Wright v. Texas Moline Plow Co.

90 S.W. 905, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 434, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 175
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 90 S.W. 905 (Wright v. Texas Moline Plow Co.) 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
Wright v. Texas Moline Plow Co., 90 S.W. 905, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 434, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 175 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

EIDSON, Associate Justice.

This suit was originally brought by Kingman, Texas Implement Company against W. L. Hutcheson to recover on certain notes and an open account held by it against the said Hutcheson, and alleged to have accrued on account of the sale by it to the said Hutcheson of certain merchandise under the following agreement:

“It is expressly agreed that the title to and ownership of all goods shipped under this contract shall remain vested in the Kingman, Texas Implement Company, unless at their option it shall be expressly waived in writing. And the goods are to be held at all times subject to their order until paid for. If sales are made before payment, they shall be made only in the regular course of business, and the proceeds of such sales, whether' cash, book account or notes, are to be held as the property of the Kingman, Texas Implement Company in trust as collateral security for their benefit and subject to their order until all obligations provided for in this contract or arising therefrom, are fully paid in money, or until full payment is made at the net prices herein specified. But nothing in this clause shall release the undersigned purchaser from making the payments as above stipulated. It is further agreed that notes taken by the Kingman Texas Implement Company are not accepted as payment or a novation or waiver of this contract.”

It further alleged that said agreement was in fact a chattel mortgage, and that the same had been registered as a chattel mortgage in the records of Tarrant County, Texas; that the said Hutcheson had sold all of said goods except eight buggies and one or two plows and had received in payment therefor more than $3,000 in money and promissory notes, as the proceeds of such goods; that instead of holding ■ the same under said contract for the benefit of said Kingman, Texas Implement Company, he has used said money and notes and the proceeds of said notes in replenishing his stock of goods, and thereby it, the said Kingman, Texas Implement Company, became entitled to a lien on said stock of goods for the payment of said indebtedness due to it by said Hutcheson; that since the institution of the suit a receiver had been appointed and the goods sold and the proceeds of all the assets of the mercantile business of the said Hutcheson were deposited in the registry of the court; that since the institution of the suit J. H. Wright had been appointed trustee in bankruptcy of the said Hutcheson, and had made himself a party to the suit. It further alleged that by reason of its said contract and the registry thereof, it became entitled to a preference lien upon all of the proceeds of the sale of the merchandise in the registry of the court.

*437 The original petition of the Kingman, Texas Implement Company and application for a receiver were filed September 16, 1901, and on the same day the court granted the writ of injunction prayed for, and ordered that the property described in the petition, together with all notes and accounts pertaining thereto in the possession of Hutcheson, his agents, attorneys or servants, together with the books of account of said business and the invoices of merchandise thereof and all memoranda relating thereto be placed in the hands of the receiver. W. S. Long, of Dallas, Texas, was appointed receiver and ordered to take possession of said property on giving bond in the sum of $2,000. He took possession of all of said property in possession of said Hutcheson, consisting of accounts of the face value of $2,403.12, notes of the face value of $774, and merchandise of the invoice value of $4,673.93. Thereafter, on the 5th day of October, 1901, the court entered an order, requiring all persons who had any claim or interest in said property, to intervene in this suit and set up such claims on or before the first day of the next term of said court, or be forever barred from asserting claim to said goods or any part thereof, and it was ordered that publication of said order be made in a daily newspaper for eight days prior to the first day of November, 1901. All of the petitions of intervention were filed by leave of the court within said time. Under the orders of the court the receiver sold the notes and accounts received by him for $512.50, and the merchandise, after withdrawing certain specified wagons, buggies and implements, for $2,690.16, and the buggies and implements withdrawn for $254.50, and the wagons for $260; all of the funds realized amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $3,827.16. Said funds, after deducting the expenses authorized by the court aggregating $607.87, were paid into the court, the amount being $3,221.29.

In the second amended original petition of Kingman, Texas Implement Company, it sets up the previous judgment of the trial court and the distribution thereunder of the funds in the registry of the court, and the subsequent reversal by the Court of Civil Appeals of such judgment, and sets up that the receivership has been closed, and that the controversy herein is at this time as to the money awarded to the plaintiff Kingman, Texas Implement Company over and above the sum of $254.50, which sum represented the value of the goods on which it established a specific lien, and as to which affirmance was rendered by the Court of Civil Appeals; and set up that more than a year had elapsed since the appointment of a trustee in the bankruptcy proceedings, and that only a few claims of small amounts had been proven in the bankruptcy proceedings, and that the time had elapsed for the parties to prove up their claims in bankruptcy, and asked that the court, on this account, administer the estate for tbe benefit of the creditors who were parties to this suit, in case the court should not hold in its favor on its claim of a lien on the entire fund.

Appellant J. H. Wright who intervened in the .suit answered (1) by plea in abatement, that said Hutcheson was on the 17th day of September, 1901, duly adjudged a bankrupt upon his voluntary petition, and thereafter on the 28th day of September, 1901, appellant was legally appointed trustee of the estate of the said Hutcheson, and had *438

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.W. 905, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 434, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-texas-moline-plow-co-texapp-1905.