Western Nat. Bank of Hereford v. Steele

36 S.W.2d 271
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 21, 1931
DocketNo. 3368.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 S.W.2d 271 (Western Nat. Bank of Hereford v. Steele) 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
Western Nat. Bank of Hereford v. Steele, 36 S.W.2d 271 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

This suit was instituted by the appellant bank in the district court of Deaf Smith *272 county, as plaintiff, against appellees George H. Guinn and M. L. Steele as defendants. From an adverse judgment the plaintiff appeals.

On June 4, 1918, the plaintiff, in the district court of Deaf Smith county, recovered a judgment in causé No. 1122, entitled the Western National Bank of Hereford v. George H. Guinn, against the said George H. Guinn, for the sum of $6,669.87, with interest and costs. An execution was duly issued on said judgment on the 25tii of February, 1919, which was returned by the sheriff of that county nulla bona.

On the 17th of May, 1928, M. L. Steele was the owner of certain steers which he sold to the said Guinn for the sum of $52.50 per head. At the time of the sale of said steers, a note was executed by Guinn to Steele for the sum of $3,000; $2,500 of this sum was the down payment on the purchase price of the steers and $500 was for cash advanced by Steele for Guinn to buy feed for the steers. The balance of the purchase money was $21,000. In May of the same year Steele wrote Guinn and inclosed him a note for $21,000 for liis signature. It took the $21,000 note and $2,500 of the $3,000 note to make the total purchase price for which Steele sold the steers, and Steele testifies that he did not include the entire purchase price in the $21,000 note because Guinn had told him he would pay the $2,500 and take up that note. Steele then suggested to Guinn that as he could not pay the $2,500 note, they had better rewrite the mortgage, but Guinn said to just let it go for a day or two and that he was going to have to have another $500 to pay for feed. Steele then loaned him $500 and took his note for that sum. On May 17, 1928, Guinn executed a chattel mortgage upon the following described steer cattle, to wit: 413 dehorned white face steer yearlings; 35 head dehorned white face heifer yearlings. This mortgage was given to Steele to secure him in the payment of the $21,000 note and contained other provisions which will be noticed later.

The mortgage describes a $21,000 note here in controversy and also contains this provision :

“Whereas, party of the first part may desire hereafter.to procure from party of the second part further loans of money from time to time, which loans, if consented to and made by second party, may be evidenced by the promissory note or notes of the said first party to the said second party or order;
“Now, Therefore, it is expressly agreed that ⅜11 of the indebtedness so as aforesaid now existing, or which may at any time hereafter be created and outstanding as hereinbefore recited, with the interest thereon, shall be equally secured as a first and prior lien upon all and singular the cattle, live stock, chattels and personal property hereinbefore described, and that said security and lien shall extend, apply and continue as to any renewal or renewals or extensions of said notes which may be made by consent of the second party and which may be evidenced by the execution of a new note, or notes in place of the original notes.”

These steers included in the mortgage were located in a pasture operated by Guinn west of the town of Hereford.

The note for $3,000, which' includes the $2,500 down payment, and the sum of $500 advanced by Steele to Guin to buy feed, was incorporated with a further sum of $1,500 advanced by Steele, and all such sums were renewed and placed into a note for $4,500, which is one of the notes here in controversy.

The steers described in thé mortgage, and which were the same steers sold by Steele to Guinn, were sold by Guinn to one Wilkinson, who appears to have been purchasing them for Lee Bivins.

The bill of sale executed by Guinn in the transaction with Bivins was delivered to Steele by Guinn pending the delivery of the cattle and the payment by Bivins of the purchase price. Subsequent to these transactions the plaintiff had an alias execution issued on the judgment in its favor in cause No. 1122 against Guinn and same was placed in the hands of the sheriff of Deaf Smith county. Whether or not this execution was levied .upon the steers is a crucial point in de- . termining whether or not the plaintiff was entitled to require the defendant to marshal securities. Hence, we will now give the material evidence bearing upon that question.

The sheriff of Deaf Smith county testified, in párt:

“After I received the execution I drove out to Mr. Guinn’s place and got there about 11:30 o’clock. He was not there, and I stayed at the camp about an hour and he still didn’t come home, and then I went out in the south pasture and I counted the cattle. I first drove back into the north pasture and didn’t find any steers. I found a bunch of heifers up there. I went back to the south pasture and counted 390 head of steers and then drove back to the camp, and went over to his son’s house and made inquiry about him, and he said he had gone to Friona. Then I went south' to the little school house and I met him there. I told him my business there. I don’t know that I read the execution to him but 1 showed it to him. I found some steers out in the pasture and counted them. About 39U. That is all the steers I saw there. That is all of them. I did not pen them up. I did not drive them around the pasture. I do not know whether thfey are the steers that Mr. Guinn had bought from Mr. M. L. Steele along about February, 1928, or not.
“I did not see Mr. Guinn before I counted the steers. I saw him afterwards, and I never saw the steers after I saw Mr. Guinn. I *273 told him, Mr. Guian, that I would like to make arrangements to leave them there, and he said that they were Steele’s cattle, and that he had nothing to do with them. I did not go and put somebody in charge of the cattle after that— I never saw them any more.
“When I returned to Hereford I went to Carl Gilliland’s office and told him word for word what Mr. Guinn had said and he said that he would make the returns himself, and I left the execution in his office. I never made any returns on the execution as I remember of. I did not put the typewriting under the caption ‘Sheriff’s return,’ and X never signed it as I know of, and the return is not signed by me. I never made any return into court myself, as I remember of.
“Q. Did Mr. Guinn tell you anything about selling the cattle or contracting for them, with Lee Bivins? A. No, he said that the cattle had been sold. I do not know how the cattle were branded. Mr. Guinn told me that I could leave the cattle in his pasture; it seemed to be satisfactory to just leave them stay there. These cattle were all in the inclosure there. I couldn’t see that they were all in one brand; I noticed that the first cattle we struck had that brand and the rest of them, and I did not know for sure that they were the cattle until I drove over south of there. The cattle I counted were on Guinn’s ranch. They were in one inclosure, the south pasture of Guinn’s place.
“After I had the conversation with Guinn we separated and I came back to Hereford and took the execution to your (Gilliland’s) office. I don’t know if you told me that you could not make a complete return on the return until after I sold the cattle.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Beaurline v. Sinclair Refining Co.
191 S.W.2d 774 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 S.W.2d 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-nat-bank-of-hereford-v-steele-texapp-1931.