Ohio Cultivator Co. v. Peoples National Bank

55 S.W. 705, 55 S.W. 765, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 643, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 85, 21 Ky. L. Rptr. 1456
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 S.W. 705 (Ohio Cultivator Co. v. Peoples National Bank) 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
Ohio Cultivator Co. v. Peoples National Bank, 55 S.W. 705, 55 S.W. 765, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 643, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 85, 21 Ky. L. Rptr. 1456 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

RAINEY, Associate Justice.

—The appellant (plaintiff below) instituted this suit in the court below, and defendants interposed a general and sixteen special demurrers to the petition, all of which having been sustained by the court, this appeal is prosecuted. The petition is quite lengthy, and we will only reproduce here a synopsis thereof taken from • appellant's brief, to wit: "The said company is a corporation created under the laws of Ohio; that the matters embraced in the suit grew out of interstate commerce, and that it had a permit from the Secretary of State of Texas to do business in Texas; that on January 9, 1897,' Z. T. Williams executed said trust deed conveying to Creager said stock of goods, situated in Ennis, Texas, in trust, and for the purpose of Creager’s taking possession thereof, and, after inventorying the same, selling the same Tor cash in such quantities and manner as to him might seem best, having in view the realization of the greatest amount therefrom/ and from the proceeds of sale paying, in the first' place, all taxes and rents secured by lien on the goods and $250 to Templeton &r Harding, and the necessary expense of executing the trust and reasonable compensation to him, Creager, and then paying, first to Creager $3150, evidenced by two notes, dated March 26, 1896, and providing for 10 per cent attorney fees, and credited with $337.50, October 15, 1896, and to the said Peoples Bank $1870.67,—these two on an equal footing; and second, to J. W. Taylor $35, to Charles Taylor $25, to A. S. Cochran $46, on an equal footing; third, to Tenison Bros., $300; fourth, to B. W. Milam, $100; fifth, W. (1 Giddings, $200; sixth, to-Kendall & Allen $175; seventh, to White Hardware Company, $243; eighth, to H. Wetter Manufacturing Companj’, $50; ninth, to Ohio Cultivator Company, $548, with interest at 8 per cent from October 15, 1896. That said instrument, which styles itself a mortgage, states that it. is made to secure the said debts in the said order named; that after the payment of said debts it was to cease and determine, and the surplus or goods remaining were to be turned over by Creager to Williams.

"Creager accepted the trust,’ filed the mortgage for record, took possession of the goods on January 10, 1897; that on the same day all the above named persons, firms, and corporations whose claims are so pro *645 videcl for, severally accepted the said mortgage; that said claim of Creager was simulated and fictitious; and that if not entirely fictitious, it was fictitious to the extent of more than one-half; that if said notes in his favor ever evidenced a real debt, such debt had been reduced by payment to an amount not to exceed $1300; that said mortgage was made by Williams and accepted'by Creager with intent to defraud the creditors of Williams, and the same was as to the said collusive and pretended debt of Creager fraudulent and void; that said fictitious debt was inserted for the benefit of Williams, and upon a secret agreement that the amount of the same was to be paid to Williams by Creager, when the latter should collect it out of the goods; that defendants had notice of all this; that Williams was insolvent, had no property except said stock of goods, and was largely indebted.

“That, at the time of the execution of the mortgage and before, the Peoples Bank held by transfer from Williams numerous promissory notes as collateral seeurhw, securing its said claims mentioned in the mortgage,—said notes being notes previously executed to Williams by his customers; that said notes amounted to $981, principal, bore interest at 10 per cent, and were secured by mortgages on chattels; that said notes were solvent and with reasonable diligence collectible to the last dollar; that a list of them is annexed to the petition; that the said six claims, last mentioned in the mortgage, were all valid debts, owing by Williams, and two of them, to wit, that in favor of Ohio Cultivator Company and that in favor of Witte Hardware Company, were for goods sold to Williams, and some of which formed a part of the stock ■embraced in the mortgage. That on January 13, 1897, said cultivator company and said hardware company, after each of them had each theretofore accepted said mortgage, were informed that said pretended debt in favor of Creager was fictitious and collusive, and the mortgage therefore void as to it, and that said bank held said collateral notes; and that on said day they gave notice in writing to the bank a3id to Creager to this effect, to wit, that they, said cultivator company and hardware company, were bona fide creditors of Williams in the amount of their said debts mentioned in the mortgage; that the said claim in favor of Crea- ■ ger therein was fictitious in part at least; that said bank held said collateral notes securing its debts; that it would be unlawful for Creager, as trustee, to pay off his said fictitious claim out of the proceeds of the sale of said stock, as such payment would cause them to lose their said debts, Williams being insolvent; and said notice further stated that they, said cultivator company and hardware company, demanded that Creager should not pay, out of the proceeds of said stock, said fictitious debt in favor of himself or any part of it; and gave notice that they would bring suit to establish the facts stated in the notice, and obtain payment in full of their said debts out of. the said stock, and to compel said collateral notes to be exhausted by the bank in satisfaction of its debt; and that said written notice was on said day also read by JVIoore, Teneson, and Williams.

*646 “That an inventory of said stock had been made at cost price, exclusive of carriage, and footed up over $10,500; that it cost upward of $10,000, and was worth $10,000. That on January 11, 1897, one Tatum, a hardware man of Corsicana, came to Ennis and offered Creager for said stock 55 cents on the dollar, which offer, by reason of the interference of Williams, Creager did not accept, but promised Tatum to telephone to him to come up again and close the trade, if Williams himself did not buy back said stock; that on the afternoon of the following day, January 12th, between 2 and 3 p. m., Creager telephoned to Tatum that he, Tatum, could have the said stock at his said offer, and requested him to come to Ennis on the next train, due at Ennis between 5 and 6 p. m.; that Tatum accepted the said offer of Creager, left Corsicana at 4:40 p. m., reached Ennis in an hour, and found that others had bought the stock, and that Creager was gone. That in the meantime (that is, between 3 and 3 p. m. and 5.40 p. m.

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55 S.W. 705, 55 S.W. 765, 22 Tex. Civ. App. 643, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 85, 21 Ky. L. Rptr. 1456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-cultivator-co-v-peoples-national-bank-texapp-1900.