Maloney v. G. A. Stowers Furniture Co.

28 S.W.2d 306, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 507
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 1930
DocketNo. 8422.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 S.W.2d 306 (Maloney v. G. A. Stowers Furniture Co.) 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
Maloney v. G. A. Stowers Furniture Co., 28 S.W.2d 306, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 507 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

FLY, C. J.

This is an action by appellee against appellant and her husband, S. L. Maloney, to recover $4,205.74, alleged to be due on furniture sold by appellee to appellant, for the foreclosure of a chattel mortgage, and appellee also obtained a writ of sequestration by which the furniture was seized.

The cause was submitted to a jury on a special issue as to the fraud of appellee in representing that the contract sued on was for the lease of the property with an option to purchase. The jury answered that there was no fraud; and judgment was rendered in favor of appellee for $8,773.54, principal, interest, and attorney’s fees, and a lien was foreclosed on the certain personal property therein described. The recovery was against the personal and separate estate of appellant, as well as her interest in the community property of herself and husband.

The suit is based on a written instrument, evidencing a contract signed by appellant at the time that the property was obtained by her from appellee. In that contract is a promise that appellant would pay ap-pellee $7,892, to be paid In monthly installments at the rate of $2,600. Title was reserved in the seller until the furniture was fully paid for, and the right to take possession of the property in case of default of payment of any installment. We copy the following from the contract:

‘T or we do hereby consent and agree that the said property and the title to the same shall be and remain the property of the said G. A. Stowers Furniture Company, until fully paid for as above agreed, and if I neglect to pay said weekly or monthly installments when due (time being the essence of this contract,) said G. A. Stowers Furniture Company, or their agents, shall have the right and privilege at any time thereafter to demand and take away their said property, with or without legal process, and I waive any action for damages if said party or its agents should take-same, and I agree to forfeit and lose all previous payments made thereon, the same being treated as rents. If I fail to pay .any installment when due, or fail to insure said property as hereafter provided, it shall give the G. A. Stowers Furniture Company, or its agents, a right to declare all installments that would become due hereinafter, then due and payable. And I agree, and bind and -obligate myself to keep said goods insured in some good and sol *307 vent company until paid for, said policy to be payable to the G. A. Stowers Furniture Company, as its interest may appear or be, if I can do so; and if for any cause I cannot so' insure for tbe use and benefit of G. A. Stowers Furniture Company, as above provided, then I, or we, agree and bind myself, or ourselves, to insure said property in my, or our name, and keep the same insured in some solvent company until said goods; are fully paid for; and it is specially agreed and understood that in case of destruction of said goods while said policy or policies are in force by fire, or any cause, that said insurance shall inure to the benefit of said G. A. Stowers Furniture Company, or a sufficient sum thereof as will be necessary to pay off and discharge any indebtedness that I may be. due the said G. A. Stowers Furniture Company, including my account and such interest as may be due thereon, and in case of legal proceedings to collect same, a reasonable amount as attorney’s fees, and so much of said insurance is now here assigned to the said G. A. Stowers Furniture Company, and it shall have a perfect right to demand same, or sue for same, in case it cannot collect same without suit, or if it thinks itself insecure in recovering same. I agree, bind and obligate myself, or ourselves to pay eight per cent interest on all past due installments.”

The instrument was properly construed by the trial judge as a sale, with power reserved to take possession of the property in case of failure to pay any installment of the purchase money.

A contract that personal propeiTy is sought to be sold and actually delivered, but should remain the property of the vendor until the purchase price is fully paid, is a chattel mortgage and can be registered as such. This is statutory, under the terms of article 5489, Rev. Stats., which provides that “all reservation of the title to or property in chattels, as security for the purchase money thereof, shall be held to be chattel mortgages." Clark v. West Pub. Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 26 S. W. 527; Parlin, etc., Co. v. Davis’ Estate (Tex. Civ. App.) 74 S. W. 951; Eason v. De Long, 38 Tex. Civ. App. 531, 86 S. W. 347; Crews v. Harlan, 99 Tex. 93, 87 S. W. 658, 13 Ann. Cas. 863. The instrument was duly filed and registered as a chattel mortgage about five days after its execution, showing the construction placed on the instrument by the seller of the furniture.

There was no evidence of fraud in the sale of the furniture. The sale was made in the same way, as other furniture had been bought by appellant from appellee, and she had never before claimed that she had leased the furniture. She admitted, time and again, that she had bought the furniture. She at the time she signed the contract so construed it, for she said: “If I pay for the furniture it is mine, and if I do not it’s yours.” That shows she knew it was not a lease, and in a letter to one of the attorneys she spoke of the transaction as a sale and objected to paying interest, stating: “I can buy furniture anywhere without the additional interest.” She bought the furniture from Robertson, salesman of appellee, and he swoi’e she bought the furniture. He swore: “When I told her she would have to sign a contract I told her it was a contract to pay so much a month. She never at any time she wasi talking to me said anything about renting or leasing the furniture.” That claim was never made until she was attempting to defeat the claim of appel-lee. Her conversation about the contract which she detailed was with a man who had since died, and, as said by the wisest of men: “The dead know not anything.” Sanakien stated that nothing was said by appellant about a lease at the time she bought the rugs, but they were sold to her as to any other customer. She was contradicted by the contract and by the witnesses. Of course the contract carried its own construction, and no one could by his statements change it into some improbable document, not even one whose spirit has left the body and may be somewhere in “desolate windswept space in twilight land, in no man’s land.”

There was but one issue in the case, and that was as to whether appellee had induced appellant to sign a contract of purchase, when she thought she was signing a lease contract. The jury under the testimony found the only verdict permissible under the facts, that there was no fraud.

Appellant sought to set aside the verdict on the ground that the jury had been guilty of misconduct, in that they had discussed the effect their answer to the issue would have upon the controversy between the parties. ■ The jury answered the issue presented to them by the court, and the discussion as to the effect of the answer was crude and altogether impertinent. The answer was not the result of their discussion. They showed by their testimony that they were convinced that appellee had not been guilty of fraud, and their conclusions as to the only answer they could under the facts have given, and their discussions, were vapid and puerile, and were idle vaporings. The discussion was not shown to' have influenced the only verdict permissible under the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
28 S.W.2d 306, 1930 Tex. App. LEXIS 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maloney-v-g-a-stowers-furniture-co-texapp-1930.