Reynolds v. Gregg

258 S.W. 1088
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 12, 1924
DocketNo. 10472.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 1088 (Reynolds v. Gregg) 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
Reynolds v. Gregg, 258 S.W. 1088 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

CONNER, O. J.

Appellant, B. F. Reynolds, instituted this suit in the district court of Young county, and in his first amended original petition, filed September 26, 1922, alleged that on December 13, 1917, for a valuable consideration, the defendant J. S. Gregg executed two promissory notes of that date, payable to the order of C. Y. McCary, each of said notes being for the sum of $250, bearing 8 per cent, interest; that said notes were numbered 5 and 6, in a series of six notes, and had been given for a tract of land purchased by Gregg and described in the petition.

It was further averred that on March 20, 1919, Gregg conveyed said land to A. J. Cantwell, in consideration of which Cant-well, among other things, assumed the payment of the notes executed by Gregg; that plaintiff was “still the owner and holder of each of said notes for value in due course of business without notice and in good faith and before maturity.” The plaintiff alleged that said notes 5 and 6 were secured by a vendor’s lien upon the land described in the. petition and conveyed to Cantwell, and he prayed for judgment for the amount due upon the notes, with a foreclosure of the vendor’s lien against Gregg as maker and Cant-well upon his assumption.

The transcript shows a pleading, indorsed “the defendant’s original answer,” addressed to the March term of the district court of Young county, 1922, in which A. J. Cantwell and J. S. Gregg appeared and alleged that it was true that the defendant Gregg had executed and delivered to C. Y. McCary and the defendant Cantwell had assumed the payment of said notes. It was further alleged, however, that C. Y. McCary had, by written transfer duly recorded and made a part of the answer, sold, transferred and delivered to J. E. Harrell the notes described in plaintiff’s petition, whereby said J. E. Harrell became the owner and holder in due course of law of the said vendor’s lien notes and the vendor’s lien securing the same, and that on August Í9, 1921, the defendant A. J. Cantwell had paid to the said J. E. Harrell, the owner and holder of the vendor’s lien notes sued on, the sum of $919.13 in full • satisfaction of the six vendor’s lien notes, being notes Nos. 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, and S, of which notes 5 and 6 had been declared upon by the plaintiff. It was alleged that such payment discharged in full the cause of the action set up in plaintiff’s petition, and that said J. E. Harrell had duly executed a release and discharge from any and all liens retained to secure the notes mentioned, which release had been duly recorded, a copy of which was attached and made a part of the answer.

A general demurrer was also pleaded to every fact stated in plaintiff’s petition, except such as had been specially admitted in the answer. This answer was verified by the defendant Cantwell on September 26, 1922, but the date when filed is not shown.

At the same term of court, to wit, the September term, 1922, the defendants Gregg .and Cantwell further filed a general denial “of the allegations in the first amended petition and pray the court that J. E. Harrell of the county of Throckmorton, state of Texas, be joined herein as a party defendant, and that if judgment should be rendered herein in favor of plaintiff and against these defendants that these defendants have judgment over .against said J. E. Harrell in the same amount as shall be recovered by plaintiff against these defendants.” This answer appears to have been filed September 25, 1922.

The transcript further shows that on the sams day, to wit, September 25, 1922, J. E. Harrell appeared and filed a pleading which contained a general denial of “every allegation in plaintiff’s petition contained,” and further alleged that he “adopts the pleadings of the defendants J. S. Gregg and A. J. Cantwell as his own pleadings and says the allegations in their said answer are true and correct, all of which he is ready to verify.” And by way of a special answer further pleaded:

“B. F. Reynolds at no time paid any consideration for the notes sued upon and described in hisv original petition or his first amended original petition herein, but on the contrary he came into possession of them by virtue of a wager in violation of the statutes of the state of Texas, and that the plaintiff is now attempt *1090 ing to use this court in the collection of a gambling debt, a transaction which grew out of a violation of the law of the land and against the public policy of the state, and is therefore unenforceable in the courts of our state.”

By a pleading filed on the following day, to wit, September 26, 1922, the plaintiff demurred to the application of defendants Gregg and Cantwell to make J. E. Harrell a party on the ground that no sufficient cause therefor had been stated. The plaintiff also filed on the same day, to wit, .September 26, 1922, a further pleading entitled:

“Plaintiff’s first supplemental petition in replication to the original answer of defendant herein filed at the March term of this court, 1922.”

The plaintiff therein denied all of the allegations of the defendants’ answer, and further specially alleged:

“That for valuable consideration, before maturity in good faith, without notice of any vice, if any, plaintiff purchased said notes hereon sued on being Nos. 5 and 6 from J. E. Harrell, the record owner, on or about the - day of November, A. D. 1920, at which time said Harrell, the record and true and lawful owner of said notes, delivered said notes to plaintiff by oral transfer .and oral assignment but by actual delivery. That the defendants and each of them were then notified by plaintiff that plaintiff was the owner of said notes, the true and lawful holder of same, and that said notes were held by plaintiff and in plaintiff’s possession. That at the time of said notice none of said notes had been paid, but that all of said series of six notes each for .the sum of $250 were outstanding against- said land and the notes hereon sued on were unpaid and were outstanding against said land. That the oral transfer and assignment to plaintiff to these two notes hereon sued-on was in all things legal.”

The supplemental petition contained other allegations of like import.

The transcript shows that the case went to trial upon the state of pleadings as above given, and that the court, after having heard the evidence, rendered judgment denying plaintiff any recovery, dismissing the cause of action as against the defendant Harrell, and that plaintiff “take nothing by his said suit against the defendants J. S. Gregg and A. J. Cantwell, and that said defendants re- • cover their costs from plaintiff.” From the judgment so rendered, the plaintiff has duly appealed and assigns error.

Upon the trial it was admitted in behalf of the defendants that all of the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition with reference to the legality of the notes declared upon were true and that the defendant Cantwell at and prior to the time he paid the defendant Harrell the notes in controversy had actual notice that notes '5 and 6, sued upon by the plaintiff, were held by him and that the plaintiff claimed the same. It is further undisputed that McCary, the payee of the notes, had transferred them to defendant Harrell, as alleged by the defendants, and that the defendant Cantwell had paid Harrell notes 5 and 6 and Harrell had executed a release of the lien on the.land, given to secure said two notes.

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 1088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-gregg-texapp-1924.