Texas Land & Mortgage Co. v. Worsham

23 S.W. 938, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 245, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 582
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 15, 1893
DocketNo. 80.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 23 S.W. 938 (Texas Land & Mortgage Co. v. Worsham) 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
Texas Land & Mortgage Co. v. Worsham, 23 S.W. 938, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 245, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 582 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This is a suit brought by appellant to enjoin the appellees, W. B. Worsham and G. C. Wright, the sheriff of Clay County, from the sale of lands lying in Clay County, under an order of sale issued from the District Court of Gonzales County on a judgment rendered in said court on January 9, 1886, in favor of T. M. Harwood, against A. L. Butler, -for $1315.17, with a foreclosure of a vendor’s lien on said land, and directing it sold in satisfaction of said judgment. The injunction was prayed for upon the ground that the judgment had been satisfied, and that a sale of the land in pursuance of said order would past a cloud upon appellant’s title to the same.

The complainant in its bill prayed for a perpetual injunction restraining the sale, and for a cancellation of said judgment. The facts upon which complainant relied for equitable relief will be found in our conclusions of fact. A temporary writ of injunction was granted, which, upon a final hearing before the court without a jury, was dissolved, and the case dismissed, from which decree this appeal is prosecuted.

Conclusions of Fact. — From an examination of the statement of facts contained in the record, we find the conclusions of fact of the court below correct, and here adopt them as our own. They are as follows, viz.:

1. This suit was brought to restrain the sale of lands lying in Clay County, which had been advertised by the sheriff of Clay County, under an order of sale issued from the District Court of Gonzales County, on a judgment of said court rendered in the case of T. M. Marwood v. A. L. Butler, January 9, 1886, foreclosing a vendor’s lien on said land, directing that the land be sold to satisfy a purchase money note, which, with interest, amounted at the date of the judgment to the sum of $1315.17. The order of sale under which the land was advertised to be sold, and which is here sought to be restrained by injunction, was issued in the name of W. B. Worsham, assignee of T. M. Harwood, on the 26th day of October, 1888.

2. That prior to this, to-wit, on April 6, 1886, Harwood had assigned a first order of sale to J. W. T. Gray, receiving therefor the full amount due on his judgment, and transferred the judgment to said Gray on the back of the order of sale, and at the same time executed to Gray a written transfer of the judgment on another sheet of paper.

3. That afterwards, to-wit, on September 12, 1888, Gray transferred in writing, on the back of the original order of sale, and under the endorsement of Harwood to him, by quitclaim, for a recited valuable con *247 sideration, all his right, title, and interest to the judgment in question to W. B. Worsham, the defendant herein, and at the same time executed a formal written transfer of all his right, title, and interest in said judgment on a separate paper, which was acknowledged for record, to the said W. B. Worsham.

4. That it was after this transfer that Worsham - procured the second order of sale, and had the same placed in the hands of the sheriff, who advertised the land for sale, and was proceeding to execute it, when the injunction in this case was granted by Judge Aldridge of the Dallas District, November 27, 1888, and the sale prevented.

5. That the Henrietta National Bank furnished the money to Butler to pay the Harwood judgment, and that Gray was the cashier of that bank, and the transfer of the judgment was made to him as a trustee for the bank. That Butler had procured Worsham to agree verbally to become his surety to the bank for the money advanced by it to pay off said judgment, and that the transfer to Gray was for the purpose of first protecting the bank until the note of Butler was paid, and secondly, if Worsham paid it, then to protect him in such payment, the note being executed by Butler alone to the bank; Worsham not being present when the transaction took place, but was represented in the transaction by his agent, W. B. Stickney.

6. That W. B. Stickney, Esq., was at the time, and all during the transactions connected with this judgment and the settlement of the matters of Butler with the Henrietta Land and Cattle Company and W. B. Worsham, the confidential agent and adviser of the parties, and acted for Worsham and Butler at the time the bank loaned the money to pay Harwood.

7. That from the testimony showing the transactions between Butler, Worsham, the Henrietta Land and Cattle Company, and the Henrietta National Bank, that W. B. Worsham, the defendant herein, paid the said bank the money it had loaned the said Butler to pay T. M. Harwood for the judgment when Butler’s note became due, May 6, 1886, according to his verbal promise to the bank; and that afterwards Butler, or the Henrietta Land and Cattle Company, of which he was president, and which, after its incorporation, had title to the lands in suit, subject to the vend- or’s liens and judgments, paid back to said Worsham the said money during the multitude of transactions which seem to have taken place between them, and that Wellesley, the agent of the plaintiff, had been so informed by Stickney, the agent of Worsham, and acted upon said information as if it were true in advancing money on said land as security.

8. That the land in question was conveyed by deed from Harwood to Butler, which was regularly recorded in Clay County, in which the vendor’s lien was reserved to secure the payment of two notes representing the balance of the purchase money. The first of said notes had been paid *248 "by Butler before the suit to foreclose the second had been filed in Gonzales County. And it is further found, that at the time of this suit there was nothing of record in Clay County showing that either of the notes mentioned in said deed had been paid, or of the judgment in Gonzales County foreclosing the vendor’s lien on the land based on the nonpayment of the last note, except a release from T. M. Harwood, dated December 8, 1886, recorded December 13, 1886, acknowledging the payment of the notes and giving to Butler a quitclaim for all his right, title, and interest by virtue of his vendor’s lien, in which nothing is said of the judgment in Gonzales.

9. That on March 1, 1884, A. L. Butler conveyed an undivided three-fourths interest in said land in suit to J. H. Butler, W. D. Butler, and B. F. Denson; and on December 3, 1884, the said A. L., J. H., and W. D. Butler and B. F. Denson conveyed the said tracts in suit, in connection with a large body of other lands owned by them, to the Henrietta Land and Cattle Company, a Texas corporation, of which grantors were the stockholders, and W. D. Butler president, by which transaction the said Henrietta Land and Cattle Company became the owner of the lands in suit, subject to the vendor’s lien in favor of Harwood. That on the 30th day of June, 1886, the said Henrietta Land and Cattle Company conveyed the said lands in controversy to C. E. Wellesley, as trustee for the plaintiff, the Texas Land and Mortgage Company, Limited, to secure a loan of $10,000, which was to be a first lien on the land in suit and a second lien on other lands already mortgaged to plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
23 S.W. 938, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 245, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-land-mortgage-co-v-worsham-texapp-1893.