North Texas Building & Loan Ass'n v. Overton

91 S.W.2d 429
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 20, 1936
DocketNo. 3959.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 91 S.W.2d 429 (North Texas Building & Loan Ass'n v. Overton) 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
North Texas Building & Loan Ass'n v. Overton, 91 S.W.2d 429 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice.

This case was sent to the Supreme Court for answer to the questions hereinafter set out upon the following statement of the case:

“The appellee Overton owned lot 20 in block 46, Overton addition tq the town of Lubbock. On June 26, 1928, he conveyed it to A. W. May by warranty deed which retained the vendor’s lien to secure six notes of $100 each. Two of the six have been paid, and the last four are the basis of this suit by Overton.

“December 31, 1928, May and wife conveyed the property to J. W. Baze. On January 31, 1929, Baze and wife executed a mechanic’s lien contract with G. H. Hughlett, which provides for the erection upon said lot by Hughlett of a six-room residence and other improvements. On March 28, 1929, Overton executed an agreement that, in consideration of benefits to be derived by him from the erection of improvements on the property, he subordinated his lien securing his six notes to the mechanic’s lien which had been executed by Baze and wife. Thereafter Baze and wife conveyed the property to W. E. White, by warranty deed dated May 24, 1929, which shows that the' grantee executed two notes payable to Baze and assumed Overton’s vendor’s lien notes and the $5,000 evidenced by the note payable to the appellant company. The residence was built upon the lot while it was owned by Baze, and on April 20, 1929, Baze and wife filed their written acceptance of the improvements and their acknowledgment that the building had been completed in accordance with the plans and specifications. After White purchased the property and assumed the indebtedness against it, he defaulted in the payment of Overton’s notes and in his payments to the appellant company. After some negotiations between *430 the parties, during which the appellant, on February 5, 1932, wrote White proposing to ‘accept a deed from yourself and wife in cancellation of the indebtedness due us,’ White and wife conveyed the property to the association on February 5, 1932, by warranty deed, which recites the consideration as follows:

“ ‘10.00 and other valuable considerations to us paid and secured to be paid by North Texas Building & Loan Association, a corporation, as follows: Ten and no/100 dollars cash in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged and confessed and the cancellation of a certain deed of trust note dated April 17, 1929 in the sum of Five Thousand and no/100 dollars as set forth and described in deed of trust recorded in Vol. 56, page 545, deed of trust records of Lubbock County, Texas, which deed of trust was executed by J. W. Baze and wife Annie L. Baze to A. C. Estes, Trustee.’
“After the execution of this conveyance, Overton filed suit upon the four unpaid vendor’s lien notes, making May, Baze, White, and the- North Texas Building & Loan Association parties to the suit.
“The association answered and filed its cross-action as the owner and holder of the mechanic’s lien debt in the sum of $5,-000, praying that its mechanic’s lien be decreed to be first and superior, and that it be foreclosed against the premises.
“Upon a trial to a jury only this issue was submitted: ‘Do you find by a preponderance of the evidence that the North Texas Building & Loan Association intended to cancel the $5,000.00 note and lien in exchange for the deed of .conveyance from the defendant, W. E. White?’
“This was answered in the affirmative, and the court rendered judgment against the association and in favor of Overton, foreclosing his lien as the superior lien upon the premises.
“The association did not plead that the deed which it accepted from White and wife, and in which the consideration expressed is that it is for the purpose of canceling the $5,000 note and mortgage, was executed through fraud, accident, or mistake.
“Because the members of the court are not in accord upon the decisive issues involved, we certify to your honors the following questions:
“(1) Is the consideration recited in White’s deed to the association contractual?
“(2) May the testimony introduced upon the question of the association’s intention as to merger be considered in support of the verdict of the jury?
“(3) If the consideration set out in White’s deed is not contractual, was evidence to show the intention of the association in taking the deed admissible in the absence of a plea of fraud, accident, or mistake?
“(4) Is the recitation in White’s deed to the effect that it was accepted in cancellation of the debt conclusive upon the issue of the association’s intention?”

In answer to the certified questions, the Supreme Court has said that the effect of the acceptance of the deed by the association was to release Baze and White from all liability on the note, and that it was not entitled to judgment against them; that the consideration recited in the deed, except the payment of $10 cash, is contractual and cannot be contradicted or added to by parol evidence. In determining the question of merger, the Supreme Court says it is immaterial as between the senior and junior lienholders whether the mortgagee retains the note and mortgage in his possession or surrenders them to the mortgagor, also whether the deed of conveyance from the mortgagor to the mortgagee recites that the cancellation of the note and mortgage was a part of the consideration for the conveyance; that a rule penalizing the mortgagor and the mortgagee for surrendering the property in consideration of the cancellation of the notes would be contrary to our policy that litigation is not to be encouraged; that Over-ton has suffered no injury by reason of that transaction, but is in the same position as if there had been a foreclosure without having made him a party to the suit; that his equity of redemption still exists, but that his lien is not elevated to first place.

In the motion for rehearing, tliu appellant calls our attention to the fact that Dr. Overton testified that, when the appellant presented him a release to be signed, he did not contend that his lien was superior to that of-the appellant, nor could any such contention have been made in the face of his agreement, supported by sufficient consideration, that his lien should *431 be subordinated to the lien of the appellant. He further testified that he did not want to protect the vendor’s lien which he had subordinated, and that he did not want the property if he had to take care of the indebtedness against it; that at that time he did not want to question the appellant’s lien which he had recognized all the years unless that lien was paid off; that on March 8, 1932, he did not intend to protect the property by assuming to take it subject to the appellant’s indebtedness against it; that he did not want it that way; and that, up to the time that White conveyed the property to the North Texas Building & Loan Association, he never recognized or insisted that the association had ever promised to pay his debt against the property, but, when he learned that White had conveyed the property to the association, it looked to him like his lien was a first lien, and he filed suit for that reason.

While, as stated, Dr.

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91 S.W.2d 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-texas-building-loan-assn-v-overton-texapp-1936.