Rushing v. Hall

74 S.W.2d 761, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 885
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 12, 1934
DocketNo. 9953.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 74 S.W.2d 761 (Rushing v. Hall) 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
Rushing v. Hall, 74 S.W.2d 761, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 885 (Tex. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

This is a suit by appellee against appellants to recover the sum of $1,149.80, with interest and attorney’s fees, alleged to be amount due upon four promissory notes, three of which were executed by appellants and the fourth assumed by them by written instrument, and all of them having been sold and transferred by the payees thereof to appellee in due course of trade, and owned and held by him. All, of these notes were secured hv a vendor’s lien upon a tract of land, containing 16 acres, situated in Trinity county. The first of these notes, and each of the remaining two executed by appellants in part payment for the land before mentioned, contains the following recitals:

“And it is specially agreed that if this note is placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, or if collected by suit or through the Probate Court, we agree to pay ten per cent, additional on the principal and interest then due thereon as attorney’s fees.
“The insurance clause incorporated in said deed of conveyance is adopted and made a part hereof.
Consideration: When Due
Cash, $300.00 Oct. 1, 1930.
Note No. 1, $200.00 Oct. 1, 1931.
Note No. 2, $225.00 Oct. 1, 1932.
Note No. 3, $225.00
Note assumed, $750
Total, - $1700.00
“Blanche • Bushing.
“D. B. Bushing.”

The petition alleges, in substance, the following facts: That, in addition to the ven *762 dor’s lien contained in the deed by which the 16 acres of land was conveyed to appellants, they executed a deed of trust upon the land to secure their vendor, E. H. Collier, in the payment of the notes for $200, $225, and $225, respectively, which were payable to said Collier, and which were held and owned by the appellee; that, default having been made in the payment of the first of said notes, the trustee, pursuant to the powers conferred upon him by the trust deed, acting on the request of appellee, proceeded to advertise and sell said land on February 3, 1031, in accordance with the terms and provisions of the deed of trust; that at such sale appellee was the highest bidder, and became the purchaser of the land on his bid of $800, which amount was duly credited upon the notes executed by appellants, and that the balance due upon said notes and the $750 assumed by. appellants is the sum of $1,149.80, for which he sues and prays judgment, together with the attorney’s fees and interest stipulated in the-notes.

In addition to a. general demurrer and general denial, defendants specially pleaded limitation of four years in bar of plaintiff’s suit upon the note for $750.

They further pleaded, in substance, that plaintiff was not entitled to maintain this suit against them because the petition shows upon its face that plaintiff held two mortgages or purported mortgages upon the 16-acre tract of land described in his petition, and “has elected to pursue and convert to his own use and benefit one of the remedies held by him and has attempted to sell the property under the deed of trust which is set out in plaintiff’s petition, (and that by so electing) he has abandoned his right to recover on said notes.” They further pleaded, in substance, that the deed of trust was only executed for the purpose of securing the first three notes before described, and that the $800 for which the land was bid in by plaintiff at the sale under the deed of trust was more than enough to pay the amount due upon said three notes, and that plaintiff is indebted to defendants for the difference between the amount due upon the three notes and the $800 for which the laiid was sold, with 6 per cent, interest from the time of such sale. They further pleaded, in substance, that the two mortgages or liens held by plaintiff on the land were inconsistent with each other, and, having elected to pursue his deed of trust lien, he is now estopped from seeking further relief against these defendants; “that when said plaintiff became the purchaser at said deed of trust sale, that extinguished the debt in so far as these defendants wore concerned on the vendor’s lien, as well as the deed of trust lien, and that this suit is now on same notes or same purported indebtedness, against the same parties and' involving the same subject matter; that said subject matter has once been used to extinguish said debt, so that now these defendants are not liable to the plaintiff in the sum of anything, and plaintiff is now, in so far as asserting or seeking a judgment against these defendants, without remedy, having had two and elected to use one to the extinguishment of the other.”

The remaining eleven pages of defendants’ sixteen-page answer and cross-action is devoted to a claim for a credit of $225 on the amount due plaintiff because of the delivery by defendants to ,T. B. Olegg, the agent of plaintiff, of a check received by defendants from J. S. Thomas for rent of the land for the year next prior to the maturity of the $200 note held by him, which check it is averred was collected by plaintiff and converted to his own use and benefit, “well knowing that said cheek for $225.00 was put aside and specially deposited with said Olegg for the sole and exclusive purpose of paying said note No. 1 held by plaintiff, * * ⅜ and was more than sufficient for that purpose.”

Plaintiff replied to this answer and cross-action by a.general demurrer and general denial, and by special exceptions, the nature of which are immaterial in the determination of the questions presented by this appeal.

Thereafter defendants filed what is termed a supplemental petition and answer by which they seek to have the sale under the deed of trust and the conveyance of the land -by the trustee to plaintiff set aside, and to recover title and possession of the land.

This pleading is not in reply to any pleading of the plaintiff, but sets up an additional ground for relief and recovery of additional damages to those prayed for in defendants’ original cross-action, which could only be properly pleaded by an amended answer and cross-action filed with leave of the court. The record does not disclose that such leave was granted or requested.

. The pleadings of defendants are voluminous and redundant, and the attorney for plaintiff was thus induced to unnecessarily extend his pleadings. The record presented to this court is prepared in the most haphazard manner and with little regard for the rules relating thereto, and as a consequence is confusing, and incomplete in some particulars. We think, however, the foregoing statement of the plead *763 ings sufficiently presents the nature of the ease, and shows- the pertinency of the questions presented in appellants’ brief.

The ease was submitted to a jury upon special issues. The jury found in response to the first special issue submitted that notices of the trustee’s sale were posted in three public places, one of which was at the courthouse in' the city of Groveton, for 21 days prior to February 3, 1931.

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Bluebook (online)
74 S.W.2d 761, 1934 Tex. App. LEXIS 885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rushing-v-hall-texapp-1934.