Wade & Hughes v. Odle

54 S.W. 786, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 656, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 443
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 25, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 54 S.W. 786 (Wade & Hughes v. Odle) 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
Wade & Hughes v. Odle, 54 S.W. 786, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 656, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 443 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

HUNTER, Associate Justice.

This suit of trespass to try title was brought by appellants to recover of H. O. Odie lot No. 3 and 18 inches off the north side of lot No. 2, on which stands the stone building-known as Odle Brothers’ storehouse property, in block 4 of the city of Meridian. For opinion on former appeal, see 46 Southwestern Reporter, 887, 47 Southwestern Reporter, 407.

Both parties claim title under Odie Brothers, a firm ¡of merchants composed of John S. Odie and J. W. Odle, as common source. Appellants claim through a judgment against Odle Bros., execution sale, and constable’s deed to the National Wall Paper Company, and from said wall paper company to appellants; while appellee H. O. Odle claims through a deed of trust from Odle Bros, to him and Adams as trustees for the benefit of certain creditors, and sale made thereunder, with deed from the trustees to Estes, and deed from Estes to John Odle, Sr., and one from John Odle, Sr., to H. C. Odle.

*657 The case was tried by a jury, who found in favor of defendants, and judgment was entered according^, and from that judgment this appeal is taken.

The facts disclosed by the record show a title in appellants, sufficient to entitle them to recover the premises sued for, if in addition thereto they established that the deed of trust or mortgage dated June 24, 1896, from Odle Brothers to Adams and Odle, trustees, for the benefit of creditors, was fraudulent and void; otherwise they were not entitled to recover.

This deed of trust or mortgage conveyed the property in controversy to the trustees aforesaid in the following terms: “All that certain tract, lot, or parcel of land situated in the city of Meridian, in said State and county, described as lot No. 3, in block No. 4, as shown by the plat of said city on record in the office of the county clerk of said county, and known as the Odle Bros/ storehouse and propertjy together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments, and appurtenances to the same belonging, incident, or anywise appertaining.” It was given to secure six preferred creditors whose debts aggregated $1685, among which was the D. O. Barton debt of $350, and that of John Odle, Sr., for $100, these being individual debts due from J. W. Odle; also the J. J. Lumpkin debt of $150, 'which was an individual indebtedness due from John S. Odle, and for neither of these three debts was the firm of Odle Bros, in any way bound.

These six creditors were to be paid in full before anything should be paid to eight other creditors whose debts aggregated $1410.80, all of whom were partnership creditors, and among them the National Wall Paper Company, whose debt was $175.04. These eight partnership creditors were to be paid pro rata after the preferred six were paid in full. It was provided that in the event Odle Bros, did not pay these debts at maturity, then the trustees might, at the request of said creditors or either of them, sell said property for cash at public auction at the courthouse door, after giving notice as required by statute, and that sale should be made within six months after request by any creditor after Odle Bros, failed to pay at maturity of debt. It was also provided that if the trustees should conclude that it would be for the best interests of the creditors, they might, instead of selling as provided above, bring suit in the District Court of Bosque County to foreclose the lien of this deed of trust, said suit to be brought to the first term of said court after request made by any of said creditors for sale as provided for. This mortgage was duly acknowledged and recorded on June 24, 1896.

The evidence is conflicting as to whether it was made with intent to hinder, delay, and defraud creditors, but sufficient to support a finding either way. The property was worth from $2000 to $2500, and was all that the firm or the members thereof had except exempt property. The debts, secured aggregated $3095.80, and were all that they owed, both partnership and individual. The firm was insolvent.

*658 The following preferred creditors accepted the mortgage: First Rational Bank of Meridian, $800 (H. C. Odie, trustee, being surety for this debt); W. M. Johnson, $175, and H. C. Hughes, $110. Of the second class the following accepted: G. T. Smith & Co., $19.65; Chas. E. Lewis & Co., $49.56. It is not shown that any of these creditors had notice of any fraudulent intent of Odie Bros, in making said mortgage, but two of them, the bank and Johnson, prove that they had no such notice or knowledge.

On December 9, 1896, H. O. Hughes, one of the accepting creditors, requested the trustees to sell the property, and they did sell it on January 5, 1897. H. C. Hughes’ claim was in fact for only $29.80, while the mortgage put his claim at $110, but this seems to have been an innocent mistake. At the sale by the trustees J. H. Estes bid in the property at $500. This was done under an agreement with H. C. Odie, one- of the trustees, who agreed with Estes to accept his check for the price of the property and protect it. The check was accepted by H. O. Odie and torn up, but H. C. Odie paid that amount and more to the accepting creditors on their debts.

Estes soon afterwards, on January 8, 1897, conveyed the land tto John Odie, Sr., for an expressed consideration of $1500, but in fact nothing was paid by said Odíe to said Estes, and later, July 20, 1897, John Odie, Sr., conveyed it to H. C. Odie for an expressed consideration of $2000, but no part of this consideration was paid or intended to be paid.

H. O. Odie admits, and we find, that at the trustee’s sale Estes bought in the property for him, H. C. Odie, under an agreement between them previously made, and these latter conveyances were but a device to conceal the true transaction. John S. Odie and J. W. Odie and the trustee H. O. Odie were brothers. John Odie, Sr., was their father. J. W. Adams, the other trustee, married a daughter of John Odie, Sr., and was, of course, brother-in-law to the sons.

H. C. Odie required his two brothers to join his father in the deed to him, because, as he considered, the eighteen inches off the north side of lot Ro. 2 was not embraced in the trust deed or mortgage. This eighteen inches was conveyed to Odie Bros, by Hughes and wife, May 30, 1894, and is described by metes and hounds, while lot 3 had been conveyed to them by other and different parties October 1, 1891. The intention of Odie Brothers was to- include the whole building in the deed of trust, but this eighteen inches was not specifically described at the time, because it was overlooked.

It is earnestly insisted by appellants’ counsel that the deed of trust is void on its face, and that it ought to have been excluded from the jury on objections to its introduction made-at the time it was offered. These objections, eleven in number, were clearly and distinctly made, and attack it from every conceivable standpoint; but we are unable to find any authority which would justify us in sustaining any of them and excluding the deed from the jury. Ror is there any new point raised which it would be profitable to discuss.

*659 On the trial H. C.

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Bluebook (online)
54 S.W. 786, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 656, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-hughes-v-odle-texapp-1899.