Mundine v. Pauls

66 S.W. 254, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 46, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 39
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 254 (Mundine v. Pauls) 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
Mundine v. Pauls, 66 S.W. 254, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 46, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 39 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

COLLABD, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellee, Pauls, against appellant Mundine, to recover one 70-saw Chatham gin stand, feeder and condenser, worth $50; one 50-saw Colbert gin stand, feeder, and condenser, worth $50; one grist mill worth $50; one Skinner & Wood plain engine, valued at $70; and one 50-horse power Atlas boiler, with attachments, valued at $150; and if the property could not be had, then for its value. The petition alleged that the property was in the ginhouse formerly owned by Nathan Green, in Lexington, Lee County, Texas, and that the property was on January 1, 1901, unlawfully taken and converted by Mundine.

Defendant set up that W. W. Mundine, the owner, on the 1st of January, 1897, conveyed lots 3, 4, 13, and 14 in block 17 of the town of Lexington to Green, taking promissory notes of Green for part of the purchase price, retaining express vendor’s lien, to secure payment for the lots, expressed in the deed and notes; that P. M. Mundine, at the October term of the District Court of Lee County, obtained judgment against Green on the notes which he had obtained from W. W. Mundine, and foreclosure of the lien, and that P. M. Mundine purchased the premises at forclosure sale the first Tuesday in January, 1901, under order of sale on the judgment, and the sheriff executed to him a deed therefor. It is alleged by Mundine that the properties sued for were fixtures on the premises purchased by him, placed on the same by Green after his purchase of the premises, long before the institution of the suit on the vendor’s lien promissory notes. The answer shows how the property was attached to the realty so as to become a part of the same. .Defendant further set up that if plaintiff held any ‘Till of *48 sale” by Green to him of the property in suit it was executed after the articles were attached to the land and became a part of the same without Mundine’s consent and did not affect his right to the same.

Plaintiff replied that he held a mortgage on the engine and boiler mentioned in his petition and the gin stand, the mortgage bearing date April 9, 1897, which was duly registered in Lee County, and filed by the county clerk of Lee County on the 24th of April, 1897; and Nathan Green, who had executed the mortgage, executed to plaintiff a bill of sale of all the property described in the petition, and that on the day of sale under order of the court, the 1st day of January, 1901, and before sale, he gave notice that the machinery sued for was his property, and that Mundine purchased the same with notice of his, plaintiff’s, right to the same.

The trial by jury resulted in verdict and judgment for plaintiff for the property sued for, and in case it could not be returned, for its value, found to be $375; from which this appeal is taken by Mun-dine.

Opinion.—1. After both parties had announced ready for trial, lists of the jurors for the week were drawn and furnished the attorneys for the parties, who struck from the lists peremptorily, leaving others, among whom was a juror, Ruthven, legally chosen; other jurors were ordered summoned and the sheriff was sworn and directed to summon other jurors to fill the panel. The plaintiff’s counsel informed the court that he wished to use the accepted juror Ruthven as a witness for plaintiff, though not summoned as a witness, and moved that he be excused from the jury. Defendant objected; the court overruled the objection and retired the juror, defendant excepting. Defendant had exhausted all his challenges and had to accept talesmen. No objection is urged • against the jurors last accepted and none was made to the court. No injury is shown as a result of the action of the court, and defendant has no ground of complaint. Wolf v. Perryman, 82 Texas, 112. Ruthven was used as a witness for plaintiff as to exchange of boilers with Nath Green, Green to give some boot and make a mortgage for the difference. This boiler exchanged to Green is now in litigation in this suit, it having been placed on the lots sold to Green by'Mun-dine (W. W.). The court was not in error in excluding the witness from the jury before it was sworn to try the case, and as soon as he was informed that he was a witness in the case. Any witness in a case is disqualified for serving as a juror on its trial. Rev. Stats., art. 3141. When the court is informed of the disqualification before the jury is sworn to try the case and other unobjectionable jurors can be had and are accepted, no injury is shown and consequently no error.

2. On the trial the court permitted plaintiff’s witness Green to testify, over objections of defendant, that the premises (the lots sold by W. W. Mundine to him, Green, on which a vendor’s lien was retained to secure the purchase money notes), including the ginhouse, engine *49 room and mill, would be of greater value than were the naked lots when Green purchased them; and would be worth more after the machinery pleaced thereon by Green had been removed. The objection of defendant to the question and answer was, that if the machinery had been so attached to the realty as to become a permanent accession to the freehold, it was immaterial, irrelevant, and incompetent to show the present value of the same without the machinery; thereupon the attorney for plaintiff, in the presence of the jury, stated to the .court that it was his purpose to show by the witness that Mundine, the defendant, would not be injured, because he would still have the property greater in value than the debt owed by Green for the purchase money. The court permitted the witness to testify that the premises, including the gin-house, engine room and well (improvements made by Green after his purchase from Mundine) would be of greater value than were the naked lots when he purchased them, even after removing therefrom all the machinery sued for by plaintiff. Defendant excepted to the ruling of the court. The ruling is assigned as error, and we believe it was erroneous. It was prejudicial to defendant’s rights • under his purchase of the realty for the jury to be informed that the realty left after removing the machinery would still be worth more than the naked lots, on which defendant had a vendor’s lien which was foreclosed upon, and defendant purchased the property as improved. There was no such issue in the case, and hence the testimony was irrelevant. It may and probably did influence the jury in finding for plaintiff on questions submitted to them concerning the rights of the parties, and in concludin that, if their verdict should be in favor of plaintiff, defendant would not be injured in his original rights acquired by his vendor lien notes. Whether the machinery sold by Green to pay Pauls was or was not, at the time of the mortgage to Pauls and the transfer to him, attached so as to become a part of the reality, was the main question in the ease to be passed on by the jury; and it was improper to allow proof irrelevant to the issues before the jury, which was calculated to influence them to the prejudice of defendant. The jury might have found that some of the machinery was attached to and became realty, and might have been correct in their conclusion, but failed to so find, because of the testimony objected to. The testimony was irrelevant and inadmissible, and it was error to admit it.

3. The third assignment ought not to be considered, inasmuch as it contains more than one question and is not followed by propositions on each issue relied on.

4. The- same is -true of the fifth assignment of error.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 254, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 46, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mundine-v-pauls-texapp-1902.