Walters v. Texas Building & Loan Ass'n

29 S.W. 51, 8 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 202
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 24, 1894
DocketNo. 392.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 29 S.W. 51 (Walters v. Texas Building & Loan Ass'n) 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
Walters v. Texas Building & Loan Ass'n, 29 S.W. 51, 8 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 202 (Tex. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

FINLEY, Associate Justice.

The facts of this case are substantially as follows: G-. W. Walters and Elizabeth E. Walters, husband and wife, residents of Vernon, Wilbarger County, Texas, owners of four contiguous lots in the town of Vernon, known and designated as their homestead, were sued by appellee, the Texas Building and Loan Association, a private corporation, with its home office at Corsicana, Texas, for recovery on a note of $3900, executed by appellants, less $520, payments indorsed thereon, dated August 12, 1890, payable to appellee at Corsicana, in monthly, installments of $65 each, the first *502 due September 12, 1890, with interest at 12 per cent per annum, and attorney’s fees of 10 per cent on the amount due. The note provides, that should any installment become due and remain unpaid for ten days thereafter, then at the option of the holder the whole sum remaining unpaid shall become immediately dúe, and bear from that date 12 per cent interest. There is also a recital in the note, that it is given for labor a,nd material advanced for the improvement of appellants’ homestead, and that appellants had executed, to secure said note, a lien on their homestead premises superior to the homestead exemption. The suit also embraces the mortgage executed by appellants, which recites, that defendants are desirous of making improvements on their homestead. Appellee contracted to advance to appellants labor and material for the purpose of making improvements on appellants’ homestead, and secured themselves by lien on .the premises, and the procurement of insurance by .appellants on the premises, payable, in case of loss, to appellee. In consideration of-the labor and material, and .to secure the note executed by appellants therefor, a conveyance was made of said premises — 120 by 240 feet — with defeasance in event ot payment of said note. This mortgage is acknowledged by appellants, with separate acknowledgment of the wife, and recorded August 18, 1890, in Wilbarger County.

G. W. Walters had, some time previous to the date of the note, in contemplation of the erection of a new residence house on said premises, caused plans and specifications to be prepared, and advertised for bids, in response to which several bids were submitted. The contract was first let to Wells So Co., who began the work, but were discharged by Walters, and the bid of Wood So Tunnell for $2600 accepted. The basement story had already been built. After accepting the bid of Wood So Tunnell, G. W. Walters applied to local agents of appellee at Vernon, with the plans and specifications-and bid. of the contractors, Wood So Tunnell, and proposed to borrow ,$2600 for the purpose of building a house. The agents informed him that he would have to fix it so that appellee would have a lien on the premises, which he agreed to do. G. W. Walters signed an application addressed to appellee, prepared ■ by its agents, setting forth that-he desired assistance from appellee to the extent of $2600, to be used in constructing a building on the described premises, also an estimate of the probable cost of the proposed building, and an agreement that he would pay $10 as attorney’s fees for examining title to the premises and preparation of papers. The application is dated July 30, 1890. This application was passed upon and accepted by appellee, and the note and mortgage prepared and forwarded by appellee to its local-agents at Vernon, who had appellants to execute the same. Appellee required of -the builders, Wood So Tunnell, a bond for the faithful performance of the contract to build the house, and formally entered into a contract with them to build the house, -which contract to build between appellee and Wood & Tunnell was a verbal contract for the sum of $2600. Wood So Tunnell *503 built the house, and were paid for labor and material performed and used in the erection of the building, as it progressed, by drafts drawn by them on appellee, which they cashed in the bank at Yernon. When the work required by the contract was completed, but before the building was finished, the appellants moved into the building.

The first eight monthly installments were paid on the note, making total payments of $527, the last of which was made on May 11, 1891.

Plaintiff’s original petition was filed August 10, 1891, and first amended petition October 29,1891, praying for judgment of the whole amount of the note remaining unpaid, for the interest thereon at 12 per cent, and 10 per cent attorney’s fees, and for foreclosure of the mortgage, designated as mechanic’s and materialman’s lien, against appellants and their homestead.

The appellants filed their answer, October 20, 1891: (1) Plea to jurisdiction. (2) General demurrer. (3) Special demurrers: first, plaintiff’s petition fails to show that plaintiff is either a mechanic, artisan, materialman, or laborer,; second, that the attorney’s fees stipulated in the note constitute no lien against the defendants’ homestead; third, the note sued on is not due; fourth, plaintiff’s lien, if any ever existed, was waived and abandoned by the acceptance of the note payable long after the time when by the statute the lien shall cease to exist. (4) Answer to the merits: first, general issue; second, special answer, that the contract evidenced by the note and mortgage sued on is void on account of its being the execution and carrying out of a discount by appellee, a private corporation; third, the contract sued on is usurious; fourth, the contract sued on was to secure $2600 by a mortgage on the defendants’ homestead.

The plea to the jurisdiction, and general and special demurrers interposed by defendants, were overruled. Defendants excepted. The trial was had on November 2, .1891, before a jury, on the issues of fact, which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff against defendant G. W. Walters, for $3808.13, with foreclosure of a lien on defendants’ homestead premises, as the same is alleged to have existed on August 10,1891, and directionfor order of sale and.writ of assistance.

Opinion. — Under the view we take of this case, it is not necessary for us to consider the numerous assignments of error based upon the rulings of the court upon exceptions to pleadings, admission of evidence, the giving and refusal of charges, etc. The case was submitted to the jury by the charge of the court upon only two issues of fact, namely, Was the contract sued upon a building contract, or was it a loan of money ? Under the many assignments of error presented to this court, the propositions, which will hereafter be stated and considered, are raised:

1. It is contended that no lien can be created, fixed, and enforced upon the homestead for improvements made thereon, except it be un *504 der and in conformity with the statutes regulating mechanics’ liens. This proposition is untenable.

In Lippencott v. York, 24 Southwestern Reporter, 275, the proposition is denied; and it is expressly held that a- valid lien upon the homestead may be created by contract providing for work and material, properly executed, as in case of sale.

2. It is urged that the transaction was a discounting transaction, and that it was therefore illegal and void, and for that reason no recovery could be had.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W. 51, 8 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walters-v-texas-building-loan-assn-texapp-1894.