Smith v. Magalis

13 S.W.2d 477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 8, 1928
DocketNo. 10221.
StatusPublished

This text of 13 S.W.2d 477 (Smith v. Magalis) 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
Smith v. Magalis, 13 S.W.2d 477 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

This suit was instituted in the court below by Ben W. Smith, plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, against B. E. Magalis, defendant in error, as defendant; therefore the parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant.

The plaintiff declared upon a promissory note executed by the defendant, payable to the order of one G. E. Spera, and secured by a vendor’s lien upon certain lots located in the city of Dallas, described in said petition. The plaintiff appropriately alleged that he was the holder of said note in due course of trade for value, and the actual bona fide holder and owner thereof; that it was due and unpaid; that he had been compelled to place said note in the hands of an attorney to enforce the collection thereof, and had com tracted to pay said attorney the attorney fee stipulated for in said note. It was further alleged that the lien to secure said note had been exhausted, in that the land on which said lien had been created liad been sold under a prior lien foreclosure, and therefore no foreclosure of lien was sought.

• Defendant, by his answer, pleaded general denial, that the note sued upon was executed by him purely as an accommodation for one G. E. Spera, the payee named in said note, and alleged certain acts of fraud as having been committed by one H. G. Wilson and said Spera in procuring the execution of said note by defendant, also charged plaintiff with knowledge of such fraudulent conduct, and further alleged that plaintiff and said Spera and Wilson acted in collusion to perpetrate a fraud against defendant, and also alleged that plaintiff acted in collusion with other parties to defraud him, and further alleged that plaintiff knew of the facts surrounding the transactions leading up to and including the execution of the note sued upon when he bought same, and that plaintiff did not pay Spera a valuable consideration, and that plaintiff acquired no title because of his knowledge of the nature of the transaction, that, prior to plaintiff’s purchase of the note,' he employed an attorney to look into the matter for him, to wit, one Boss M. Scott, and that Boss M. Scott was fully informed as to the nature of the transaction, namely, that it *478 was purely an accommodation- transaction, and that it was so understood between all of the parties. He further alleged that the acknowledgment of Spera’s wife to the deed was not taken in the manner required by law. Defendant, in aid of his charges of fraud, pleaded the fraudulent acts alleged by Spera in his petition filed against plaintiff and one H. C. Wilson to cancel the note sued upon and the deed of trust executed by Spera to Magalis and likewise pleaded the allegations of fraud contained in the petition filed by plaintiff against Ross M. Scott to recover from said Scott damages claimed to have been sustained by plaintiff on account of certain representations alleged to have been made by Scott to plaintiff as to the value of the land the debts secured by liens thereon against same, which induced him to purchase the note. Under the view we take of the case, it is not necessary to further notice the pleadings filed in said suits, as the allegations of said respective petitions deal with matters that occurred after plaintiff became a holder in due course of the note sued upon, and no evidence was introduced in support of same.

After the introduction of evidence had closed, plaintiff requested the court to instruct the jury as follows: “You will return a verdict for the plaintiff, Ben W. Smith, against the defendant, R. E. Magalis, for the sum of $6,000.00, being .the amount of principal, interest and attorney fees of the note sued upon.”

This peremptory instruction was refused, to which action of the court plaintiff duly reserved his exception, and by further proceedings is properly before us for review and revision.

Following are the special issues submitted and answers made thereto by the jury:

(1) Was Ross M. Scott acting for or on behalf of the plaintiff in the purchase of the note sued on? Answer: “Yes.”

(2) Was Ross M. Scott authorized to act for or on behalf of the plaintiff in the purchase of the note sued on? Answer: “Yes.”

Plaintiff in due time and form filed his motion for judgment to be rendered in his favor on said verdict. This motion was overruled and judgment rendered against the plaintiff, denying him the right of recovery on his cause of action.

If, under all of the facts established by the evidence, plaintiff was a purchaser in due course of trade of the note sued upon, this cause should not have been submitted to the jury, but to the contrary plaintiff’s request for an instructed verdict in his favor should .have been granted.

We find the following to be all of the material facts established by the evidence introduced upon the trial of this cause that was properly admissible:

■ On the 23d day of July, 1921, the note for $3,500 sued upon was executed by defendant to one G. E. Spera as accommodation paper. Defendant was not indebted to said Spera in any sum and was not to receive any personal benefit on account of the execution of the note. Defendant had a friendly interest in Spera, and at his request executed the note to enable Spera to obtain money thereon with which to complete his residence then being constructed on exempt real estate. In reference to the circumstances surrounding the execution of the note, defendant testified as follows: “Mr. Spera invited me over to see his new home quite a number of times. I went over there several times. He did not mention to me helping him in any way the first time I saw the home, but two or three months later, when the house was almost completed, he said that he was short of money, and that he had made a first lien on the place and he did not have enough money to complete the place, and he needed extra money. He said he needed $3,500.00 and asked me if he could deed this property to me and I make a note for $3,500.00, which would be a second lien against the property; then he could sell this note and get this $3,500.00. He told me at the time that there was $11,000.00 against this house and I believed that statement. I considered the property worth somewhere around $25,000.00 or $30,000.00, and felt perfectly safe in signing this note.”

Spera and wife, on the 23d day of July, 1921, executed their general warranty deed, purporting to convey to Magalis lots Nos. 8, 9, and 6 and 50 feet off of the north side of lot No. 5, in block 3020-39, as shown by the official map of the city of Dallas. Foreclosure of lien was not sought on the property so conveyed. The note sued upon was described in said deed as part of the purchase money contracted to be paid by said defendant for the tract of land described in said deed and note secured by the vendor’s lien on the property described in said deed. On the 3d day of August, 1921, defendant executed a deed of trust to one E. A. Gillam, as trustee, conveying to said trustee in trust the tract of land described in the deed from Spera and wife to defendant to secure Spera in the payment of said note. Said deed of trust was duly acknowledged and filed for record with the county clerk of Dallas county on the 3d day of August, 1921. It was agreed between Spera and defendant that defendant would deed the property back to Spera as soon as the loan of money was obtained on the $3,-500 note. Defefidant knew that the property conveyed to him as security for said note was Spera’s homestead.

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W.2d 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-magalis-texapp-1928.