Parker Square State Bank v. Triangle Supply Co.

364 S.W.2d 418, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1552
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1963
Docket3768
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 364 S.W.2d 418 (Parker Square State Bank v. Triangle Supply Co.) 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
Parker Square State Bank v. Triangle Supply Co., 364 S.W.2d 418, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1552 (Tex. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

GRISSOM, Chief Justice.

Wise and Steadham Drilling Company drilled many oil wells for Fletcher Oil & Gas Drilling Corporation. As each well was completed Wise and Steadham presented to Fletcher an invoice and it approved the account and agreed that it should be assigned to a designated assignee. Although payment was due upon completion of each well, Fletcher ordinarily paid its accounts thirty to sixty days after an invoice was so presented and approved. In the meantime, to carry on their business, Wise and Steadham assigned the accounts to secure loans.

On March 15, 1961, Fletcher owed Wise and Steadham and their assignees $164,-690.99, evidenced by thirteen invoices which *420 had been approved by Fletcher upon completion of thirteen wells by Wise and Stead-ham. On or before March 15th, all of said invoices and the accounts evidenced thereby had been assigned for a valuable consideration to Parker Square State Bank, City National Bank in Wichita Falls or Time Equipment and Supply Company. Said assignees and Triangle Supply Company, Carter Engine and Equipment Company, L. H. Strand and Kelley Supply Company, as garnishing creditors, United States of America, as a tax lien creditor, Tucker and Stephens Bulldozers, Inc., as a mechanic’s and materialman’s lien and judgment creditor, and others, as general creditors, claimed the money owed by Fletcher to Wise and Steadham or their assignees. Fletcher paid into court $54,624.77, and impleaded all of said parties for the purpose of having the court determine their respective rights to said funds. The District Court granted priority of right to receive such funds to said subsequent lien creditors in preference to Parker Square, City National and Time Equipment as to the assignments which had not been filed for record. In other words, the court held that the lien creditors who fixed their liens after said assignments had been delivered had a right to said funds over the assignees because notice of the assignments had not been filed for record. Parker Square State Bank, City National Bank and Time Equipment and Supply Company have appealed.

The principal question presented is whether the lien creditors who acquired liens after delivery of valid written assignment of the accounts, acquired rights to the funds superior to that of the assignees because the assignees had not filed notice of their assignments. This question must be determined by an interpretation of Article 260-1, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., which provides in Section 2 that assignments of accounts may be protected by execution and delivery of written assignments and by filing notice thereof. Section 6 provides that

“Whenever any person * * * shall in good faith take a protected assignment of any account * * * all creditors of, and all subsequent assignees, purchasers, and transferees of or from the assignor shall be conclusively deemed to have received notice of such assignment, dating from the time of the filing for record of the notice of assignment hereinabove provided ; and after such filing for record, no purchaser from the assignor, no creditor of any kind of the assignor, and no prior or subsequent assignee or transferee of the assignor, holding an assignment not protected, or holding as assignment under a notice of assignment subsequently filed for record, shall in any event have, or be deemed to have acquired, any right in the account * * so assigned or in the proceeds thereof, or in any obligation substituted therefor, superior to the rights therein of the assignee named in such prior protected assignment.”

In Section I an “account” or “account receivable” is defined so as to exclude therefrom the right to payment of money secured by a chattel mortgage or any other instrument which may be filed for record and the assignment of rights subject to special statutory provisions of the State or Federal Government relative to the rights of creditors or successive assignees.

Prior to the enactment of Article 260-1, the law in Texas was, as to the rights of assignees, that the first in point of time had the superior right. This seems to have been the majority view in the United States. Some states, notably Pennsylvania and California, adopted the English rule that the first assignee to give notice to the debtor had the prior right. Under the common law in Texas, if the contract was in existence at the time of the assignment, no creditor of the assignor could acquire rights therein superior to that of a prior assignee, regardless of notice to the debtor. Hess & Skinner Engineering Company v. Turney, 110 Tex. 148, 216 S.W. 621, 623, 25 Tex. Law Rev. 607. Unless there has been a failure to *421 comply with a recording statute enacted for the protection of creditors, generally, an assignee takes priority over a subsequent lien creditor of the assignor who had no lien at the time the assignment was made. 6 C.J.S. Assignments § 92, p. 1149. In 1855, the Texas Supreme Court held that Texas had no law either requiring or authorizing recording of assignments and that in the absence of such a statute the recording of an assignment did not give notice of its existence. 1 Burnham v. Chandler, Trustee, 15 Texas 441, 443. In 1943, the United States Supreme Court in Corn Exchange National Bank v. Klauder, Trustee, 318 U.S. 434, 63 S.Ct. 679, 87 L.Ed. 884, 144 A.L.R. 1189, held (in a Pennsylvania case, in which state, as between assignees, the law gave priority to the assignee who first gave notice of the assignment to the debtor,) that assignments of accounts which, by reason of failure to give notice of the assignment to the debtor, were, by local law, inferior to the rights of a subsequent assignee who gave notice, were preferences and inoperative against the assignors’ trustee in bankruptcy. It held that the amended bankruptcy act provided a new test for the purpose of striking down secret liens and included a failure to record which could be asserted by a bona fide purchaser or a lien creditor of the transferor against the transferee.

It has been said that as a result of that decision thirty-five states have enacted statutes for the protection of assignees and lien creditors against the trustee in bankruptcy, who then apparently had the rights of a bona fide purchaser or lien creditor. Some statutes clearly provided that an assignee’s failure to record notice of his assignment enabled a creditor to establish superior rights by garnishing the account, “and that is the critical test adopted in the Bankruptcy Act.” 53 A.L.R.2d 1392, note. In a note in 246 F.2d at page 810, it is stated that the Bankruptcy Act was amended in 1950 to remove the threat that an assignment might be vulnerable to a claim by a trustee — as a preferential transfer merely because a subsequent assignee could attack it and that such amendment restored assignments to their pre-section 60 status in respect to a claim by a trustee in bankruptcy. The California Statute expressly provides that no assignment shall be valid against creditors or subsequent assignees without notice unless the assignment is recorded. With reference to that statute the court in Costello v. Bank, 246 F.2d 807, 811, said: “Actual notice to the obligor, which hitherto sufficed, was no longer enough. The statute also revised existing law as it related to creditors of the assignor.

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Bluebook (online)
364 S.W.2d 418, 1963 Tex. App. LEXIS 1552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-square-state-bank-v-triangle-supply-co-texapp-1963.