Masterson v. Ginners' Mut. Underwriters' Ass'n of Texas

222 S.W. 263, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 588
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 14, 1920
DocketNo. 2215.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 222 S.W. 263 (Masterson v. Ginners' Mut. Underwriters' Ass'n of Texas) 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
Masterson v. Ginners' Mut. Underwriters' Ass'n of Texas, 222 S.W. 263, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 588 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

WILLSON, C. J.

(after stating the facts as above). Appellant attacks the judgment as erroneous because it is not in his favor for the amount of the 10 notes for $1,000 each deposited with the Harris Lumber Company as collateral security, and for a foreclosure of the trust deed to Marsh, instead of for the amount of the principal note for $1,000 made by Jones to said lumber company. Appellee, in cross-assignments, attacks as erroneous, because without the support of testimony, it says, the finding that it was chargeable with notice of the rights of the owner of indebtedness secured by the trust deed to Marsh at the time it commenced its foreclosure suit against Jones and at the time it purchased the land under the judgment in its favor in said suit, and on the ground that it did not have and was not chargeable with such notice, and on the ground that “there were no pleadings nor facts” authorizing it, attacks the judgment as erroneous in so far as it awarded appellant a foreclosure of the trust deed on said land for any amount.

In the view we take of the case, a determination of the contentions presented by the cross-assignments referred to will dispose of the appeal.

[1] It seems to be the law that the foreclosure of a lien on land at the suit of the senior mortgagee who did not have notice of the right in the owner of the junior mortgage in the property bars such right, notwithstanding the junior mortgagee was not a party to the foreclosure suit. 2 Jones on Mortgages, § 1425; Rogers v. Houston, 94 Tex. 403, 60 S. W. 869; Reel v. Wilson, 64 Iowa, 13, 19 N. W. 814; Henderson v. Grammar, 66 Cal. 332, 5 Pac. 488.

[2] It appears from the record that appellee, as a matter of fact, did not know of the existence of the deed of trust to Marsh at the time it commenced its foreclosure suit against Jones, not, indeed, until June 7, 1917, which was long after the time when the .land was conveyed to it as the purchaser at the sale thereof made by the sheriff as directed by the judgment in said foreclosure suit. Therefore, unless the record of said trust deed of March 3, 1913, operated • to charge appellee with notice that the lumber company had acquired a right in the land, appellee was not bound to make that company a party to its foreclosure suit in order to bar such right. If the lumber company was bound by that judgment, of course appellant was; for he, as well as his assign- or, H. Masterson, acquired the collateral notes and trust deed long after said notes matured and with full notice of the nature of the transaction between Jones and the lumber company and of appellee’s claim to the land as the purchaser thereof at the sale under the judgment in its foreclosure suit. Therefore appellant was not in a more favorable position than the lumber company was in, and as the holder of the collateral notes could not assert a right it could not have asserted.

Finding, in accordance with the statement hereinbefore made, that appellee had no actual notice of the existence of the collateral notes and trust deed to Marsh until June 7, 1917, the trial court further found that the record of the deed operated to charge appel-lee with constructive notice—

*266 “that Jones had executed his 10 promissory notes of $1,000 each payable to bearer, and to secure said notes he had executed a deed of trust upon the land, naming W. B. Marsh, of Tyler, Tex., trustee in the mortgage.”

Unquestionably, we think, the record was notice of that much, and we do not understand appellee to be in the attitude of contending to the contrary; but the court further found, and appellee attacks the finding as without support in law, that the effect of the record and recitals referred to was to put appellee on inquiry and to charge it with notice of the existence of such other relevant facts as inquiry pursued with proper diligence would have disclosed.

“From these facts,” said the court, “that is, the execution of the notes and deed of trust, and causing same to he recorded in the record provided by law for record of such instruments, it would be presumed that the notes had in some way gone into the channels of trade, and a lien had become fixed. To hold otherwise would be to assume that the entire proceedings were for no purpose and not intended for what they speak. With this information given by the record, a reasonable inquiry of either Jones, the maker of the notes, or of Marsh, the trustee, would have disclosed the fact that the notes were held by the Harris Lumber Company.”

[3] As supporting bis view of tbe law, tbe court cited Wilkerson v. Ward, 137 S. W. 169. In that case Ward claimed under a deed from Miles made in 1888, and duly recorded, in which the land was described as block 49, containing lots numbered 1 to 20, inclusive, in the Jonathan Miles First addition to San Angelo, and Wilkerson claimed under a deed from Miles made in 1908, in which the land was described with reference to streets in said addition. The court of civil appeals held Wilkerson to be chargeable with notice that the land Miles sold him was the same land he had conveyed to Ward. If the case is not within a qualification of the general rule announced in Carter v. Hawkins, 62 Tex. 393, it is opposed to the doctrine recognized in this state by the ..Supreme Court. The general rule and the qualification was stated by Chief Justice Phillips in Wiseman v. Waters (Sup.) 174 S. W. 816, as follows:

“The general rule that under the doctrine of constructive. notice there is imputed to the subsequent purchaser or incumbrancer notice only of that which appears on the face of the recorded instrument, and that where there is substantial discrepancy between the property intended to be conveyed or mortgaged and that described in the instrument, the record will not operate as notice, is subject to the qualification that where the description in the instrument is ambiguous, inconsistent in its parts, or correct in one particular and false in another, the record is such as to naturally excite inquiry, and under such circumstances it therefore becomes the duty of the subsequent purchaser or incumbrancer to make inquiry for the purpose of ascertaining what property was actually the subject of the instrument.”

And in discussing the question further the Chief Justice added:

“With the qualification announced in Carter v. Hawkins, the rule is established, at least in this state and in others, that the record of instruments provided or permitted by law to be recorded operates as notice only of the facts actually exhibited by the record, and not those which might have been ascertained by such inquiries as an examination of the record might have induced a prudent man to make” citing numerous authorities, to which may be added Adams v. Lumber Co., 162 S. W. 974.

The reason for the distinction between the effect of constructive and actual notice appears in the statement of the Supreme Court of Minnesota in Bailey v. Galpin, 40 Minn. 319, 41 N. W. 1054, as follows:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jaramillo v. McLoy
263 F. Supp. 870 (D. Colorado, 1967)
Vivier v. Barreda
110 S.W.2d 1233 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1937)
Masterson v. Ginners Mut. Underwriters' Ass'n
235 S.W. 1081 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 S.W. 263, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masterson-v-ginners-mut-underwriters-assn-of-texas-texapp-1920.