Weil v. Miller

215 S.W. 142
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 1919
DocketNo. 7692.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 215 S.W. 142 (Weil v. Miller) 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
Weil v. Miller, 215 S.W. 142 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

LANE, J.

This suit was'instituted in the district court of Colorado county by Mrs. Laura Miller, one of the appellees, against A. and I. Weil as individuals and as copart-ners in the business of A. & I. Weil, and against C. E. Hadsell and wife, Ruby Had-sell, First National Bdnk of Ft. Wayne, Ind., the Hadsell Land Corporation, W. W. Wy-rick and John Wilding, to set aside a certain decree theretofore rendered in said court whereby a certain mortgage was foreclosed as against certain lands owned by her situated in said Colorado county, and for other purposes not necessary to be here stated.

The defendant First National Bank of Ft. Wayne, having filed its disclaimer of any interest in the subject-matter of the suit, was dismissed from the cause, and therefore no further notice of it will be made in this opinion. ■

Neither defendant Wilding, nor Wyrick have appealed from the judgment rendered against them. Nor have either of them asked any relief at the hands of this court in any manner whatever, and for these reasons they will not be further mentioned herein.

The defendants C. E. Hadsell and wife, Ruby Hadsell, and the Hadsell Land Corporation filed answers of general denial only. Judgment for the foreclosure of the mortgage lien pleaded by the Weils was foreclosed as against them upon the land claimed by them on the appeal, but no personal judgment was rendered against any of them for any sum whatever, and none of them have appealed. They have, however, filed their joint brief, in which they assign fundamental error. We shall defer further discussion of the issue sought to be raised by the assignments of these defendants until we shall have disposed of the issues between the *144 plaintiff Mrs. Miller and the defendants A. & I. Weil, the1 nature of which we hope to make clear by the following statement:

On the 15th day of Eebruary, 1910, O. E. Hadsell held the legal title to about 1,500 acres of land situated in Colorado county, Tex., and to secure the payment of one note for the sum of $11,000, executed and delivered by him and his wife, Ruby Hadsell, to A. & I. Weil on said 15th day of-February, 1910, due and payable to the Weils one year after date, Hadsell and wife executed and delivered to the Weils a mortgage upon the above-mentioned land, except about 322 acres thereof, hereinafter called the Findley tract, which is not directly involved in this suit; 729 acres of the land so mortgaged, which will hereinafter be designated and called the 729-acre tract, was thereafter, on the 14th day of March, 1913, by warranty deed conveyed by Hadsell and wife to John H. Miller and wife, <Laura Miller, of Williams county, Ohio, for a consideration of $4,600 cash paid by the Millers to C. E. Hadsell, and the further consideration of the conveyance by the Millers to Hadsell of certain land owned by them situated in Ohio of the agreed value of $10,200. Shortly after the Millers purchased the Colqrado county land they moved upon it, took possession thereof, and held such possession until some time in November, 1913, at which time John H. Miller died. After his death his widow, Mrs. Laura Miller, became the sole owner of the same, and has ever since continued her possession thereof.

On the 20th day of December, 1913, while Mrs. Miller was in possession of the 729-acre tract covered by the mortgage of the Weils, the Weils brought suit in the district court of Colorado county against Hadsell and wife upon the said $11,000 note of date February 15, 1910, praying for judgment for the full amount of the principal, together' with interest, costs, etc., and for a foreclosure on all the Colorado county land covered by their mortgage, which included the Miller 729-aere tract and three other tracts which were not sold to the Millers-by Had-sell and wife. Hadsell and wife filed their answer to this suit on the 10th day of February, 1914, and thereafter, on the 16th day of September,- 1914, by an agreement of all parties to the suit, judgment was rendered for the Weils for the sum sued for and for a foreclosure of their mortgage lien on all land covered by the mortgage; it being recited in the judgment that no order of sale should be issued until the 1st of March, 1915. Mrs. Miller was nqt made a party to this foreclosure suit.

On May 3, 1915, Hadsell and wife and the Hadsell Land Corporation filed suit to enjoin the sale of the land under an order of sale issued under the above-mentioned decree. It was alleged' as the basis of this bill for I injunction that the Weils had agreed with Hadsell not to sell the land under the judgment prior to the first Tuesday in September, 1915, unless it could be sold for such a price as would pay off the judgment and leave a surplus for Hadsell- and'the Hadsell Land Corporation; that, acting upon this promise, Hadsell and the Hadsell Land Corporation had advertised the land for sale and spent large sums of money in an effort to sell it, and they asked for an injunction restraining the sale prior to September, 1915. Temporary injunction was granted on May 4, 1915.

On the 11th day of May, 1915, Mrs. Miller filed this suit against the Weils and others to set aside the aforesaid judgment of foreclosure in so far as it affected the 729-acre tract claimed by her. In her petition she alleged, among other things, that she and her husband had purchased said 729-acre tract from Hadsell and wife with the understanding and agreement that the land was free from all incumbrances, that at the time of such purchase neither she nor her husband had any knowledge of the existence of the Weil mortgage, and that she had no knowledge of the existence of the same until long after the rendition of the said foreclosure decree; that although she had purchased said land and.was in possession of the same long prior to the filing of the foreclosure suit, she was not made a party thereto by the Weils; that she had valid defense against said foreclosure, jn that the note for $11,009, to secure which the foreclosed mortgage was given, had been paid off by Hadsell prior to the filing of said foreclosure suit and rendition of the foreclosure judgment, and therefore no such lien existed on said land at that time or at any time since in favor of the Weils; that the Weils had actual and constructive knowledge of the purchase-of the land by Miller and the whole matter relative to such sale; that they acquiesced in the sale to Miller and profited thereby, in that the cash payment of $4,600 made by Miller was paid by Hadsell to the Weils, and further that after Hadsell had been placed in possession of the Ohio property by Miller as a part of the consideration for the Texas property he mortgaged said land to the Weils.

The effect of the last plea was that the Weils encouraged the sale of the 729-acre tract to Miller and reaped benefits therefrom, and therefore are estopped to foreclose their mortgage on said 729 acres even if such mortgage was still unsatisfied. And again, in effect, she alleges that the bringing of the foreclosure suit by the Weils and the entry of the agreed judgment in said suit was a fraudulent scheme entered into between C. E. Hadsell and the Weils to defraud her; that as a fact the “Weils were money lenders and speculators and drove Hadsell under their control, for extensive obligations, into *145

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Bluebook (online)
215 S.W. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weil-v-miller-texapp-1919.