Scott v. Crawford

41 S.W. 697, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 477, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 256
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 26, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 41 S.W. 697 (Scott v. Crawford) 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
Scott v. Crawford, 41 S.W. 697, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 477, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 256 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

HUNTER,

Associate Justice. — In this case one of the District Courts of Tarrant County, at the instance of appellees, who held a large majority of the capital stock of the Clark & Plumb Company, a Texas corporation, with a capital stock of $750,000, had placed all the property of the corporation in the hands of a receiver. Appellees alleged that the corporation was insolvent; that its assets consisted of 50,000 acres of land tying in Clay and Archer counties, Texas, and promissory notes amounting at their face value to $46,000, which were hypothecated and not under its control; that the lands were worth $8 per acre.

The averments of the petition were sufficient to give the court jurisdiction to appoint the receiver, and on January 35, 1896, the petition was filed, and William Capps was appointed receiver of all the property belonging to the corporation, and the lands were by proper order of the court placed in his possession on that day. These lands in November, 1890, belonged to Dorr Clark and D. C. Plumb, who were partners and held the same as tenants in common; and on the 36th day of said month they conveyed the same in trust to Albert R. Shattuek, trustee for Albert L. Richardson, to secure said Richardson in the payment of $185,000, as evidenced by four promissory notes executed by said Clark and Plumb, *478 payable to. said Richardson, dated as above. These notes were all to mature on January 1, 1896, and bore interest at the rate of 12 per cent per annum after maturity until paid; and, for the payment of the interest thereon accruing before maturity- of the principal notes, twenty interest coupon notes were given, under the same date, to become due on January 1, 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895, and 1896, respectively, conditioned that, if default he made in the payment of any of said interest coupons, then the holder and owner of said notes could declare the principal sum due and payable at once, without notice to the makers, and further providing that in that event, or upon maturity of the principal notés, the'trustee, Shattuck, should have power, at the request of the owner or holder of said notes, or any one interested therein, to sell said property at the courthouse door in Clay County, Texas, at public auction, to the 'highest bidder for cash, thirty days’ previous notice of the time,'place, and terms of such salej and the property to be sold, having been first given in some daily or weekly newspaper published in Clay County, Texas, by at least four insertions, and also a notice thereof for twenty days prior to day of sale to be given in the counties of Archer and Clay in the manner provided for judicial sales by the laws of the State of Texas, the date of sale to be the first Tuesday of some month, and to apply the proceeds to the payment of said debt, and to make a deed or deeds- to the purchaser or purchasers, ancl that the recitals therein should be prima facie evidence of the truth of the statements therein made; further providing that should the trustee at any time believe said property, or any part thereof, had become endangered as a security for the indebtedness, he should have the right to take possession of the same and hold it until said indebtedness should be paid, or until said property should be sold as aforesaid. But it was provided that nothing contained in the deed of trust should be construed as requiring the trustee to take or have actual possession of any of said property before being authorized to sell the same as therein provided. Substitution of trustee was provided "for, to be made in writing; the substitute to have all the rights, title, and powers therein conferred on Shattuck. It was further provided that, when sale should be made by the trustee, the party in possession at the time should become the tenant at will of the purchaser, and that he should remove from the premises on ten days’ nótice, and pay reasonable rents to the purchaser. Afterwards, on December 15, 1891, Dorr Clark and D. C. Plumb conveyed all of said lands to the Clark and Plumb Company, the corporation above referred to.

These notes, while payable to Albert L. Richardson, in fact belonged to the British-American Mortgage Company; and after they wére all matured, and default had been made in the payment thereof, as well as a large amount of the interest, W. W. Mangum was duly appointed substitute trustee, Shattuck failing or refusing to act.' On the first Tuesday in April, 1896, the said Mangum, as trustee, after advertising the same as required by the deed of trust, and in all respects complying therewith, sold said lands as provided for in said deed of trust, when Henry James *479 Scott, the appellant herein, became the purchaser at the price and sum of $112,000, and the said trustee' conveyed the same to him by deed duly executed and delivered on that day. On June 15, 1896, the said Scott intervened in this cause; and prayed that the court deliver the lands to him, or that, if his trustee’s sale was held invalid, the court permit said trustee to again sell said lands.

Upon this petition of intervention the court appointed John W. Wray master in chancery in said cause, and the matters in controversy between the plaintiffs and intervener, Scott, were referred to him, to take evidence and report his' conclusions of fact and of law to the court; and after full hearing the master reported, in substance, among others, the following facts:

On the day of the 'trustee’s sale, April 7, 1896, Clark and Plumb were indebted to. Henry James Scott in the sum of $40,000, and to secure this indebtedness a second mortgage had been given him on the ,land.in question before they conveyed the same to the Clark & Plumb Company. This mortgage was second only to the mortgage or deed of trust held bv the British-American Mortgage Company, Limited. On the same day— April 7, 1896—Clark & Plumb were indebted to the British-American Mortgage Company, Limited, in the sum of $155,206, the same being the balance due on the noté executed to Albert L. Richardson, and said note was secured as aforesaid.

Intervener Scott, before the date of the sale — April 7, 1896—had agreed to purchase said debt from the said British.-American. Company, and pay the full face value thereof. • He had paid ,$25,000 in cash, and after the sale, and before his intervention herein, had paid the balance. The sale made by the trustee was fairly and legally made, and regularly and honestly conducted, and the amount due to.Scott, $40,000, and that due to the British-American Company, $155,206, was honest and bona fide indebtedness, and was all due; and the dealings between Scott and the mortgage company were made in good faith with the sole purpose on the part of Scott to save the $40,000 due to him. The trustee had conveyed the lands to Scott, and he was entitled to the possession thereof. Clark and Plumb had conveyed the lands to the Clark & Plumb Company after mortgaging them to the'said British-American Company and to said Scott, and the Clark & Plumb Company held them subject to these two mortgages. The dash market value of the lands on April 7, 1896, was $2 per acre.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W. 697, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 477, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-crawford-texapp-1897.