Minchen v. First Nat. Bank of Alpine

263 S.W.2d 601, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1656
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 2, 1953
Docket4956
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 263 S.W.2d 601 (Minchen v. First Nat. Bank of Alpine) 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
Minchen v. First Nat. Bank of Alpine, 263 S.W.2d 601, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1656 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

McGILL, Justice. .

This suit was brought' -by the appellee' bank and John W. Gillett, its liquidating agent, against Maurice Minchen, -to recover funds of the bank which had been embezzled by its employee, John Clanton, and expended by Clanton on improvements on appellant’s ranch. Appellee also sought to fix and foreclose an equitable lien against the entire ranch of appellant consisting of some forty-five thousand acres of land in Brewster County securing the repayment to it of the money expended by Clanton for such improvements. Trial was to a jury and on answers to special issues the court rendered judgment against appellant for funds expended by Clanton after notice to appellant of the ownership of said- funds on October 15, 1947, for $36,999.24, plus interest at the rate of six per cent per annum from the date said funds were so expended to the date of the judgment in the sum of $8,631.83, or a total sum of $45,631.07, and fixed and established in favor of appellee and John W. Gillett equitable liens on defendant’s ranch containing 45,440 acres of land in Brewster County.

The jury findings were (1) Without the improvements the reasonable rental value per acre of the Maurice Minchen Ranch over the period of time it was occupied by John Clanton and continuing until possession of the ranch was returned to Min-chen in April 1950 was '5‡ per acre per an-num; (2) the reasonable market value of the ranch was increased as of the date possession thereof was delivered. .to Min-chen in April 1950 by the improvements previously placed thereon by Qanton with funds of the bank in the amount of $56,800; (4) at the time Clanton was placing the improvements on the Minchen ranch Min-chen had notice that moneys of appellee bank were -being spent by Clanton in payment for such improvements; (5) Min-chen had such notice in October 1947.

When referring' to the proceedings in the trial court the parties will be designated as pláintiff and- defendant, and when referring to proceedings here as ap-pellee and appellant.

' Appellant' -predicates' .his appeal upon sixteen points.. The first- is that the court erred in admitting the audit of an *604 auditor appointed by the court, over defendant’s objection. From appellant’s -brief it is very difficult to tell just why he claims the court erred in admitting the auditor’s report. Turning to thé objections which were brought forward in the amended motion for new trial, the first (3a) is that the audit shows on its face that it is not a statement of accounts between the parties, but an effort on the part of the auditor to show the greatest amount of money that was spent on defendant’s property, disregarding the instruction to list only such amount as “improved” the defendant’s property. This objection is too general to warrant consideration except insofar as it complains that the audit disregards the instructions to list only such amount as “improved” the defendant’s property. This objection is inconsistent with'objection (3c)-which complains because the auditor mistakenly concluded that all money alleged to have been spent on defendant’s property was spent for improvements, such conclusion being outside of the court’s instructions and directions to the auditor.

The order appointing the auditor was based on stipulations of the parties and authorized and directed the auditor (3⅛ p. 78) to

“ * * * examine into, investigate, and analyse (1) the accounts, books, and records of The First National Bank of Alpine and John Clanton, deceased, (2) the public records, (3) the books and records of Maurice Minchen, (4) the records of persons, firms, or corporations with whom John Clanton did business or from whom he borrowed money, (5) the records of the estate of John Clanton, deceased, for the purpose of (a) stating the accounts between the parties.to this suit under the Order and direction of this Court, (b) ascertaining the amount and value of the assets, property, securities, credits, or monies of The First National Bank of Alpine, if any, used by the said John Clanton in improving the ranch of defendant Maurice . Minchen, (c) ascertaining the property sold off of the.,. premises of Maurice Minchen by the administrator, Neville Haynes, and the prices received therefor.”

The direction to ascertain the value of the assets, etc. of the bank used by Clanton in improving the ranch of defendant is explicit. The evidence was ample to support such value of funds o>f the bank traced, to improvements of defendant’s ranch of a more or less permanent nature, such as fencing, corrals, buildings, storage tanks, trees, grass, seed, and a dry water well, totaling $39,990.48. This was in strict compliance with the terms of the order appointing the auditor to which defendant agreed and by which he is of course bound. Gulf & B. V. R. Co. v. Winder, 26 Tex.Civ.App. 263, 63 S.W. 1043, writ refused. The objections that the auditor did not go upon the premises to inform himself concerning the improvements and their condition or whether they had been destroyed and hence did not constitute improvements are without merit, since' there was'no direction to determine the'value of improvements, but merely the value of the assets, etc., of the bank that were used by Clanton in procuring them. Hence it would have been outside of the scope of the duties of the- auditot to ascertain the value of the improvements, and their value was immaterial, since defendant’s liability depended upon whether he had knowledge or notice of the use of the bank’s funds in the purchase .of the improvements,, or of such facts as if diligently pursued would have led to such knowledge and the amount of the bank’s funds which were so used, and a physical inspection of the premises would have been of little if any help in determining the amount of funds so used. The objection that it was not shown that the books and records examined by the auditor contained original entries of .the transactions audited and that they were pertinent to the business in question is not sustained because such showing was unnecessary. Richie v. Levy, 69 Tex. 133, 6 S.W. 685; Whitehead v. Perie, 15 Tex. 7. For like reason the objection d(c) that the auditor took into consideration only. *605 the figures produced by plaintiffs from the records of the bank and cannot represent a fair basis for the auditor to state the accounts between the parties is without merit. Defendant by excepting to the report ■ on the ground that the evidence was insufficient to support it would have been afforded an opportunity to rebut the report by other evidence. In our opinion the audit was admissible, and .the court did not err in admitting it.

The second point is that the court erred in refusing to declare a mistrial because of the testimony ,of Zeb Decie and John W. Gillett concerning a proposed settlement of plaintiff’s claim against defendant. Zeb Decie, a witness for plaintiff, testified that some time after Clanton’s . death defendant asked him if he and Mr. Gillett could meet, and that they did meet that evening in the directors’ room of the bank, then the following occurred:

“Did you discuss with him at that time the claims of the Bank against Mr. Minchen and his ranch? A. I don’t exactly say that we discussed the claims as of the bank, no.
“Q. What was that discussion? A. What was what? .
“Q. What was the discussion you . had? A.

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Bluebook (online)
263 S.W.2d 601, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minchen-v-first-nat-bank-of-alpine-texapp-1953.