Vansickle v. Watson

123 S.W. 112, 103 Tex. 37, 1909 Tex. LEXIS 115
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1909
DocketNo. 1983.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 123 S.W. 112 (Vansickle v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vansickle v. Watson, 123 S.W. 112, 103 Tex. 37, 1909 Tex. LEXIS 115 (Tex. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Williams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was brought by Henry Vansickle as administrator of the estate of M. W. Vansickle against R. J. and Pearl W. Thomas as makers of two promissory notes for $200 and $800, respectively, for part of the purchase money of a tract of 203 acres of land, and against J. B. Vesey, O. L. Davidson, J. W. Watson and Ras Watson, *40 to recover judgment for the amount of the notes against the makers and for foreclosure of the vendor’s lien on the land against all the defendants.

The First Rational Bank of Stephensville came into the ease as intervener.

A statement of the pleadings is unnecessary. The questions for decision and the relations of the parties to them will best be developed by a statement in chronological order of the transactions out of which they arose: (1) Sale by M. W. Vansickle to R. J. and Pearl W. Thomas of the land in controversy, January 34, 1903, in which the notes sued on were taken, as part of the consideration, and a lien on the land was reserved in the conveyance. (3) Sale of the land by the Thomases to J. B. Yesey. Before this, however, Yesey was indebted to the First Rational Bank of Stephensville, which held a mortgage on a tract of land which he was to convey to the Thomases in exchange for the land in controversy, and the deed was therefore executed by the Thomases to the Bank, to be held by it as security for Yese/s debt in the place of the land conveyed to them. This deed to the bank was dated February 4, 1903, expressed a cash consideration of $3037.50, and was made subject to the notes sued on. It was not recorded until April, 1904, and, in the transactions which followed, Yesey seems to have been treated as the holder of the title, the real conditions between him and the bank being known only to them. Yesey was known to the bank, but not to others, to be insolvent. It was the understanding between the bank and Yesey that the latter should sell the land and turn in the purchase money, in notes or otherwise, on his indebtedness. (3) On January 15, 1904, Yesey made two written contracts, one with J.' W. Watson and the other with J. A. White, in which he agreed to sell to each of them fifty acres of the land on exactly the same terms, viz.: five notes of each for $135 each, payable on the first days of Rovember, 1906, 1907, 1908, 1909 and 1910, and 'the making of specified improvements on each tract. Yesey was to execute deeds and the vendees were to execute the notes, and thése were to be deposited in bank (not the intervener), to be held in escrow until each vendee had cleared and put in cultivation at least twelve and one-half acres of the land bought by him, when the notes and the deeds were to be delivered to the vendor and vendees respectively. The vendees had already entered into possession and begun improving the land under the verbal understanding reached before the written contract was prepared, and they have held possession and continuously improved ever since. The deeds and notes were executed and deposited in bank as agreed. This trade was known to the bank, when made, and it agreed with Yesey to take the White and Watson notes in part payment on his indebtedness. (4) Yesey negotiated a sale of the 103 acres of the tract in controversy to O. L. Davidson, and, in order to carry it out, he paid to Yansickle the entire interest due on both the Thomas notes and one-half of the principal of the $800 note, and secured from Yansickle, April 34, 1904, a release of the 103 acres from the lien securing that note but not from that securing the $300 note. This release recites that the $800 note has been paid *41 in full and that the 103 acres was all the land conveyed by Van-sickle to Thomas “except two tracts of fifty acres each sold by J. B. Vesey, the present owner .of said tract, to one J. W. Watson and one White.” It was agreed between Vesey and Vansickle when this release was executed that it would not affect the lien on the other 100 acres. (5) On April 25, 1904, Vesey conveyed the 103 acres to O. L. Davidson in exchange for a stock of goods. This deed and the Vansickle release were recorded April 27, 1904. When he acquired his title Davidson knew of the purchases, possession and improvements of the two fifty acre tracts by White and Watson and that the notes, afterwards delivered by Vesey to the bank, were for the purchase money. (6) Watson and White having completed the improvements to be made as a condition precedent to the delivery of their notes to Vesey and of his deeds to them, the notes were delivered to him and by him sent to the hank and his deeds were delivered to the purchasers, all as previously agreed. This occurred about May, 18, 1904. At the time their notes were delivered, Watson and White knew that Davidson had bought the 103 acres from Vesey. There is no evidence that they knew of the release and the accompanying agreement between Vesey and Van-sickle. (7) The bank, in May, 1904, after being advised of Watson’s and White’s compliance with their contracts as to improvements, accepted their notes from Vesey as part payment of his indebtedness, in accordance with its previous agreement, and then delivered to him its deed for the -203 acres, dated February 1, 1904, which stipulated that Vesey assumed the Vansickle notes. (8) On November 7, 1904, White conveyed to defendant, Bas Watson, the fifty • acres bought from Vesey in consideration of $200 and Watson’s assumption of the five notes given to Vesey. The value of the land released by Van-sickle to Vesey was greater than the amount due on the notes of the Thomases held by the former, and either the land claimed by White and Watson or that claimed by Davidson is worth largely more than the balance due on the $200 note. This statement is made in harmony ■ with the findings of fact of the Court of Civil Appeals with the addition of some facts appearing without dispute. There is a conflict in the evidence as to some facts about which the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals is silent. Ho findings by the trial court appear in the record.

It was the contention of the Watsons and the hank that the release by Vansickle of the land conveyed to Davidson from the lien of the larger. note had the effect of releasing also the other tracts from that lien. This contention was denied by the District Court but sustained by the Court of Civil Appeals, and this holding of the latter- court is the occasion of the application for writ of error by plaintiff.

There was also a contention between the Watsons and the bank on one side and Davidson on the other as to whose lands should be first charged to pay the smaller note. The District Court held that the 100 acres owned by the Watsons and the 103 acres owned by Davidson should be subjected equally, and, by the judgment, charged upon each one-half of the amount due on that note, but the Court *42 of Civil Appeals held that, inasmuch as Vesey retained an interest in the land sold to. Watson and White to the extent of the unpaid purchase money, which exceeded the amount due on the smaller note, their' tracts should be subjected first. Of this holding the Watsons and the bank complain in their application for writ of error to this court.

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W. 112, 103 Tex. 37, 1909 Tex. LEXIS 115, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vansickle-v-watson-tex-1909.