Mayotown Lumber Co. v. Nacogdoches Grocery Co.

221 S.W. 644, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 470
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 14, 1920
DocketNo. 530.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 644 (Mayotown Lumber Co. v. Nacogdoches Grocery 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
Mayotown Lumber Co. v. Nacogdoches Grocery Co., 221 S.W. 644, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 470 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This suit was instituted by the Nacogdoches Grocery Company in the district court of Nacogdoches county against June C. Harris, as receiver of the Attoyac River Lumber Company, the Bankers’ Trust Company, a corporation, the First National Bank of Houston, the Union National Bank of Houston, the Lumberman’s National Bank of Houston, the Hilgard Lumber Company, the Mayotown Lumber Company, S. F. Carter, and Louis R. Bryan, trustee, to recover the balance due them for supplies furnished by them to June C. Harris in a receivership proceeding pending in said court, styled Bes-ser et al. v. Attoyac River Lumber Company. Afterwards Burrus Mill & Elevator Company and George E. Dilley & Son intervened, pleading substantially the same facts and asking the same relief sought by the plaintiff. The relation of the different defendants to plaintiff’s and interveners’ demands will be reflected in .the statement of the case.

This case was tried by the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered for plaintiff and interveners for the relief prayed for by them against all the defendants, except the Bankers’ Trust Company, which disclaimed any interest in the litigation. From this judgment all the defendants, except the Bankers’ Trust Company, have appealed by writ of error, and on their request the trial court filed conclusions of fact and law. The following statement of the case is taken from these conclusions:

On and prior to August 1, 1918, the defendant Attoyac River Lumber Company was incorporated under the laws of the state of *646 Texas, for the purpose of operating a sawmill and planer mill for the manufacture of lumber and to buy such lands and timber as necessary therefor. Its original office and. place of business was Mayotown, Nacogdoch-es county, Tex., where it had its mills, planers, tenant houses, tramroads, and timber. On August 1,1914, this company was indebted to the” defendants Lumberman’s National Bank, Union National Bank, and First National Bank in a large sum, aggregating $115,000. On this date the lumber company issued its 300 bonds, of the denomination of $1,000 each, which it secured by a deed of trust on all its property, naming the Bankers’ Trust Company as trustee. These bonds were purchased by the bank defendants and defendant S. F. Carter in the following proportions : Lumberman’s National Bank, $70,-000; Union National Bank, $75,000; First National Bank, $100,000, and S. F. Carter, $55,000. The bank defendants deducted from the amount due for the bonds the several sums due them by the lumber company, and paid the difference in cash to the lumber company. At that time S. F. Carter was president of the Lumberman’s National Bank, and he personally guaranteed in writing to the First National Bank and the Union National Bank the payment of the bonds purchased by them, and these two banks looked to Carter individually, as well as to the security held by them, for the payment of the bonds. On the 4th day of January, 1915, on petition of J. J. Besser and three others, who held labor liens to the amount of $1,291.31, which had been fixed against the property of the lumber company, June O. Harris was appointed receiver of said lumber company, and he duly qualified as such receiver on the 6th day of June, 1915, and took possession of all of the properties of the Attoyac River Lumber Company, which plaintiffs in their petition stated to be of the reasonable value of $816,000. Quoting directly from the court’s conclusions of fact:

“(7) That under the direction and request of • the creditors, including the defendant bondholders, the court had the properties of the lumber company run and operated through the receiver from the date of his qualification as such until the 28th day of April, 1917.
“(8) That upon the question of advisability of appointing a receiver for the lumber company, and of the operation of the properties through such receiver, the defendant bondholders other than S. F. Carter, who acted for himself, left the policy and attitude of the bondholders towards the receivership to the defendant S. F. Carter, who in such regard acted for himself, his bank, and the two other defendant bondholders.
“(9) That the defendant bondholders, while not named as parties in said receivership, were privies to, acquiesced in, and agreed and consented to the appointment of such receiver and the operation of the properties of the lumber company through such receivership.”
“(19) That the receiver incurred debts for labor and supplies, machinery, etc., necessary to the successful operation of the properties, the balance of which was due and unpaid on May 3, 1917, amounting to approximately $71,000.
“(20) That the plaintiff, Nacogdoches Grocery Company, and intervener George E. Dilley & Sons, and intervener Burrus Mill & Elevator Company, were supply creditors of the receiver, having sold and delivered to him, during the time he was operating the properties, various and sundry goods, wares, and merchandise, necessary to the success and used by the receiver in the operation of the property.
“(21) That on April 28, 1917, the receiver filed his petition, asking permission to sell' all the right, title, and interest in the properties of the said lumber company and himself as such receiver, subject to "the terms of the deed of trust executed by the lumber company to secure the bonds, stating in said petition that a price sufficient could be obtained to pay the receiver’s creditors, which included plaintiff and inter-veners, in full.
“(22) That on April 28, 1917, the court granted said petition and ordered the receiver to sell all of the right, title, and interest of the lumber company and himself in the properties, subject to the terms of the deed of trust; the order reciting certain liens therein specified, not including the claim of praintiff and interveners.
“(23) That on May 3d the receiver sold and conveyed all of the right, title, and interest of the lumber company in and to said properties, as well as that of himself as such receiver, subject to the terms of said deed of trust, to the defendant Hilgard Lumber Company, for the sum of $62,500 in cash, and sale was approved by the court.”

The receiver paid out the proceeds of this sale to his creditors, and none of the parties to this appeal questioned his actions in so doing. The plaintiff and interveners were paid by the receiver about 70 per cent, of their claims, leaving a balance due as follows: Nacogdoches Grocery Company, $3,-050.52, with interest to date of judgment, $220.28; George E. Dilley & Son, $348.71, with interest to date of judgment, $24.12; Burrus Mill & Elevator Company, $667.18, with interest to date of judgment, $133.42. All these sums were past due and had not been paid. At the time this suit was instituted, the receiver was entirely without funds with which to pay any part of the balance due on said claims. At the date of the receiver’s sale, the bondholders still held the bonds bought by them, except such bonds as had been paid by the receiver.

“(33) That shortly after the conveyance from the receiver to the defendant Hilgard Lumber Company, said defendant sold and conveyed said properties to the defendant Mayotown Lumber Company, under the same terms of its purchase from said receiver, except as to the purchase price.

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Related

Chase Manhattan Bank v. Bowles
52 S.W.3d 871 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2001)
Mayotown Lumber Co. v. Nacogdoches Grocery Co.
236 S.W. 704 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W. 644, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayotown-lumber-co-v-nacogdoches-grocery-co-texapp-1920.