in the receipt ana release executed by them to appellees.

Plaintiff’s petition, after the formal allegations and allegations as to the procurement by appellants of the judgment in the district court of Galveston county, and the issuance and levy of the order of sale and the advertisement of the property for sale, contains the following allegations:

. Appellees further alleged that the property situated in Galveston county, and which had been advertised for sale under said execution and order of sale, was worth far in excess of the amount of the judgments held by the Lobit estate against them; that Elliott Cage, who was duly authoiized to act for appellees in the premises, went to Galveston and made an investigation as to the value of said properties so advertised, and, believing the same to be worth far in excess of the amount of said judgments, was preparing to bid a part of said property in for the benefit of appellees, and would have done so, had it not been for an agreement that he made and entered into with Louis Lobit, one of the executors of the Lobit estate, and who was duly authorized to make such agreement, to the effect that if appellees would not bid at the sale of said property, or force the Lobit estate to incur the expenses of commissions to the sheriff for making said sales at a large value, and permit the executors of the Lobit estate to buy said property in at whatever figure or sum of money that they could buy same at said sale, that they would accept said property in full satisfaction of all of the indebtedness represented by said judgments, and of all the indebtedness and claims due and owing by appel-lees, or either of them, to the Lobit estate; that relying upon said agreement between the said Elliott Gage, acting for appellees in the premise's, and the said Louis Lobit, acting for the Lobit estate, appellees were not represented at said sale, and permitted the executors of the Lobit estate to buy said property so advertised at a nominal sum; that prior thereto, and without the knowledge of appellees, appellants had caused to be abstracted said judgment in the office of the county clerk of Oameron county, where appellee Mrs. Helen Marcoulides owned a league of land; that thereafter appellee Mar-coulides had arranged at much expense for a loan of several thousand dollars on said Oameron county land, and that she had prepared an abstract to said land, and that the abstract of said judgment appeared therein and had not been released; that thereupon they demanded of appellants that a release of said judgments be filed in Oameron county; in order that she might proceed with the loan that she had planned to obtain on said land, but that appellants wholly failed and refused to execute a release thereto, except upon the payment by appellees of the sum of $5,753.81, which they claimed to be the balance due and owing them on the judgments that they held against appellees, and which appellees had claimed had been settled under the agreement, hereinbefore mentioned, with Elliott Cage.

Appellees further alleged that, after negotiations for said loan had progressed to such an extent, appellees could not recede from taking the loan without spending a large sum, all of which was well known to appellants ; that thereupon, to save themselves the loss of a large sum of money, they had paid under protest the said sum of $5,753.81, which said sum was paid on the 14th day of August, 1917, and without prejudice of their right to bring suit therefor; that the said Louis Lobit, acting as the duly authorized executor of said Lobit estate, had agreed with appellees and.

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W. 757, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 1067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lobit-v-marcoulides-texapp-1920.