Park v. Johnson & Rather

56 S.W. 759, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 46, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 274
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 12, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 56 S.W. 759 (Park v. Johnson & Rather) 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
Park v. Johnson & Rather, 56 S.W. 759, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 46, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 274 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

GILL, Associate Justice.

J. S. Johnson & Co., a firm of merchants engaged in the drug business, executed a preferential deed of trust whereby their stock of goods was conveyed to H. H. Parker and S. D. Johnson, as trustees for the benefit of certain named creditors. The failing firm was composed of J. S. Johnson and I. Pope. The date of the trust deed was April 7, 1896.

The Gibbs national Bank, one of the creditors named, refused to accept under the trust deed, brought suit against J. S. .Johnson & Co. on their debt, and had a writ of attachment levied on the stock of goods in the hands of the trustees as the property of the insolvent firm. In this proceeding the trust deed was attacked for fraud.

The trustees filed a claimant’s oath and bond, whereby they regained possession of the property. The proceeding of trial of right of property was not pressed by the bank, and the matter was disposed of by a judgment quieting the claimants in their title to the property.

J. S. Johnson & Co. did not resist the bank’s suit upon the debt, and judgment final was rendered thereon in favor of the bank. The trustees then proceeded with the execution of the trust, and the stock of goods was finally sold in bulk to Mrs. S. P. Park, the appellant, for the sum of about $2350. She immediately resold to Johnson & Rather for $3000, and the trustees were paid the price bid, by a draft from Johnson & Rather, appellees, for about $2350, thus leaving a balance due appellant of $650. The sale by appellant to appellee was to be a cash transaction, and appellees having failed to pay the balance due, appellant drew on them for the amount, but the draft was returned unpaid.

The trustees, upon receipt of the fund resulting from the sale of the stock, distributed it among the preferred creditors in accordance with the terms of the trust deed, but it was insufficient to pay the claim of the creditors named in class A, the indebtedness to the creditors in this class amounting to over $10,000. The firm of J. S. Johnson & Co. was originally composed of J. S. Johnson and J. W. Murchison. As so composed, they purchased the drug business of J. B. Hart, at Huntsville, Texas, about January 1, 1894, and continued to conduct the business in the house occupied by the said Hart. This house was owned by G. A. Wynne, and was being occupied by Hart under a three-year lease, of date June 15, 1892, at a monthly rental of $65. When Johnson & Co. bought out Hart they also purchased the lease. This lease con- *48 tamed a stipulation against subletting or assignment, and G. A. Wynne refused to release J. B. Hart from liability on the lease, and refused to consent to its assignment unless E. J. Hart & Co. would guarantee for J. B. Hart the balance due on the lease. This was done by E. J. Hart & Co. in writing. The firm of J. S. Johnson & Co., as first constituted, continued business in this house until March, 1895, when I. Pope purchased the interest of J. W. Murchison and became a partner in his stead. They continued the business until the "failure, paying the rent accruing after the expiration of the Hart lease as it fell due.

G. A. Wynne brought suit against E. J. Hart & Co. on their guaranty for the rent due by J. B. Hart on the lease and finally recovered judgment thereon for $675. In this suit J. S. Johnson & Co. were not made parties, and no landlord’s lien was asserted as against their stock of goods, nor was there any averment of liability against them. Pending this last named suit, and subsequent to the date of the deed of trust, G. A. Wynne, for himself and Hart & Co., as a matter of precaution, presented the rent claim (which was also the basis of his suit) to the trustees of J. S. Johnson & Co. for allowance. The claim was not mentioned nor preferred in the deed of trust, but was allowed by the trustees on the assumption that it was secured by a landlord’s lien on the stock which they held under the trust deed. This claim was not presented and allowed until nearly twelve months after the expiration of the lease to J. B. Hart, and was paid by S. D. Johnson, one of the trustees, and who was also a member of the firm of Johnson & Rather. The money with which it was paid was not a part of the trust funds, but was the individual money of Johnson & Rather. When Wynne finally won his suit against Hart & Co., they paid the judgment in full, thus leaving in Wynne’s hands the sum so paid him by Johnson & Rather on his claim for rent.

On the 14th day of April, 1899, Mrs. S. F. Park, the appellant, brought this suit against Johnson & Rather to recover the balance due on the purchase price of the stock of goods sold them by her.

About that time the Gibbs National Bank procured a writ of garnishment to be issued on their judgment against J. S. Johnson & Co., making G. A. Wynne and Johnson & Rather, composing the firm of Johnson & Rather, garnishees, in which it was contended that the sum in the hands of Wynne was the property of Johnson & Co., and that the balance claimed by Mrs. Park to be due her from Johnson & Rather was due to Johnson & Co.

On motion of the bank and in response to a prayer in the answer of Johnson & Rather, these garnishment proceedings were consolidated with appellant’s suit, over the objection of appellant.

¡E. J. Hart & Co. then intervened, alleging that by reason of their having paid off the Wynne judgment against them they were subrogated to the landlord’s lien by which Wynne’s rent claim was alleged to have been-secured, and prayed judgment against Wynne for the sum held by him as a result of his presentation of the claim for rent against the *49 trustees. Wynne answered that he held the money subject to the order of the court, stating how he came by it. Johnson & Bather answered to the suit of Mrs. Park, that the balance they owed her on the goods had been discharged by their payment to Wynne, it having served to liquidate a valid preference lien on the stock which they had purchased from her. The facts show that this was a voluntary payment on the part of Johnson & Bather, without authority of appellant. That nothing may be added to this confusion it is proper to state that S. D. Johnson, trustee (and also a member of the firm of Johnson & Bather), was not a member of the firm of Johnson & Co.

The facts thus stated are practically undisputed, and upon them was rendered a judgment that appellant take nothing; that Johnson & Bather go hence with their costs; that the bank take nothing, and that the interveners, E. J. Hart & Co., recover of Wynne the sum he had collected from Johnson & Bather and costs of suit. Appellant alone complains of the judgment.

The contention of the bank that the balance due Mrs. Park was in fact due J. S. Johnson & Co., because the sale by the trustees to Mrs. Park was irregular, fraudulent, and void, is utterly untenable.

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.W. 759, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 46, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-v-johnson-rather-texapp-1900.