Murray Co. v. Jacksboro Oil & Milling Co.

205 S.W. 517, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 784
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 30, 1918
DocketNo. 8815.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 205 S.W. 517 (Murray Co. v. Jacksboro Oil & Milling 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
Murray Co. v. Jacksboro Oil & Milling Co., 205 S.W. 517, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 784 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

This suit was filed February 14, 1916, by appellee Jacksboro Oil & Milling *518 Company against appellees W. H. and C. A. Simmons and appellant, the Murray Company, to recover the balance due upon two promissory notes in the sum of $2,750 each, executed by W. H. and C. A. Simmons, payable to plaintiff’s order, dated December 16, 1910, and due December 15, 1911, and December 15, 1912, respectively, with interest at 10 per cent, and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees. Plaintiff also sought a foreclosure under a deed of trust, of even date with the notes, executed by W. H. and C. A. Simmons to F. N. Foxhall/'trustee, to secure the said notes; the deed of trust being upon two tracts of land, one in the town of Jean, and the other in the town of Loving, Young county, Tex., together with the gin plants there, including engines, boilers, gin stands, etc. Appellant was made a party defendant; the petition alleging that it was claiming some sort of a lien on said lands and property, but if it had any lien thereon that the same was inferior and subordinate to the lien held by plaintiff. Appellant answered, disclaiming any interest or any lien on the property other than such machinery as was described in a certain chattel mortgage, dated July 2, 1913, and recorded in Young county on July 12, 1913. It alleged that it had sold to W. H. and C. A. Simmons on July 2, 1913, certain gin machinery, consisting of six 70-saw Murray steel huller gins complete, together with certain described attachments and accessories, and that said W. H. and O. A. Simmons, hereinafter called Simmons Bros., in payment thereof executed to the appellant their four certain promissory notes, bearing date of July 2, 1913, in the sum of $426 each, payable as follows, first, November 1, 1913, second, December 1, 1913, third, November 1,1914, and last December 1, 1914; that on August 5, 1913, the appellant sold certain other gin machinery to Simmons Bros., who executed in payment thereof two notes of even date, in the sum of $165.75 and $165, respectively, both maturing November 15, 1913; that to secure the payment of said notes said Simmons Bros, executed to R. H. Nevitt, trustee, their certain chattel mortgage of even date,' giving a lien on said property so sold; and that in said chattel mortgage it was stipulated that the property therein described should remain as personalty wherever located until the indebtedness thereon, as provided for by said chattel mortgage, should be paid. Defendant the Murray Company further alleged that its lien under the chattel mortgage on said machinery was superior to any claim of the plaintiff set up in its petition; that plaintiff’s deed of trust under which it claimed was given to secure notes existing long before the execution of the chattel mortgage by Simmons Bros, to the Murray Company, and long before the machinery therein described was installed or placed upon the premises; that plaintiff paid no value for said machinery, and was not in the position of an innocent purchaser thereof. In a supplemental petition, plaintiff pleaded that the machinery upon which defendant the Murray Company claimed its mortgage was installed in the gins and became a permanent fixture to the real estate covered by plaintiff’s mortgage long before -the execution of the purported chattel mortgages under which the Murray Company claimed the-lien; that at the time said machinery was installed plaintiff’s mortgage or deed of trust upon the property described therein was of record, and that the defendant the Murray Company was fully aware thereof; that the Murray Company knew at the time the machinery, it sold to Simmons Bros, was installed that there was in said gin other machinery covered by the plaintiff’s mortgage, and which constituted a part of the realty, and said defendant knew that in order for its machinery to be installed the machinery covered by plaintiff’s mortgage would have to be removed, which was done by Simmons Bros, with the knowledge and consent of the Murray Company, and without the consent or knowledge of plaintiff. Wherefore plaintiff pleaded as in its original petition. A trial was had before the court, without the aid of a jury, and judgment was rendered against the Simmons Bros., severally, on the notes given to plaintiff, in the sum of $5,835.87, with interest and attorney’s fees, with a foreclosure under the deed of trust; said foreclosure being made superior to the right of foreclosure on the part of the defendant the Murray Company. Judgment was given in favor of defendant the Murray Company on its cross-action, against Simmons Bros., severally, for its debt, and for foreclosure on the machinery described in its chattel mortgage, subject, however, to the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff. From this judgment the defendant the Murray Company has appealed.

The evidence discloses that in December, 1910, Simmons Bros., who were conducting gins at Loving and Jean, owed the Murray Company $5,500 for gin machinery purchased from the Murray Company and which had been installed in the gins; that the Murray Company was pressing them for payment and they applied, through F. N. Foxhall, president of the Jacksboro Oil & Milling Company, to the latter for a loan to take up this paper ánd liquidate the debt; that the Jacksboro Oil & Milling Company extended Simmons Bros, the loan requested and gave them a check for $5,500 with which to pay the Murray Company, and the latter executed a release; that thereupon Simmons Bros, executed a mortgage on the gin plant to secure this debt, and executed two notes in the sum of $2,750 each; that on these notes payments were made in the sum of $500 each, and interest paid thereon to December 12, 1912; that on December 10, 1915, Sim *519 mons Bros, executed their renewal note in the sum of $5,835.S7 to the Jacksboro Company, said notes reciting that it was a renewal extended on the balance due on the two promissory notes before described, and that it was the intention of the parties that the deed of trust theretofore given should remain in full force and effect to secure this last-described note. Said deed of trust covered the gin, plants located at Loving and Jean, including engines, boilers, gin stands, suctions, and ail machinery, tools, appurtenances, house, and all things of whatsoever hind connected with each and both of said gins, as well as the leases of Simmons Bros, on the lands described on which said things were located. The 'deed of trust dated December 16, 1910, was duly executed by both of the Simmons brothers, on December 16, 1910, and filed for record in Young county on January 30, 1911. The evidence further shows that appellant company had actual as well as constructive knowledge of the existence of this mortgage held by the Jacksboro Company at the time it sold the machinery to Simmons Bros., which was later installed in the gin plant at Loving, and that it knew that in order to install the new machinery sold by it to Simmons Bros, the old machinery on which plaintiff held the mortgage would have to be removed, and that it was taken, out and stored in an outhouse; that the Jacksboro Company did not know of the proposed removal of the machinery on which it held a mortgage until after it had been removed and the machinery purchased from appellant had been installed.

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Bluebook (online)
205 S.W. 517, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murray-co-v-jacksboro-oil-milling-co-texapp-1918.