Oldham v. Industrial State Bank

216 S.W.2d 1016, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2253
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 13, 1949
DocketNo. 12044.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 216 S.W.2d 1016 (Oldham v. Industrial State 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
Oldham v. Industrial State Bank, 216 S.W.2d 1016, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2253 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

GRAVES, Justice.

This was a .suit for the conversion of certain personal property, alleged to be worth more than $1602.00, brought by the appellant, M. C. Oldham, against the ap-pellee, The Industrial State Bank.

The appellee bank had foreclosed two chattel mortgages it held against such property, upon which the appellant — by virtue of his having been the lessor of the land, to Milton Hodson, the tenant who gave the bank such mortgages on -the property— claimed that he then had both-a landlord’s and a contract lien on the tenant’s property, which were prior and superior to those contained in the appellee bank’s two mortgages thereon.

The cause was submitted to the court, sitting without a jury, upon an agreed “Stipulation of Facts”, the -controlling ones of which may, it is thought, for the purposes of the appeal, be substantially thus stated:

On July 1, 1945, appellant entered into a written lease agreement with one Milton Hodson for a term of five years, commencing on July 1, 1945, and covering Lots Nos. 6, 7 and 8, in Block No. 5, of Magnolia Park Addition to the City of Houston, Harris County, Texas, said premises being improved by a frame store-building. The tenant Hodson agreed to pay therefor to appellant $178.00 per month as rental, payable in advance. The lease was never recorded, and appellee had no actual knowledge of its terms. The tenant went into possession of said property and placed thereon certain chattels and equipment, among which were the chattels covered by appellee’s chattel mortgages, and they were the same chattels against which appellee foreclosed its liens. The tenant failed to pay to appellant the monthly installments of rent accruing on October 1, 1945, and -oft the first day of every month thereafter, up to and including August 1, 1946.

Such tenant vacated the premises in September or October, 1946. On January 29, 1946, the -tenant executed a chattel mortgage to appellee, to secure a promissory note of even date therewith, for the sum of $12,720.00. Said chattel mortgage was not filed for record until March 26, 1946. The tenant executed another chattel mortgage to appellee on March 30, 1946, securing a promissory note of even date therewith, for the sum of $150.00. Said chattel mortgage was not filed for record until April 8, 1946.

On August 14, 1946, appellant filed a sworn statement of the amount of rents due and owing to him under such lease agreement, in the Office of the County Clerk of Harris County, Texas. That statement had a manuscript cover thereon, bearing only the word “Affidavit”, and it was filed in the Chattel Mortgage Department of the County Clerk’s Office, on the second floor of the Harris County Courthouse. Such original statement was at all times thereafter retained in such Chattel Mortgage Department, with chattel mortgage instruments,- and such statement was indexed *1018 in the Chattel Mortgage Index Records. It was never recorded by the County Clerk in the Landlord’s Lien Records Book, maintained in the Office of the County Clerk.

During the first year of such lease there accrued and became due and owing from the tenant to appellant rents in the amount of $1,602.00, no part of which was ever paid to appellant.

During the month of October, 1946, ap-pellee matured the indebtedness owing to it, took possession of these chattels and equipment covered by its chattel mortgages, foreclosed its liens thereon, and sold such chattels, appropriating the proceeds therefrom to its own use and benefit. These chattels were located in the leased store building so belonging to appellant, and they were of the reasonable market value in excess of $1602.00. This suit was filed on August 14, 1947, to recover against appellee the sum of $1,602.00, for the conversion and use of such chattels and equipment.

The trial court rendered judgment in favor of the appellee, holding — in effect— that appellant’s failure to satisfy the requirements of Article 5238, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St., was fatal to any claim upon ,his part of a statutory lien on such property thereunder.

In this Court, appellant inveighs against the judgment so adverse to him below upon four points of error, as follows:

1. It was not necessary for him to file the verified statement referred to in such statutory article, insofar as any rights of this appellee under its two chattel-mortgages were concerned;

2. The court’s holding that appellant failed to comply with the provisions of Article 5238, hence did not secure the landlord’s lien he so declared upon, was erroneous, because appellant did file a verified statement with the county clerk in his office and in his official capacity, hence he substantially complied with the provisions of that article;

3. The court’s holding that appellee’s two chattel mortgages were superior to the claimed landlord’s lien of appellant was erroneous, since such chattel mortgages, as a matter of law, had. not been “forthwith filed”, as required by Article 5490, Vats; wherefore, such mortgages, as. against this appellant, were wholly void;

4.The court’s holding that appellee’s chattel mortgages were superior to the express lien claimed in appellant’s lease contract with the tenant on the property, on the ground that the lease had not been recorded was further erroneous, because the chattels or personal property in question were located on the leased premises, hence the appellee had constructive notice of appellant’s claimed contract lien.

The trial court supported its judgment by filing findings of fact and conclusions of law, in substance, to this general effect:

First, as to the facts, it repeated those above summarized in the “Stipulation-of-Facts” between the parties, and then added the following:

“(A) No statement of plaintiff for the rents here involved was ever recorded in the Landlord’s Lien Record Book, being the only record book provided by the Harris County Clerk for recording verified statements, under Article 5238, and no such statement was ever filed in the department of said County Clerk’s Office where such Landlord’s Lien Record Book was at all times maintained and kept.
“(B) All of the rents, for which plaintiff asserts a lien-right herein, were more than six (6) months past due at the time the tenant, Milton Hodson, was adjudicated a bankrupt on December 9, 1946, and all of such rents were more than six (6) months past due at the time of the filing of this suit, on August 14, 1947. Each and both of the chattel-mortgages of the defendant bank, referred to and described in the aforementioned Stipulation were filed for record and duly indexed in the Chattel-Mortgage Department in the Office of the County Clerk of Harris County, Texas, forthwith, and there was due and unpaid more than $5500.-00 on the original indebtedness evidenced thereby at the time of the foreclosure of said chattel-mortgages by defendant bank during.the month of October, 1946.”

The-substance of its conclusions of law was this:

“I. No statement of plaintiff landlord having ever been recorded in the Landlord’s Lien Record Book of Harris Count), the *1019 •said M. C.

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Related

Industrial State Bank v. Oldham
221 S.W.2d 912 (Texas Supreme Court, 1949)

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Bluebook (online)
216 S.W.2d 1016, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 2253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oldham-v-industrial-state-bank-texapp-1949.