Temple Trust Co. v. Logan

82 S.W.2d 1017, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 515
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 1935
DocketNo. 4429.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 82 S.W.2d 1017 (Temple Trust Co. v. Logan) 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
Temple Trust Co. v. Logan, 82 S.W.2d 1017, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 515 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

MARTIN, Justice.

We interpret appellees’ trial pleadings as a suit primarily for removal of cloud from title to real estate in Lubbock county, belonging to them, against appellants, who pretend and assert that a lien of record in Lubbock county in their favor is a valid and subsisting one, when in truth such lien is invalid and has no actual legal existence.

Appellees, in substance and effect, allege : The execution by them of a deed of trust on land, dated June 9, 1925, to secure Temple Trust Company for a loan by it to them of $2,700; the execution of a series of notes contemporaneously with said trust deed, aggregating $3,000, the last of which was for the sum of $1,100, due July 1, 1935, and which is the only one directly involved herein; facts in great detail, which show the usurious character of said loan, but which we omit for the sake of brevity, since the contract was conclusively proven to be usurious and is tacitly admitted to be so by appellants; the payment throttgh the years of all of the principal of all of said series of notes except the $1,100 one; the payment of usurious interest yearly from January 1, 1926, to January, 1934, inclusive, on said contract, which aggregated $1,305.50; that applying this last-mentioned sum to the $1,100 note more than paid it; allegation of the collection of such usurious interest by both appellants, and prayed for “ * * * judgment against the defendants and each of them, cancelling the aforesaid deed of trust lien on the property herein described and the note of $1100.00 and other evidences of the debt described, that plaintiffs’ land and title therein be in all things quieted and every cloud by reason of said deed of trust removed, * * * and for such other and further relief, special and general, in law and in equity, -to which they may show themselves justly entitled.”

*1018 There was also a penalty prayed for, but recovery of this was denied, and this phase of the case is not involved here.

Appellants filed pleas in abatement, which in various ways raised the question that appellees’ suit should be abated because permission to sue was not obtained-from the federal court appointing H. C. Glenn receiver.

Answer was filed by appellant Glenn only. This consisted of special exceptions hereafter disposed of, a general denial, and a special plea admitting the execution and delivery of the series of notes described in appellees’ pleadings, and then continued: “That said nine notes described in plaintiff’s petition were sold and endorsed by Temple Trust Company to various and sundry investors long prior to the time this defendant was appointed receiver for said corporation, and none of said notes has ever been a part of the Receivership assets.”

The pleas of abatement were heard by the trial court along with the case on its merits. These were overruled and judgment entered for appellees as prayed for.

The issues here are succinctly stated by appellants in their brief, which we copy:

“The appellants can not contend that the loan contract was not usurious. The only contentions presented by these appellants in this Court are:
“First, that the plea in abatement of H. C. Glenn, as Receiver for Temple Trust Company, to the cause of action of the ap-pellees should have been sustained, because the appellees did not obtain permission of the Federal Court' appointing H. C. Glenn Receiver to sue him as Receiver;
“Second, that judgment should not have been rendered against Temple Trust Company and H. C. Glenn, as Receiver for Temple Trust Company, cancelling the $1,-100.00 note and lien securing payment of same, because it was not shown that either Temple Trust Company or its Receiver owned said note and lien securing payment of same and because it was alleged by the Receiver that said note and lien had never been any part of the assets of the receivership estate.”

The case is disposed of on these alone, and no other question is considered or impliedly decided.

The contentions above may be conceded to be sound as abstract legal propositions, but any error in overruling them was, in our opinion, harmless under the particular and rather unusual facts found here.

This is the picture which backgrounds the above contentions:

Appellant, the Temple Trust Company, made a concededly usurious loan, void as to all interest from its inception. This loan was secured by a trust deed, placed of record in Lubbock county, where appel-lees’ real estate was situated, and from the date of .its filing constituted a cloud on appellees’ title to the extent of all interest secured by same. ’ This filing gave to-appellees a cause of action for removal of such cloud from their title, triable in Lubbock county. Great Southern Life Ins. Co. v. Williams (Tex. Civ. App.) 78 S. W. (2d) 1063.

Appellees paid all the principal except $1,100, and paid to said Temple Trust Company before any receivership more than $1,200 usurious interest, which the law will apply to the payment of said $1,100-principal. The said note- for $1,100 has long since been legally paid, and the lien,, which is but an incident of the debt, has also been in law extinguished. This was the situation when a. receiver was appointed for said company. Though the receiver avers said note was transferred to-others prior to the receivership and had never been a part of the assets of said company in his possession, still he continued'to demand and to receive usurious interest, though such note was not in his possession, was not the property of the receiver or of said company, and had been legally paid. His conduct amounted to the pretense that an invalid lien was a valid one,, though at that time the note for which . such lien was given had been paid and he did not even own same as receiver and never had. His plea of abatement contains no averment that title or possession of such note passed to him as receiver, and his answer contains the positive allegation that such note was never a part of the “receivership assets.’-’ Why then should this court dismiss a case because appellees have not secured permission from a federal court to litigate the validity of a note, which admittedly has never been brought within the jurisdiction of such court and over which it can exercise no authority whatever? The law does not require a vain and useless thing to be done. The rule invoked by appellants is founded in the main upon the necessity of preventing *1019 confusion and dissipation of the assets of a receivership by litigation in numerous and different courts over property in the custody of the court first acquiring jurisdiction and possession of it through its receiver. As said by the United States Supreme Court: “Where a court of competent jurisdiction has, by appropriate proceedings, taken property into its possession through its officers, the property is thereby withdrawn from the jurisdiction of all other courts. * * * The court which first acquired jurisdiction through possession of the property is vested, while it holds possession, with the power to hear and determine all controversies relating thereto. It has the right, while continuing to exercise its prior jurisdiction, to determine for itself how far it will permit any other court to interfere with such possession and jurisdiction.” Lion Bonding & S, Co. v.

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82 S.W.2d 1017, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/temple-trust-co-v-logan-texapp-1935.