Taylor v. American Trust & Savings Bank

265 S.W. 727
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 22, 1924
DocketNo. 1698.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 265 S.W. 727 (Taylor v. American Trust & Savings Bank) 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
Taylor v. American Trust & Savings Bank, 265 S.W. 727 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HIGGINS, J.

Appellants Taylor and wife filed this suit against the appellees, American Trust & Savings Bank of El Paso, Tex., the Liberty Trust & Savings Bank of Chicago, the El Paso Cattle Loan Company, and O. N. Cummings and Harry Moore, the sheriffs of Culberson and Hudspeth counties, respectively. A statement of the material allegations of the petition is as follows:

On October 2, 1923, the El Paso Cattle Loan Company, hereinafter referred to as the Loan Company, recovered an agreed judgment in the district court of Culberson county against the plaintiffs upon certain notes and foreclosing mortgages upon real and personal property, the judgment being for the sum of $76,399.80, with interest. The personalty thus foreclosed upon is described in the judgment as follows;

“Three thousand (3,000) or more head of cattle and horses described as follows: Fifty (50) or more head of steers, 2 years old and' up; two hundred (200) or more 1-year old steers; twelve hundred (1,200) or more cows; two hundred fifty (250) or more 2-year old heifers; three hundred twenty (320) or more 1-year old heifers; ninety (90) or more bulls;, six hundred fifty (650) or more calves; two hundred (200) or more stock horses; forty (40) or more work and saddle horses.
“The above described cattle and. horses are all branded and marked in one or more of the following brands and earmarks: -4- on left jaw; ~y on left side earmarked or in any position on any part of the animal. The above described cattle and horses are all located on, ranches in Culberson and Hudspeth counties, Texas.”

Contemporaneously with the rendition of such judgment, the plaintiff and the Loam Company entered into a written contract in which it was agreed (omitting immaterial provisions) — “between the plaintiff and defendant, D. Taylor, that execution of said judgment and order of sale on the same will be stayed on the following terms and conditions, only, to wit: That the said D. Taylor will remain in possession of said ranch and cattle, giving the same his undivided time, effort, and -attention, in connection with-any representative or inspector of the El Paso Cattle Loan Company who will have a right at all times to remain upon said ranch and look after the said cattle and ranch in the interest of the El Paso Cattle Loan Company; that said cattle and the stock horses will be gathered and sold at the best‘price obtainable (subject to the approval of the-El Paso Cattle Loan Company) on or before-the 1st day of January, 1924, the El Paso-Cattle Loan Company agreeing to assist in obtaining an advantageous sale for the same except that the said D. Taylor, shall have a right to retain 600 top cows, 30 bulls and 30-saddle -horses of his own selection, after sales aggregating $30,000 have been made. Subject to the above, it is contemplated that the sale of said cattle will' be for the mutual advantage of all and carried through in an orderly manner and sold at such times and under such conditions as will derive the-maximum amount. All proceeds of said sales will be payable to the El Paso Cattle Loan Company,, to be applied on said judgment, and the balance remaining.unpaid after the *729 sale of' all sucli cattle and horses, except those excepted herein, shall he due and payable within twelve months from this date and shall bear interest as provided for in' said judgment. * * * Until said debt and judgment is entirely liquidated the same shall stand secured by said chattel mortgage lien, deed of trust lien, and judgment lien as therein provided except as to the parcels of property sold under this contract and the proceeds derived therefrom applied thereon. * * * The El Paso Cattle Loan Company agrees to advance to the said D. Taylor,' as •his needs may require, sufficient expense money to attend to the running, gathering, selling, and shipping of said cattle from now until the 1st day of January, 1924, not ■exceeding the total of $1,000. Any amount so advanced as herein provided for said expenses shall be deducted from said sales and' otherwise stand secured by the said liens that now secure said debt and judgment.”

In accordance with the provisions of such contract the plaintiffs paid to the Loan Company more than $30,000 prior to the 1st day of January, 1924, and shortly thereafter paid a further sum of approximately $36,000, and plaintiffs cut out and retained 600 top cows, 30 bulls, and 30 saddle horses, which cows and bulls they still have, and 5 head of saddle horses; 25 head of the saddle horses having been sold and the proceeds paid to the Loan Company.. The Loan Company, on September 29, 1924, at the instance of the defendant banks, procured the issuance of an order of sale based upon said judgment, and the same was delivered to the sheriff of Culberson county and on October 3, 1924, said defendant banks procured the issuance of another order of sale which was delivered to the sheriff of Hudspeth county, in which orders of sale the recovery of such judgment is recited, and the payment thereon •of the sum of $66,819.40 and reciting a balance due of $19,224.95, and the sheriffs were directed to seize and sell the property described in the orders of sale in satisfaction of said balance due. The order of sale directed to the sheriff of Culberson county is attached as an exhibit to the petition and the property which the sheriff is therein directed to seize and sell follows the description contained in the judgment of foreclosure as quoted above.

The indorsement of the sheriff of Culberson county upon the writ directed to him shows that he levied the same “upon the following described personal property, described in the within order of sale, on the 29th day of September, A. D. 1924, at 11 o’clock a. m. being the property of defendants, situated and running upon the range of D. Taylor, in Culberson county, Tex.: About 50 head bulls; about 800 head cows and heifers; about 600 head calves; about 50 head stock horses; about 15 head work and saddle horses; about 20 head steers — all branded in one or more of the following brands: -†- left jaw; ~~y left side on cattle 7 left thigh on horses ■ earmarked calves unbranded but following cows.”

Such property has been advertised for sale by the sheriff of Culberson county on October 16, 1924, in satisfaction of said balance of $19,224.95. Said judgment was assigned by the Loan Company to the defendant banks. The sheriff of Hudspeth county is threatening to round up, levy upon, and advertise for sale, all of the property in Huds-peth county described in the order of sale, delivered to him. The petition avers that there is only $11,922.97 balance due upon the judgment, instead of $19,224.95, but the defendant banks are endeavoring to add to the judgment about $4,000 which has been advanced by the Loan Company, or the assignees to plaintiffs for the purpose of running the ranch and earing for the live stock thereon and there is not “a scratch of a pen” against the plaintiffs to show such indebtedness, except the $1,000 advance provided for in the above mentioned agreement, and that such $4,000 is no part of the judgment.

On June 21, 1924, the plaintiff D. Taylor was served with a writ of garnishment in a suit wherein the American Trust & Savings Bank is plaintiff, and W. D.

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Bluebook (online)
265 S.W. 727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-american-trust-savings-bank-texapp-1924.