McDavid v. Phillips

94 S.W. 1131, 100 Tex. 73
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1906
DocketNo. 1571.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 1131 (McDavid v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDavid v. Phillips, 94 S.W. 1131, 100 Tex. 73 (Tex. 1906).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

Certified question from the Court of Civil Appeals for the First Supreme Judicial District, as follows:

“In the spring of 1902 Geo. R. Phillips was a merchant doing business in Tyler, Smith County, Texas, and Brannon Harris was a farmer engaged in raising cotton, corn and other crops on rented lands in that county. He had resided and folknved his calling in that county for years, intended to continue to do so and had no purpose to reside or conduct his business in any other county..
“On April 19, 1902, Harris executed and delivered to Phillips a mortgage to secure two promissory notes and certain other indebtedness to be thereafter incurred for supplies to be furnished by Phillips.
“The mortgage covered certain livestock and in addition contained the following description of property sought to be brought within its terms, towit: ‘My entire crop of cotton, cotton seed and corn, said crops planted and to be planted, cultivated and raised during the year 1902 on the farm belonging to N. T. Mosely situated in Smith County about 13' miles east from Tyler or any other land that I may cultivate in said county or have cultivated under my supervision or I may be entitled to receive as rents from my own property or property that I may have leased from any other person for the year 1902 or any and all crops that I may acquire by purchase or otherwise for said year. And if said indebtedness is not paid from any cause then this lien shall *75 remain in full force and effect and cover the succeeding crops of the succeeding years until finally paid. It is agreed and understood that if from any cause whatever I fail to cultivate the above described lands then this mortgage shall cover the land I do cultivate until this mortgage is paid in full.’
“At the date of the mortgage Harris had the Mosely farm rented only for that year and did not have in mind what land he would rent and cultivate thereafter. At the end of the year 1902 Phillips took the personal property and the crop of that year and applied their value as a credit on the mortgage debt. There remained a balance due. Harris raised a crop in 1903 but none of it was turned over to Philips. In 1904 Harris raised a crop of cotton in Smith County on lands other than the Mosely farm. Of this crop some was bought by Cone & Minor, some by Crawford & Co. and some by J. D. McDavid, all these parties residing and doing business in a county adjoining Smith County. The mortgage had been promptly placed of record in Smith County. The mortgage being still unsatisfied Phillips brought this suit against" Harris to foreclose the lien upon the crop of 1904. Cone & Minor, Crawford & Co. and J. D. McDavid were made parties defendant and judgment was sought against them for the value of the cotton covered by the alleged lien and bought and converted by them. The trial court gave judgment as prayed for against all the defendants. J. D. McDavid and Cone & Minor brought the cause here by appeal.
“At a former day Of this term the judgment was reversed by this court and judgment rendered for appellants. The cause is now pending before us on motion for rehearing. The majority of the court are now of opinion that the motion should be granted and the judgment affirmed. Justice Eeese dissents.
“The judgment was reversed by this court on the ground that the mortgage did not attach to the crop of 1904 because the parties to the mortgage did not have in mind at the date of its execution the particular land upon which the crop of 1904 was to be raised. In so concluding we followed what we believed to be the doctrine laid down in Bichardson v. Washington, 88 Texas, 339. Justice Eeese adheres to that view and that construction of the case cited. The majority are now convinced that a mortgage upon ‘crops to be raised by the mortgagor for future years until the mortgage is discharged’ contains a sufficient description and that a mortgage such as the one in question attached to the crop of 1904 when it was brought into existence at the hands of the mortgagor and this notwithstanding the fact that the mortgage did not name nor did the parties have in mind the particular land upon which the crop for that year would be raised and that this conclusion is not inconsistent with the case cited. We therefore certify for your decision tire question:
“Did the mortgage constitute a valid lien upon the crop raised by Harris in 1904?”

We answer the question in the negative.

Hothing in actual or potential existence" is described by. the following language: “And if said indebtedness is not paid from any cause then *76 this lien shall remain in full force and effect and cover the succeeding crops of the succeeding years until finally paid. It is agreed and understood that if from any cause whatever I fail to cultivate the above described lands then this mortgage shall cover the land I do cultivate until this mortgage is paid in full.” That language neither discloses property in existence, which is a proper subject of contract, nor does it give any description by which the thing that was in contemplation of the contracting parties could be identified at that time. In the absence of these elements the mortgage must be held to be void as to creditors. Jones on Chattel Mortgages, sec. 55a; Richardson v. Washington and Costley Bros., 88 Texas, 339; Gwathney v. Etheridge, 99 N. C., 571; Redfield v. Montgomery, 71 Miss., 113; Paden & Co. v. Bellenger, 87 Ala., 577; Muir v. Blake, 57 Iowa, 663; Brown v. Bolt, 116 Mich., 52; Low v. Pew., 108 Mass., 347.

In Richardson v. Washington and Costley Bros., above cited, this court decided that a mortgage upon a crop to be raised during the year 1893 upon one hundred acres of R. F. Jones’ farm in Travis County, for which the mortgagor had a lease for that year, was valid. Judge Denman delivered the opinion of the court and by way of argument contrasted the rule applicable to such mortgages in courts of equity and the rule applied by the courts- of law, but lest his conclusion might be misunderstood he used the following significant language: “We do not wish to be understood as intimating that a court of equity may foreclose a lien upon property which it can not clearly determine that the parties, at the date of the contract, intended should become subject to such lien when acquired by the grantor, or when it came into existence. On the contrary, a court of equity will not make a contract or create a lien for the parties, and therefore will not foreclose a lien upon property not in esse, or not owned by the grantor, at the date of the contract, unless it is clear, that at such date the parties thereto anticipated the acquisition by the grantor of the very property upon which the lien is sought to be fixed and foreclosed, and intended that it should be subject thereto.” It needs no argument to show that the instrument under consideration does not come within the most liberal terms expressed by Judge Denman in that opinion. The property was not in existence at the time the contract was made and no court can say with any certainty that the crop which was raised by the mortgagor in 1904 was in contemplation of the parties as a thing to be acquired in future and to be subject to the lien of that instrument.

In Gwathney v.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 1131, 100 Tex. 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdavid-v-phillips-tex-1906.