Stevens v. Bowie National Bank of Bowie

475 S.W.2d 314, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2428
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1971
DocketNo. 17268
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 475 S.W.2d 314 (Stevens v. Bowie National Bank of Bowie) 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
Stevens v. Bowie National Bank of Bowie, 475 S.W.2d 314, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2428 (Tex. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

OPINION

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

Bobby F. Stevens and W. John Allison, Jr., sued Bowie National Bank of Bowie, Texas, and its president, Franklin Wilson. Objective of the suit was to set aside a certain sale conducted by a trustee under Deed of Trust on April 6, 1971, for a money amount as damages because of expense to recover the property, and in the alternative to “remove cloud on title” by a “pretended” Trustee’s Sale. The defendants filed their motion for summary judgment on plaintiffs’ whole case. Following a hearing summary judgment was rendered for the defendants. Plaintiffs appealed.

Reversed and remanded.

Since the defendants’ brief is devoted to the contention that plaintiffs were without standing to bring and prosecute their suit, having no justiciable interest which could entitle them to relief at the hands of the courts, we will first discuss that question.

John Allison, Jr., is an attorney practicing in Dallas County, Texas. He was employed by Bobby F. Stevens to perform services for him, and in compensation Stevens, by warranty deed of March 23, 1971, conveyed title to certain realty in Montague County, Texas, to Allison. The realty was encumbered by Deed of Trust mortgage securing a note in the original amount of $4,750.00, which had by payments made thereon according to its pro[316]*316visions been reduced so that the approximate amount of $2,000.00 was the principal balance then owing. Said principal, with interest thereon as it accrued, was being retired by installment payments of $50.00 per month. Apparently the installments were payable on the 15th of each month since such was its description in the Deed of Trust. The note was not made part of the record. Proof as to dates or amounts of credits applied to the note was not made. The fact that it was ever in default was never settled for the only statement (that by a party at interest) that it was in default constituted a mere conclusion.

As part of the compensation payable by Stevens to Allison the former agreed to make subsequent payments at his own expense as they accrued and thereby to retire the entire mortgage balance. In other words Allison was to receive from Stevens the real estate without any assumption of the indebtedness for which it was mortgaged as security.

The indebtedness in question had existed for a number of years and was originally created by a predecessor in the chain of title. It had been in 1968 that Stevens acquired the property, pursuant to a transaction by which he had assumed the obligation of the note and Deed of Trust mortgage. Prior to March 2, 1971, the Bowie National Bank had acted as the collection agent for a Mr. Ford, the owner and holder of the note, but on that date it purchased the note and became its owner and holder in Ford’s stead. On March 8, 1971, Mr. Wilson, the president of the Bank, advised Stevens of such fact. However, Mr. Wilson did not tell Stevens that the Bank had elected to treat the note as in default, and that it intended that on that day there be a post of notices for a Trustee’s Sale of the property, or that such had already been posted.

Apparently Stevens owed a separate and additional indebtedness to the Bank. It could be inferred (but not on summary judgment) that the Bank received the $50.00 payment from Stevens in February, 1971, and applied it to the indebtedness mentioned rather than to the note secured by mortgage and Deed of Trust. The same might be said of Stevens’ March payment, the same day that he was told that the Bank had purchased the note from Ford. In any event, by the Bank’s records, it was made to appear that such note was in default; that by the provisions of the Deed of Trust the Bank, pursuant to its purchase of the note, was lawfully entitled to have the property posted for sale by the trustee and disposed of at a Trustee’s Sale. Such a sale did occur on April 6, 1971. The Bank purchased the property from the Trustee for the amount it treated as the principal balance owing.

On April 6, 1971, the very day of the Trustee’s Sale, Stevens learned of its occurrence. He went to the Bank and to Wilson immediately. He learned of what he claims to have been the Bank’s misapplication of those payments made by him with the intention that they be credited on the note, of which intention he claims the Bank was aware when the payments were made in February and March. He informed Allison. On April 13, 1971, while the Bank still held such title as was received by the deed from the trustee, the plaintiffs filed suit.

(Under our present laws it is possible for an interested party to lose his rights in property without having had any true chance to protect his interest. Such condition exists because of absence of effective notice of sales under powers granted in many Deeds of Trust. This is a legislative rather than a judicial problem, and recently there have been bills introduced directed thereto, though none have passed. An excellent article upon the situation appears in Texas Law Review, Vol. 49, No. 6 (November, 1971) by David P. Cotellesse, entitled “Nonjudicial Foreclosure Under a Deed of Trust: Some Problems of Notice”.)

[317]*317Having warranted the title to the property which was the subject of foreclosure, though he had divested himself of the title by his transfer to Allison, Stevens had a justiciable interest entitling him to bring and maintain his suit. Of course, Stevens was injuriously affected for other reasons. See, generally, 39 Am.Jur., p. 859, “Parties”, Sec. 10, “Interest to Support Suit”; 39 Tex.Jur.2d, p. 217, “Mortgages and Trust Deeds”, Sec. 157, “Who may attack sale”.

Pleading of the cause of action by both Stevens and Allison might appear to be founded upon fraud rather than premised upon accident or mistake on the part of the Bank in application of the payment(s) delivered for the purpose of credit upon the note in question. The defendants apparently assert some benefit of the theory under which they assert plaintiff’s cause of action to have been founded by their claim of a want of right to bring suit upon the ground of fraud. We need not discuss. Reference may be made to 25 Tex. Jur.2d, p. 665, et seq., “Fraud and Deceit”, Sec. 35, “Concealment”.

It is apparent from the affidavits appended to the Response to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment that the pleadings might be readily amended for purposes of a trial on the merits on grounds of accident or mistake. Thereunder would be no question of plaintiff’s right to maintain suit. If our memory is accurate counsel so conceded at time of argument. In summary judgment proceedings the Court will look “through and beyond the pleadings” in the determination of the existence of a litigable controversy. Ordinarily, therefore, the state of the pleadings at time of the hearing does not have the significance which would obtain at the time of a trial on the merits and in the present instance we attach no particular importance to them. Therefore, we need not greatly concern ourselves with the defendants’ contentions that Stevens has no justiciable interest in prosecution of the suit merely because of the state of the pleadings. 4 McDonald’s Texas Civil Practice, “Judgments”, Sec. 17.26.5, “Summary Judgment - (New)— —(IV) Determination of Motion on Matters Outside Pleading”; Womack v. Allstate Insurance Company, 156 Tex. 467, 296 S.W.2d 233, 237 (1956).

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475 S.W.2d 314, 1971 Tex. App. LEXIS 2428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-bowie-national-bank-of-bowie-texapp-1971.