Whitehead v. Wicker

280 S.W. 604
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 1926
DocketNo. 2593.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 280 S.W. 604 (Whitehead v. Wicker) 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
Whitehead v. Wicker, 280 S.W. 604 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HALL, C. J.

On October 19, 1923, Wicker filed his original petition in the district court of Lubbock county, alleging, in substance, that on August 1, 1920, the defendant Smith executed and delivered to him a promissory note for $1,250 which was secured by a chattel mortgage on certain crops sold by plaintiff to Smith; that on August 18, 1920, plaintiff executed and delivered to A. E. Whitehead his promissory note for $1,000, due November 15, 1920, and secured by a chattel mortgage on crops; that plaintiff forthwith filed the mortgage given him by Smith for registration on August 6, 1920; that on August 10, .1920, the defendant Smith made some sort of a deal with the defendant Whitehead, whereby the former executed and delivered to the latter his promissory note fof $610, secured by a chattel mortgage on the identical crops described in the chattel mortgage which Smith had prior to that time made to plaintiff; that Whitehead filed his mortgage for registration August 11, 1920; that plaintiff delivered to Whitehead the said note for $1,250 which he had obtained from Smith as collateral security for the $1,000 note which plaintiff had made to Whitehead, it being agreed that Whitehead should hold the $1,250 note as collateral security until the $1,000 note was paid; that thereafter, from November 11,1920, to January 12,1921, Smith harvested and sold a part of the crop which he had mortgaged to plaintiff and paid the proceeds thereof to defendant Whitehead to be credited on the $1,250 note which Smith gave to Wicker; that said payments aggregated $255.38, which sums belonged to plaintiff and were paid to appellant only because he held the said note for $1,250 as collateral security; that said sums should have been credited on both of said notes held by Whitehead, but that Whitehead wrongfully credited the amounts so paid on the aforesaid $610 note; that plaintiff harvested and sold crops from November 12, 1920, to February 8, 1921, realizing from such sales the sum of $260.92, which he paid to Whitehead, and which, together with the payments made by Smith, amounted to $506.30, which should have been credited on said $1,000 note; that plaintiff Whitehead and Smith agreed that the cotton mortgaged by Smith to plaintiff, and by plaintiff to Whitehead, should be gathered and ginned and the bales stored in Whitehead’s warehouse without storage charges; that it should be sold by Whitehead and the proceeds of Smith’s cotton applied to both the $1,250 and the $1,000 notes and the proceeds from Wicker’s cotton applied to the $1,000 note only; that in pursuance of this agreement Smith stored in Whitehead’s warehouse 11 bales of cotton, and Wicker stored 7 bales, all of which Whitehead sold in July, 1921, at $18.16 per hundred pounds; that Whitehead applied this money to the payment of said $610 note, though plaintiff’s mortgage on said crop was a prior and superior lien to the mortgage which Smith had given to Whitehead; that, because of a mistake in measuring the acreage of the crops which Wicker sold to Smith, an agreed correction in the sum of $250 was made in favor of Smith, and said amount credited on said $1,250 note, leaving the net principal of that note $1,000; that by reason of the aforesaid transaction plaintiff’s said note for $1,000 was paid, and should have been canceled if payments had been properly applied by White *606 head; that he was entitled to the return of both of said notes to him, together with any moneys received by Whitehead in excess of the amount necessary to discharge his $1,000 with principal and interest.

The plaintiff prayed for an accounting; for a correct application of the payments; for judgment against Whitehead for any balance due him; and for judgment against Smith for whatever sum might be owing on the $1,250 note. On May 26, 1925, plaintiff amended his original petition, setting up the same, facts in the amendment, except that he corrected the date of the sale by Whitehead of the cotton, alleging that the sale was made May 4, 1922, instead of in the month of July, 1921, as alleged in the original petition, and the further correction that Whitehead sold the cotton for $16.60 per hundred pounds instead of $18.16, as previously alleged. He charged a further payment to Whitehead from the sale of crops in the sum of $102.69 from November 1, 1922, and abandoned his claim for $500 attorney’s fees as set out in the original petition. He set out the items of account showing that Whitehead was indebted to him May 4, 1922, in the sum of $808.35, and interest, and that Smith owed him a balance of $196.96, with interest.

On May 29, 1925, Whitehead filed his first amended original answer, interposing by exception the statute of limitations of 2 years, specially excepted to the amended petition as setting up a new cause of action, and pleaded specially, in substance that appellee agreed that said $610 note and the mortgage securing it should be a prior lien to that securing the $1,250 note; that, out of the feed delivered by Smith to him, he had paid the landlord the rent, leaving a balance of only $163.59 to the credit of Smith. He alleged that he did not sell Smith’s cotton, but that Smith sold it, and he purchased it at public auction for the sum of $6 per hundred pounds; that all of such cotton was picked and ginned at his expense, after Smith and the plaintiff had refused to pick the same, and that the $6 per hundred realized at the sale was not sufficient to pay the expenses of picking and ginning; that, on the sale of the 7 bales of cotton belonging to plaintiff, he received only $435.63, which was properly credited. He further alleges that plaintiff owed him $300 for borrowed money due on demand, and, after crediting said $300 with money paid to him by and for plaintiff, that plaintiff still owed him the sum of $357.27; that said $163.59 was properly credited on the $610 note, leaving a balance due him from Smith of $406.41. He pleaded the 2-year statute of limitation in bar of plaintiff’s action, and prayed for judgment over for the amount due him. By supplemental petition, plaintiff interposed the statute of limitation of 2 and 4 years for the various items claimed by Whitehead in his cross-action.

In response' to special issues, the jury found: (1) That the $1,000 note which plaintiff, Wicker,- had given to Whitehead was overpaid by applying to it as credits, the proceeds from the sale of the Smith feed crop by payments made by Wicker prior to the sale of the cotton, together with the proceeds of the 7 bales of cotton belonging to plaintiff which Whitehead had sold and appropriated; (2) that said items had overpaid the ñote $110.14; (3) that the proceeds of the 11 bales of cotton should be accounted for by Whitehead to Wicker less the rents; (4) that plaintiff Wicker- did not agree that Whitehead’s said note for $610, executed by Smith, should be paid out of the proceeds of the mortgaged crops prior to the payment of the $1,250 note; (5) that no rents should be de-' ducted from the $245.38 paid to Whitehead by Smith as the proceeds of the sale of the said crops; (6) that Whitehead should not be credited for the expenses of picking, ginning, and hauling the 7 bales of cotton. Based upon this verdict, the court rendered judgment for plaintiff, and decreed that the appellant take nothing on his cross-action.

The contention under appellant’s first proposition is that, because plaintiff alleges certain amounts to have been paid which resulted in an overpayment of the principal note, said amounts being credited on the wrong note, and that the proceeds of the sale of cotton stored in the warehouse have been converted, the cause of action is barred by the 2-year statute of limitation.

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Bluebook (online)
280 S.W. 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitehead-v-wicker-texapp-1926.