Norris v. W. C. Belcher Land Mortgage Co.

82 S.W. 500, 98 Tex. 176, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 275
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1904
DocketNo. 1343.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 82 S.W. 500 (Norris v. W. C. Belcher Land Mortgage Co.) 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
Norris v. W. C. Belcher Land Mortgage Co., 82 S.W. 500, 98 Tex. 176, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 275 (Tex. 1904).

Opinions

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

The history of the transactions out of which this controversy grew is as follows: One Houston conveyed the land in question to Arch Norris, a minor, by deed which was not recorded. Houston afterwards conveyed the land to another, who conveyed it to Taylor. Taylor, to secure a loan, executed to the W. C. Belcher Land Mortgage Company the mortgage upon the land discussed further on. Thereupon, through his next, friend, Arch Norris instituted against Taylor an action in the form of trespass to try title to recover the land, joining the mortgage company, alleging the facts, and charging that the several conveyances subsequent to the deed to him, including the mortgage, were made to defraud him and were taken by the grantees with notice of his deed, and praying for judgment against all of the defendants for the title and possession of the land and “canceling and holding for naught the mortgage lien of the mortgage company as an incumbrance upon his title and use to the land; and also praying that, if he should fail to have the mortgage canceled, he have judgment against Taylor for the amount thereof to use in paying same. In that action the mortgage company set up in its answer the facts attending the execution of the mortgage and alleged that it had made the loan to Taylor in good faith without notice of plaintiff’s unrecorded deed. The debt to secure which the mortgage was given was not then due and no effort was made to enforce the mortgage, the prayer of the answer being only “that plaintiff take nothing by his suit and that it (the mortgage company) be dismissed with its costs.” The final result of that suit was a judgment in favor of Norris against Taylor for the title and possession of the land, but against plaintiff in favor of the mortgage company, “that the mortgage be and is hereby declared a valid lien against said land.” Thereafter,. Taylor having failed to pay an interest installment, in consequence of which it was claimed the mortgage debt matured, the mortgage company brought this action against Taylor, as debtor and mortgagor, and against Norris, as the holder of the legal title, to foreclose the mortgage. The petition showed an indebtedness evidenced by a bond for $700 payable in five years, with five coupons recited to be for annual interest, for $42 each, and by three promissory notes for $35 each, payable respectively, in one, two and three years from the date of the bond and mortgage. The petition also alleged that the mortgage contained the stipulation that the borrower should repay all money that may have been paid by the lender “for taxes or assessments on said premises, or on the said *179 bond and coupons or on said notes or any part thereof, or. on account of or to extinguish or remove any prior or outstanding title, lien, claim or incumbrance on the premises, which payment was secured by the mortgage lien.” Following the allegation of this provision, the petition stated the nature and result of the former action, and alleged that in defense thereof the present plaintiff had incurred certain costs and expenses of suit, as set forth, and prayed for judgment for them, also, against Taylor and the land. The defendant Norris pleaded that the ■debt sued on was usurious, in that the five coupons for $42 each and the three notes for $35 each were all given for the interest, which, together with the taxes on the debt which the contract bound the borrower to pay, amounted to more than 10 per cent per annum. The reply of plaintiff to this answer contained no plea- of res judicata, nor otherwise relied on the former judgment as a bar to the defense. It, however, sought to avoid the plea by alleging, in substance, that the agreement actually made as to taxes was not as stated in the mortgage, in taking which a printed form was used, and was not intended to make the borrower pay the ordinary taxes, but was intended “solely to provide for the payment by the mortgagor of any tax or assessment on the mortgage that might be imposed by Texas legislation during the life of the mortgage, whereby the mortgagee would be taxed on the landed security only to the value of his equity therein, and the remainder of the landed tax, or the difference between the full value of the security and the equity of redemption, would be imposed on the mortgage holder,” and that no such legislation had been adopted, and that neither it nor Taylor had paid or been called on to pay any of the ordinary State, county or municipal taxes on the aforesaid indebtedness. The evidence showed that the loan was made on January 1, 1900, and that for that- and the two succeeding years the rate of taxation at Fort Worth, the mortgage company’s domicile, was as follows: State, 34 cents; county, €2% cents, and city, $1.75 on the .hundred dollars. The trial court excluded evidence offered by the mortgage company to prove the facts alleged in its plea in answer to the charge, of usury, held the contract usurious and gave a foreclosure for the principal of the loan, denying the plaintiff’s claim for reimbursement for its expenditures in the former suit. The Court of Civil Appeals, in effect, held with the trial court on these questions, but were of opinion that the former judgment concluded the defense of usury and foreclosed the mortgage for principal and stipulated interest. Both parties applied to this court for a writ of error and the case is before us upon both petitions.

We will first consider the holding of the Court of Civil Appeals that the judgment in the former action -barred the defense of usury in this. Our opinion is that this was erroneous for two reasons, viz: (1) The judgment was not pleaded as a bar, and (2) the issues in the former action did not embrace in their scope this defense. The allegations in the petition concerning the former action and judgment were plainly. *180 made to sustain the claim asserted for the recovery of the expenses of that suit and to bring such expenses within the provision of the mortgage relied on for that purpose. There is nothing whatever in the pleading to give notice to the defendant of a reliance on the judgment as a bar to the defense of usury. An exception to the petition for insufficiency as a plea of res judicata would have been futile, the allegations not having been made for any such purpose. Neither the defendant nor the court were bound to treat matter thus set up for one purpose as applying to an entirely different purpose. Whitlock v. Castro, 22 Texas, 113.

As the cause "will be remanded for another trial when other pleading may be supplied, it is proper that we determine the question as to the effect of the former judgment upon the defense of usury. The issue between Norris and the mortgage company in the former action was one of priority; i. e., whether the former’s elder legal title or the latter’s junior mortgage should have precedence. Precedence was claimed by Norris because he asserted the mortgage company took with notice of his title, and by the mortgage company because it asserted it took without such notice. This was the issue made and adjudicated, and it seems obvious that it did not involve any question as to the amount the mortgage company could rightfully demand of Taylor, which is the question here. In the attitude he then occupied Norris could not have made such a question as a part and in support of the action he prosecuted. It is only when his deed is postponed to the mortgage and he is, as to his rights in the land, thus forced into the shoes of the mortgagor that he is concerned with and can raise questions as to the amount of the debt.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.W. 500, 98 Tex. 176, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norris-v-w-c-belcher-land-mortgage-co-tex-1904.