Rutland Sav. Bank v. Isbell

129 S.W.2d 505, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 719
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 18, 1939
DocketNo. 5307.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 129 S.W.2d 505 (Rutland Sav. Bank v. Isbell) 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
Rutland Sav. Bank v. Isbell, 129 S.W.2d 505, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 719 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Justice.

Rutland Savings Bank appeals from a judgment which denied it a recovery of the title and possession of 462 acres of land under count one of its pleadings and which allowed only a partial recovery under . count two, wherein appellant sought in .the alternative a judgment for the principal, interest and attorney’s fee due on four notes of $1,000 each and one of $19,000 with foreclosure of deed of trust lien on the land it sought to recover outright in count one. The’ judgment allowed appellant a recovery of $13,273.33 against some of the defendants with foreclosure of the lien on only an undivided ¼ interest. The cause was tried without'a jury. The court made no findings of fact and conclusions of, law as such, but did set out findings in. its judgment, as will appear in the course of this opinion. Named as defendants yere John ,D. Isbell and wife, Annie; .G. W. Isbell, a widower; Jim A. Isbell and wife, .Lizzie; G. W. Isbell, administrator of the estate of Sam R. Isbell, deceased; Edith Crabbe, surviving wife of Sam R. Isbell, and her present husband, J. M. Crabbe; Billie Wayne Is-bell and Sylvia L. Isbell, minors, and the only children of . Sam R. Isbell; G. W. Isbell, .guardian of the estate of said minors; Scott Title and Trust Company; and J. T. Tucker.

The litigation aróse out of the following transactions: — In 1914 R. Isbell and wife'conveyed to their four sons, Sam R., John D., Jim A., and G. W. Isbell, all unmarried, the land described in the pleadings. In this conveyance these sons assumed the payment of certain vendor’s lien notes theretofore executed by the father in part payment of the land which he had purchased from Tucker. They each acquired an undivided ¼ interest as their separate estate.

In 1915, in renewal and extension of the balance due on said notes, the sons, who were still single, executed a note for $7,-000 payable to Luther Reece, the then legal holder and owner of the said notes and liens securing them. They also executed a deed of trust on this land to better secure its payment. The sons executed a note for $15,000 payable to one W. H. Evans, and on March- 21, 1923, joined by their wives (having married in the meantime), executed a deed of trust on this land to secure the payment of this note. This $15,000 was used by them for machinery and labor costs in constructing a levee upon the land in controversy and other adjacent lands owned by them.

On October 11, 1923, in renewal and extension of above two notes, the sons, joined by their wives, executed a $23,000 note and a deed of trust on the land in controversy, payable to and in favor of D. H. Scott & Son. The Reece and the Evans notes, together with the respective liens, were assigned to D. H. Scott & Son. This $23,000 note was then assigned to appellant, for a valuable consideration, before its maturity. In connection with the last-mentioned transaction the sons executed five notes for the aggregate sum of $2,300, payable to the Scotts, which represented 2% interest on the loan and constituted the commission which the Scotts expected to make out of the loan transaction.

The $23,000 note assigned to appellant being unpaid at its maturity, January '21, 1929, was re-transferred to Scott & Son. On March 30,' 1930, Jim A. Isbell and John D. Isbell, joined by their wives, G. W. Isbell, then a widower, and G. W. Is-bell, guardian of the estate of Billie W. Isbell and Sylvia L. Isbell, minors, and Edith. Isbell, surviving wife of Sam R. Isbell, executed in renewal and as extension of the $23,000 note four notes of $1,000 each, and one note for $19,000 payable to Scott Title & Trust Company, being the notes sued upon in count ' two. They also executed a deed of trust on the land to secure these notes. The notes and lien were, immediately transferred to ap *507 -pellant. As part of the extension last mentioned, notes in the total sum of $1,050 were executed to cover 1% of the interest ■on 'above note, and a second lien deed of trust executed to secure same. The interest notes were retained by Scott Title & Trust Company. Default being' made in the payment of the 'interest note, the trustee sold said 1'and on February 6, 1934, under the provisions of this second 'lien ■deed of trust. The trust company bought the land at the sale and received a deed to same. Thereupon the land was rented by the trust company to the Isbells for the year 1934, on the rental terms of ⅛ 'of the grain and ¼ of the cotton and seed grown for that year.

The notes held by appellant also being in default, suit was filed by it in a Dallas county district court to recover the amount due thereon and for foreclosure of its first deed of trust lien. Appellant established its debt and lien in the Dallas court and took, a default judgment foreclosing its lien against only Scott Title & Trust Company and Tucker. This suit was reduced to judgment on May 7, 1935, which was subsequent to the date of the Trustee’s sale under the second lien deed of trust. Under order of sale issued out of the Dallas court the appellant purchased the land in controversy on August 6, 1935.

Under count one, wherein appellant sought recovery of the title and possession of the land, it pleaded and introduced in evidence the foregoing mentioned instruments and transactions. Appellant introduced in evidence an instrument in writing signed and acknowledged by ap-pellees in which they had agreed prior to February 6, 1934, that the trustee named in the second lien deed of trust of 1930 “may” execute the power of sale held on that date. Appellant contends that the sale by the trustee in February, 1934, was regular and valid and therefore the trustee’s deed conveyed the title out of appellees into the Scotts, the purchaser under the sale, subject to the debt and first lien then held by appellant. It is a fact as contended for by appellant there existed a valid lien against the land, regardless of the question of homestead, later herein discussed, to the extent of at least $7,702.50 and interest then due on the unpaid vendor’s lien 'purchase notes which had been renewed, extended and merged into the Scott transactions. To this extent the foreclosure on the second lien deed of trust was not void. Belcher Land Mortgage Co. v. Taylor, Tex.Com.App., 212 S.W. 647; Hampshire v. Greeves, 104 Tex. 620, 143 S.W. 147.

Appellant therefore asserts that by reason of foreclosure of its first lien against the Sco.tts in the Dallas district court and its purchase of the land under the order of sale, the deed executed in pursuance thereto conveyed the title out of the Scotts into appellant. Before the order of sale out of the Dallas court had been executed, appellees had instituted suit in the district court against the Scotts in trespass to try title. The record does not disclose when this suit was filed. On August 5, 1935, appellees obtained judgment by default against the Scotts for. title' and possession of the land. Appellant was not a party to the Red River court suit. Neither were appellees parties to the Dallas court judgment. The Scotts made default in each suit, including the present one. So we conclude that both judgments, including the instant one, foreclosed any claim of lien that the Scotts may have had against the land, but no. further.

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Related

Rutland Savings Bank v. Isbell
154 S.W.2d 442 (Texas Supreme Court, 1941)

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129 S.W.2d 505, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 719, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rutland-sav-bank-v-isbell-texapp-1939.