Perkins v. Alexander

209 S.W. 789, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 325
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1919
DocketNo. 8140.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 209 S.W. 789 (Perkins v. Alexander) 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
Perkins v. Alexander, 209 S.W. 789, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 325 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

February 5, 1915, Cornelius Perkins executed and delivered to Ernest Alexander his negotiable promissory note for $360.10, .providing for conventional interest and conditional attorney’s fees, due September 15, 1915, and secured in payment by chattel mortgage executed and delivered concurrently with the note. January 3, 1918, appellee, Ernest Alexander, sued appellant Cornelius Perkins to recover the amount due on the note and to foreclose the mortgage lien securing payment thereof, joining the appellant Paul Norman in the suit, and alleging in substance that he had purchased five bales of cotton covered by the mortgage lien with constructive notice thereof. Prayer was for judgment for the sum due on the note, foreclosure of the lien against both appellants, and alternately for judgment against appellant Norman in event he had disposed of the cotton purchased by him for the value thereof. There was trial to jury, which returned verdict for appellee, Alexander, against appellant Perkins for the sum then due on the note, and against appellant Norman for $250. Judgment followed the verdict, and in addition foreclosed the chattel mortgage lien on the crops grown by appellant Perkins for the year 1917. From the judgment recited, Perkins and Norman have appealed and assigned errors.

The first three assignments of error challenge the action of the trial judge in overruling exceptions presented by appellants to appellee’s petition, to which was appended a copy of the chattel mortgage. The effect of the exceptions is to assert that, the chattel mortgage was insufficient to create a lien on crops grown subsequent to its execution, because it did not specify the future crop, by year, and failed to describe the land upon which such crops were to be grown and its situs. The provision in the chattel mortgage which undertakes to describe the property conveyed recites that appellant Perkins bargains, sells, and conveys to appellee, Ernest Alexander, etc.,

“all crops of cotton and corn or any other crops grown on the farm I am now living on, said farm being the one sold to Ernest Alexander, or any other crops that I may raise on any other land for the year 1915 and all succeeding years until the amount of this note is paid.”

[1] It is settled law in this state that chattel mortgages on future crops are enforceable in'equity. Richardson v. Washington, 88 Tex. 345, 31 S. W. 614. Thé distinction between proceedings in law and equity in such cases is elaborately and thoroughly expounded in the case cited, and we apprehend it is unnecessary to restate in this opinion those reasons, but will confine ourselves to an application of the facts in the present case to the rule there stated. That rule in final analysis, as reflected in the syllabus, is that a chattel mortgage lien given on crops not then in existence and to be grown on land to which the mortgagor has no lease at the time or does not own may be enforced in equity on the crops when they do come into possession of the mortgagor, if their acquisition was contemplated at the time the mortgage was made. Omitting the reference to crops grown on other lands, and other matter which does not affect the meaning, the chattel mortgage under discussion was to be upon—

“all * * * cotton ⅜ * ⅜ grown on the farm I am now living on * ⅜ * for the year 1915 and all succeeding years until the amount of this note is paid.”

[2] We do not understand that it is absolutely necessary to name the year in which the crops are to be grown, in order to make the mortgage a valid one. What the parties contemplated at the time controls. In the case cited the mortgage which was declared a valid one was for the year 1892 and “succeeding years” until the debt was paid. The only other facts tending to show what the parties contemplated at the time was that Richardson was a tenant at the time the mortgage was given, and had been for five or six years prior thereto, and in the latter part of 1892 became a tenant for the year 1893. In holding that the facts related sufficiently established that the parties, at the *791 time the mortgage was executed, contemplated and intended to cover the crops which might be grown on the land in the year 1893, the court declared that—

“If A. agree that B. shall have a lien upon the wool to be grown on certain sheep or the crop to be raised on certain land, neither the sheep nor the land being owned by A., it is no answer to the suit brought by B. for the enforcement of such lien for A. to show such nonown-ership, if he be now the owner of the wool or crops.” '

[3] In the case at bar the evidence shows that Perkins was a tenant on the Alexander farm in 1915, and inferentially prior thereto, and continued as such tenant during 1916 and 1917. Such facts are as strong, in our opinion, as those in the Washington Case for the purpose of showing that the parties contemplated when the mortgage was given that a crop would be grown on the leased land in the year 1917. There was, therefore, in oui opinion, no error in overruling the exceptions.

[4] Further, it is obvious, from what we have said, and from the Washington Case, that what the parties contemplated is in a measure a question of fact, and a matter that could not be determined by exception.

[51 As much can be said concerning the identification of the leased land. While there is nothing in the chattel mortgage which alone describes and fixes the situs of the land, at the same time such situs may be made certain by parol testimony, which is always admissible in such cases.

[6] It is next urged that the court erred in refusing to peremptorily direct verdict for the appellants on the ground that appellee had no title to or interest in the note sued on. The facts on the issue so presented are ■few and are not in controversy, and fail to disclose many essential facts necessary to dispose of the point. Appellee, before the institution of the present suit, was adjudged, a bankrupt. At the time of the adjudication appellee was the owner of, but failed to schedule, the note sued on. The reason why he did not schedule it was that it was in the hands of creditors as collateral security. After appellee was discharged in bankruptcy, he paid the debt for which the note sued on was security, and in that manner received the note. In Lasater v. National Bank, 96 Tex. 345, 72 S. W. 1057, our- Supreme Court declared generally that, after the bankrupt’s estate had been administered and the trustee discharged, the bankrupt could recover unadministered assets. In that case the bankrupt sued to recover under federal statute double the amount of usurious interest paid a national bank, and which right of action accrued to him before he was adjudged a bankrupt. Subsequently the case reached the Supreme Court of the United States. First National Bank v. Lasater, 196 U. S. 115, 25 Sup. Ct. 206, 49 L. Ed: 408. There the judgment of our Supreme Court was reversed, and the proceeding remanded to the district court.

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Bluebook (online)
209 S.W. 789, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-alexander-texapp-1919.