Spring Woods Bank of Houston v. Lanier

601 S.W.2d 425, 1980 Tex. App. LEXIS 3425
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 15, 1980
Docket6162
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 601 S.W.2d 425 (Spring Woods Bank of Houston v. Lanier) 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
Spring Woods Bank of Houston v. Lanier, 601 S.W.2d 425, 1980 Tex. App. LEXIS 3425 (Tex. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

In February, 1972, Sidney Lanier, Jr. and his father, Sidney Lanier, Sr. formed a partnership known as L & L Investment Company by oral agreement. Later, Lanier, Jr. and Lanier, Sr. acquired title to lots 5, 6 and 7 of block 4 of Hyde Park Annex, a subdivision located in the City of Austin, Travis County, Texas. Lots 5, 6 and 7 were then re-subdivided into Lot A, Pecan Park Addition; and the correct legal description then became “Lot A, Pecan Park Addition, a re-subdivision of Lots 5, 6 and 7, Block 4, Hyde Park Annex, a subdivision in the city of Austin, Travis County, Texas, according to the map or plat of said re-subdivision recorded in Volume 61 at Page 41 of the plat records of Travis County, Texas.” Thereafter, in October, 1973, construction of a 25-unit apartment complex was completed on the property. On May 15, 1974, Lanier, Jr. and Lanier, Sr. reduced their oral partnership to a written agreement. The agreement provided that each owned a 50% interest in the business and property of the partnership. It also expressly prohibited either partner from selling or assigning his share or interest in the partnership “to any person or persons whatsoever” without the prior written consent of the other partner. In June, 1974, Lot A, Pecan Park Addition and the apartment improvements thereon were conveyed by Lanier, Jr. and Lanier, Sr. by warranty deed to the partnership, L & L Investment Company, and the deed was duly recorded during the same month. At all times since the conveyance, legal and record title to the property have been in L & L Investment Company. This property and its improvements and the personalty therein are the partnership’s only assets.

On July 1, 1976, Lanier, Sr. executed a promissory note to the Spring Woods Bank of Houston, Texas (hereinafter “Bank”) in the principal sum of $222,000.00. The proceeds of this loan were used mainly to pay off existing loans owed by Lanier, Sr. to Bank totaling approximately $150,000.00 and his debts to other creditors totaling about $60,000.00. To secure this loan, Lanier, Sr. simultaneously pledged certain business equipment and machinery to Bank, and he also signed two deeds of trust. One deed of trust purported to convey to “Don Stocking, Trustee, ... all of the following described real estate, to wit:

“Three (3) tracts of land located in Bastrop County, Texas, Tract No. 1, containing 43.38 acres, Tract No. 2 containing 21.48 acres, and Tract No. 3 containing 71.56 acres, each such tract in the Stephen F. Austin Survey Abstract No. 3, Bastrop County, Texas, each being more fully described by deed recorded in Deed Records, Bastrop County, Texas; this is all of the real property and estate owned by Mortgagor located in said Abstract and in said county.”

It is undisputed in the record that at the time of the execution of the deed of trust Lanier, Jr. and Lanier, Sr. each owned an undivided one-half interest in the three Bastrop County tracts conveyed in the trust deed. It is also undisputed that Don Stocking, named as trustee in the trust deeds, was Bank’s attorney. The other deed of trust, the one which generated this lawsuit, purported to convey to “Don Stocking, *427 Trustee, ... all of the following described real estate, to wit:

All of that certain lot and parcel of land known as Lot A in PECAN PARK ADDITION, Travis County, Texas, according to the map on plat thereof recorded in the Map Records of Travis County, Texas, together with all improvements located thereon; this is all of the real property and estate owned by Mortgagor located in said addition in said county.”

Both deeds of trust were duly recorded in July, 1976.

On behalf of Bank, the loan transaction with Lanier, Sr. was handled by Richard Hairston, Bank’s president. Lanier, Sr. testified that the note and the deeds of trust were executed in blank by him. This testimony was disputed by Hairston and by a witness who was Hairston’s secretary at the time of the transaction. Lanier, Sr. testified that when he executed the deed of trust forms in blank that he intended to convey only his interest in the Bastrop County properties; that he did not intend to convey the property owned by the partnership L & L Investment; and that he did not intend to give a deed of trust to Bank on his “partnership interest” in L & L Investment. This testimony was supported by his pleadings.

The evidentiary record also contains an instrument denominated “Financing Statement — Form UCC-1,” signed by Lanier, Sr. as “Debtor,” and signed by Hairston on behalf of Bank as “Secured Party,” which purports to pledge the following property to Bank:

“All of the Debtor’s right, title and interest in and to that certain partnership known as ‘L & L Investments,’ a partnership between S. E. Lanier, Sr., Houston, Texas, and S. E. Lanier, Jr., Austin, Texas.”

The instrument does not reflect the date of its execution. The only date shown on it is the handwritten date “September 2, 1977,” located in a box designated for showing the date of filing with the office of the Secretary of State. Hairston testified that this UCC-1 form was executed by Lanier, Sr. on July 1,1976, simultaneously with the execution of the note and the deeds of trust. His explanation for the delay of filing with the Secretary of State was simply oversight on the part of Bank. Lanier, Sr. denied that he executed the UCC-1 form in question. He testified that sometime prior to the transaction on July 1, 1976, he signed two UCC-1 forms in blank when W. R. “Bubba” Fitzpatrick, Bank’s vice-president with whom Lanier, Sr. was then dealing on transactions with Bank, “shoved them out to me one time and said, ‘Here. Sign these. They don’t mean a damned thing, but I’ve got to have them.’ I signed two of them in blank.” The implication of Lanier, Sr.’s testimony was that the UCC-1 form in question was one of the two signed by him in blank which was filled in by Bank and signed by Hairston sometime after July 1, 1976. Hairston testified that the reason he was dealing with Lanier, Sr. on July 1,1976, was because Fitzpatrick was no longer with Bank at that time.

Hairston acknowledged in his testimony that on July 1, 1976, Bank’s records on Lanier, Sr. reflected that L & L Investments was a partnership, that Lanier, Jr. and Lanier, Sr. were the partners, and that the partnership owned the apartment complex, land and improvements, in Austin, Texas, but he stated that he thought at the time that Lanier, Sr., in a telephone call to Lanier, Jr., had secured Lanier, Jr.’s oral consent for execution of the deed of trust on the partnership property. Lanier, Sr. and Lanier, Jr. denied any such telephone call; and they denied that Lanier, Jr. had agreed to the conveyance. Lanier, Jr. testified that he first learned of the deeds of trust on both the Bastrop County properties and the partnership property in December, 1976. He said that he then contacted Don Stocking at Bank both by telephone and by letter in December, 1976; that he told Stocking that the deed of trust on the partnership property was in violation of the partnership agreement; and that he sought without success to have Bank release the deed of trust on the partnership property.

*428 On March 15, 1977, Lanier, Jr. and Lanier, Sr. entered into an oral agreement under which Lanier, Sr. agreed to sell, and Lanier, Jr.

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Bluebook (online)
601 S.W.2d 425, 1980 Tex. App. LEXIS 3425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spring-woods-bank-of-houston-v-lanier-texapp-1980.