Roberts v. Anthony

185 S.W. 423, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 468
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1916
DocketNo. 961.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 185 S.W. 423 (Roberts v. Anthony) 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
Roberts v. Anthony, 185 S.W. 423, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 468 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

*424 HALE, J.

July 13, 1911, David Eley and A. Davidson recovered a judgment in the district court of Potter county against Louis Anthony, W. S. Roberts, and E. B. Power, in the sum of $1,592.04, with a foreclosure of the vendor’s lien upon certain town lots in Amarillo. The judgment is also in favor of Anthony against Roberts and Power for $2,-392.32, and in favor of Roberts against Power for all amounts which the said Roberts might be forced to pay in satisfaction of the judgment. It is decreed that the land be sold and the proceeds distributed according to the rights of the respective parties, as fixed by the judgment. November 18, 1915, Anthony sued out a writ of garnishment based upon said judgment against H. T. McGee, of Lubbock county, alleging that McGee was indebted to W. S. Roberts, and in due time McGee filed his answer, admitting an indebtedness to Roberts in the sum of $940.31. Roberts intervened, and by his plea of intervention denied that he was indebted to Anthony in any amount exceeding $150, and other facts which will be hereinafter set out.

To this answer appellee filed a general and two special exceptions, which were sustained, and, appellant having declined to amend, the court dismissed the plea, and judgment- was rendered in favor of appellee Anthony against the garnishee McGee, for the amount admitted- to be due. The order of sale issued upon the original judgment shows that the property was sold for $2,500, Eley and Davidson were paid off, and the.judgment in favor of appellee credited with $787.70.

Omitting the formal parts, the pleading to which the general demurrer was sustained is as follows:

“II. This defendant, further specially answering the affidavit of the said Louis Anthony herein, for defense thereto, and for set-off and counterclaim to such alleged indebtedness, and for cross-action against the said Louis Anthony, shows to the court that the judgment referred to is not binding upon this defendant, that same has been paid, and that the said Louis Anthony is estopped from claiming any indebtedness thereon, and in the alternative that, if any amount is justly due and owing by this defendant on said judgment, it is only a small amount of approximately $150, for this:
“(1) That at the time said suit No. 1507, styled David Eley v. Louis Anthony et al., was filed, during the pendency thereof, at the time of the rendition of said judgment, and long thereafter, the most friendly, cordial, and cooperative relationship existed between this defendant and the said Louis Anthony, and this defendant fully and completely trusted and relied upon the statement, representations, and agreements of the said Louis Anthony, and had full faith and confidence in him.
“(2) That the lands and premises involved in said suit, in addition to the legal description contained in said judgment, was a tract of land 100 feet wide, fronting the east on Tyler street, between Sixteenth and Seventeenth streets, in Amarillo, Tex,, improved with a good and substantial seven-room house and other improvements, being a good and desirable residence location, having a rental value of about $40 per month, and of the reasonable value of not less than $4,000, and was a marketable and saleable piece of property; that defendant was in possession thereof, using and occupying the same as a tenant, and continued in the occupancy thereof until about March 1, 1912.
“(3) That about the time said suit was filed the said Louis Anthony came to this defendant, and they conferred together in reference to and to the end of mutually co-operating together in protecting their respective interest and liabilities in reference to said property; that said Louis Anthony having purchased the property from one Ira Webster and wife, and executed vendor lien notes in part payment therefor, and this defendant having later purchased same from said Louis Anthony, assuming the notes given by him, and executing to Louis Anthony certain vendor lien notes, and this defendant in turn having conveyed said property to E. B. Rower, who had assumed all of said notes, and who held the title to said property, said notes and transactions more fully appearing from the pleadings in said cause to which reference is here made, this defendant and the said Louis Anthony discussing such situation and agreeing upon a plan of letting judgment of foreclosure be rendered in said case, and a sale of said property be made under said judgment in the discharge of their indebtedness and respective liabilities, and thereby divesting title out of the said E. B. Power, as hereinafter more fully set forth.
(4)_ To this end and for this purpose the said Louis Anthony and this defendant verbally contracted, agreed, and arranged with each other that this defendant would waive service of process in the case as to the intervention and cross-action and answer in said suit, not contesting the demands of the respective parties, and that proper waiver and answer should be prepared for this defendant by the attorney for said Louis Anthony, thereby saving costs and expense in said suit, and that judgment in favor of the respective lienholders would be rendered by agreement, and over and against the parties respectively as their rights might exist, and that, when order of sale should be issued upon said judgment, the said Louis Anthony being able to protect said property and himself and this defendant in bidding same in at the sale by reason of this judgment, and not necessarily being out of money, an amount only sufficient to cover the judgments in favor of David Eley and A. Davidson, it was agreed and arranged that said Louis Anthony would attend the sale, and in the event some person did not bid an amount sufficient for said property to pay off and discharge the total indebtedness thereon, thereby relieving and protecting- the said Louis Anthony and this defendant from their respective liabilities, that the said Louis Anthony should bid in said property and have a conveyance thereof made to himself, and in that event that this defendant, who was engaged in the real estate business, should thereupon give his time and efforts to selling said property at a private sale for the best price obtainable in the discharge of their respective liabilities, and that, if a sufficient amount could be secured from such sale to discharge such liabilities, said judgment would thereupon and thereby be discharged, and, if said property could not be sold for an amount sufficient for such purpose, then that this defendant would pay and discharge to the said Louis Anthony the difference or any deficiencies, it being contemplated, understood, and agreed that this defendant could and would sell this property within a few months, or at any event within a reasonable time, which this defendant alleges would have been approximately six months, whereby, and in consideration of the mutual promises and agreements aforesaid, the said Louis Anthony and this defendant each became bound and obligated to the other to carry out and perform said contract, and each became the agent of the other in undertaking such plans and agreements.
“(5) That this defendant prior to, at the time, *425

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W. 423, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-anthony-texapp-1916.