Williams v. Simon

235 S.W. 257, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 2, 1921
DocketNo. 6385. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 235 S.W. 257 (Williams v. Simon) 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
Williams v. Simon, 235 S.W. 257, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1108 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

BRADX, J.

This suit was instituted by appellee, Henry Simon, and Mrs. Louisa Simon, against appellant, Lizzie E. Williams, T. H. Davis, as administrator of the estate' of H. G. Williams, and other parties who were alleged to be the heirs of H. G. Williams. The action is in the nature of a bill of interpleader, and Henry Simon, having acquired the interest of Mrs. Louisa Simon pendente lite, was permitted to thereafter prosecute the suit as sole plaintiff.

The trial was without a jury, and the court rendered judgment sustaining appellee’s right to maintain the action of interpleader, and ordered the fund, paid into the registry of the court by appellee, to be paid to appellant, Mrs. Lizzie E. Williams. The judgment further canceled the notes involved in the suit, and the vendor’s lien securing their payment, and made certain findings of fact, which will be hereafter mentioned. The judgment further awarded appellee the sum of $250 as attorney’s fee to be paid to his attorney of record, and $50 to be paid to attorneys for certain minors and nonresidents, which attorneys had been appointed by the court. These items were ordered taxed as costs, and to be paid out of the fund in the registry of the court.

The court also directed the clerk to prepare and cause to be recorded in the deed records of Hays county a certified copy of the decree, and directed that, the cost of same should also be paid out of the fund. From this judgment appellant has appealed.

It was alleged in the several pleadings upon which appellee went to trial that on June 23, 1914, Mrs. Lizzie E. Williams, joined by her husband, H. G..Williams, conveyed to one Joe Graze about 1,100 acres of land situated in Hays county, Tex.; that as part consideration for the conveyance Cruze executed and delivered twelve notes, secured by vendor’s lien, payable to the order of Mrs. L. E. Williams and H. G. Williams. These notes were each payable on or before their respective maturity dates. It was further alleged that Cruze conveyed the land to Louis and Henry Simon after he had paid the first four notes, and that Louis and Henry Simon assumed the eight notes remaining unpaid, the first of which was due on or before September 1, 1918; that H. G. Williams died intestate on or about July 26, 1914, leaving surviving him as his heirs at law his widow, Lizzie E. Williams, and all the other defendants, except T. H. Davis, who was alleged to be the administrator.

As cause for the interpleader, appellee alleged that he and his coplaintiff had paid .all accrued interest on the notes to’September 1, 1919, on which date they offered to pay the notes in full, but were unable to determine to whom they should be paid, as appellant claimed the entire amount as her separate property to the exclusion ot all other defendants, who in turn also asserted and claimed some interest therein as the heirs of H. G. Williams. Appellee alleged his readiness, willingness, and ability to pay the *259 notes, upon a proper release of the vendor’s lien, bnt that the defendants had failed and-refused to execute such release, that he did not know the nature of the claims of any or all of the defendants and did not undertake to say who was entitled to the fund, although prior to September 1, 1919, he had notified defendants that he was ready, willing, and able to pay the notes, upon the execution of a proper release, and that since such date he has held the fund in trust as a stakeholder, or bailee, for such defendants as are entitled to receive the same.

Appellee further alleged that, by reason of the facts stated, he was compelled to employ an attorney to bring a suit of interpleader, and asked for reasonable attorney’s fees to be taxed as costs and paid out of the fund.

In his amended petition appellee averred that, after the execution and delivery of the notes, H. G. Williams, who was one of the payees, by some character of indorsement on the back of the notes, purported to convey them to appellant, Mrs. Lizzie 13. Williams, but that the other heirs of H. G. Williams had theretofore contended, and were then claiming, that the indorsement and transfer was made through undue influence, and at a time when H. G. Williams was unable to contract because of his mental and physical condition, and that no written assignment or transfer of the notes was ever acknowledged and placed of record, although the deed in which the’vendor’s lien was reserved showed the notes were payable to H. G. Williams.

The petition also alleged that the other heirs deny that appellant was the legal and (Hiuitable owner and holder of the notes, and claim that she has no right, title, or interest therein; that by reason of the conflicting claims as alleged a reasonable doubt existed in the mind of appellee as to the truth or falsity of the respective allegations and claims of the defendants.

In supplemental pleadings appellee averred that, while Joe Cruze was the owner of the property, Jim Williams, as son and heir at law of H. G. Williams, on or about July 31, 1914, instituted a suit in the district court of Hays county, being cause No. 2465, against Lizzie E. Williams and the other alleged heirs of H. G. Williams, in which it was alleged by Jim Williams that the defendants claimed some interest or title in the notes; that, while this suit was pending, an agreement was entered into between Lizzie E. Williams and Joe Oruze, dated September 1,1914, which r.ecited the claim of Mrs. Lizzie E. Williams to the notes, and also the pen-dency of cause No. 2465, and therein Mrs. Williams agreed and bound herself to place the notes in a bank at Austin, Tex., until such time as the suit brought by Jim Williams should be settled and disposed of, or until the court ordered the notes turned over to Mrs. Williams, or some other person. The agreement further provided that Oruze should not be compelled to pay the notes, or any of them, until the Jim Williams suit was settled or determined, but, if the litigation should be protracted, the bank was authorized to deliver the notes to Mrs. Williams, upon the giving by her of indemnity to Oruze. The rights of Oruze under this contract were duly assigned to appellee, which contract and assignment appear of .record in Hays county. By reason of these facts, appellee claimed all the rights of Oruze in the contract, and that Mrs. Williams was still bound thereby, because cause No. 2465 is still pending and has not been settled or disposed of, and no final judgment entered.

It was specifically averred that, if appellee should pay the notes to Mrs. Williams, his land would be incumbered and clouded by-liens or claims asserted by the other defendants, and a double liability might be imposed upon him, that interpleader was his only-remedy to protect himself and his land, and that he was in no manner interested in the controversy, except to pay the notes to the proper parties, and for his own protection.

[1, 2] We have set out the averments of the petition very fully, because it is earnestly insisted by appellant’s counsel that the pleading stated no cause of action, and that the court should have sustained a general demurrer. We have no doubt that the petition stated a good case for interpleader, which is an equitable remedy and favored wherever a debtor or bailee of property has a reasonable doubt as to the true owner of the fund.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 S.W. 257, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-simon-texapp-1921.