Young v. Bank of Miami

175 S.W. 1102, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 472
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1915
DocketNo. 754. [fn†]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 175 S.W. 1102 (Young v. Bank of Miami) 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
Young v. Bank of Miami, 175 S.W. 1102, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 472 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HUFF, C. J.

The appellees instituted this suit as a partnership under the partnership name of the Bank of Miami, against the appellants, D. J. Young, Robert Moody, Thomas F. Moody, and W. S. Martin, the latter of whom is not appealing in this case. This suit is based upon a contract between appellants and appellee executed on the 21st day of September, 1912, in which contract it is alleged that appellees purchased from appellants the Bank of Miami, together with all of its assets, books, notes, accounts, etc.

The appellants answered the petition of appellees by general and special exceptions, general and special answers, consisting of several paragraphs. The appellees, by exception, urged to paragraphs 3, 4, 5, and 6 of subdivision 3 of appellants’ answer on the ground that the matters therein alleged had been concluded by a certain judgment in the district court of Roberts county The trial court sustained these several exceptions and struck out the paragraphs so excepted to.’ It appears "that the appellants on the day that these exceptions were acted upon, had filed their admission in writing of the appellee’s cause of action, as-set out in their petition, subject to matters alleged in their *1103 answer under rule 81 (142 S. W. xx) for the district courts. The parties entered into an agreement eliminating all matters, except that set out in paragraph 5 of the agreement, in which it is agreed:

“That the only issue to be determined by the court is as to the liability of defendants D. .T. Young, Robert Moody, and Thomas 3?. Moody on the H. J. Newman, R. 3T. Gilman, and L. G. Dana judgment, set out in the various paragraphs of plaintiff’s original petition; and it is agreed that, in determining the same, the attorney’s fees included in said judgment is to be abandoned, it being understood and agreed that the judgment was taken by H. E. Hoover and J. G. Dial, and that they released the plaintiff from all the liability for attorney’s fees, and that, should the court hold these defendants liable upon said judgment in any sum, then, in fixing the amount of liability the amount of actual attorney’s fees included in the judgment shall be deducted therefrom.”

The court rendered judgment in accordance with agreement after having sustained the exceptions to the answers heretofore mentioned by us, reciting the admission of plaintiff’s cause of action as filed in the case before trial. Nineteen-twentieths of the amount rendered is against Young, Robert, and Thomas Moody and one-twentieth of the amount is against W. S. Martin.

It will not, we think, be necessary to consider each assignment separately, as all the exceptions to the answer present the same grounds to each paragraph; that is, that the judgment obtained in Roberts county in the case of Bank oif Miami v. Martin and others is conclusive of the matters alleged by appellants in their answer, for the reason that appellants were privies thereto, if not parties. In paragraph 1 of the answer appellant admits the allegations in paragraph 1 of appellees’ petition as being substantially correct, except as applied in this case, will be shown in defendants’ special answer thereto to follow this subdivision of the answer; .and in their second paragraph they admit the matters set out in the second paragraph of plaintiff’s petition, “with the limitations expressed in paragraph 1 above, admit the allegations in paragraph 2 of said petition.” The sixth paragraph of subdivision 3 of the answer of appellants alleges, as a bar to the recovery on. the judgment, that the suit was instituted and prosecuted by appellee and through its fraud permitted W. S. Martin to escape liability thereon; “that these defendants could not avail themselves of the fraud in said suit because they were in no wise a party thereto.” Then follows the allegations of acts alleged as fraud in obtaining the judgment. The petition of appellees alleges in the first paragraph that on the 21st day of September, 1912, appellants and W. S. Martin were engaged in a general banking business, and that on that day appellees bought the bank business from appellants and Martin, including the note which was reduced to judgment and the subject-matter of this suit, paying therefor a valuable consideration, and that the parties entered into a written contract and agreement with reference thereto, which included an obligation of the defendants to guarantee payment of all the notes, etc., at that time due the bank of Miami, which was the partnership name of appellants at the time of the sale. The consideration therefor was the purchase price paid by appellee for the banking business, which was subject to the condition:

“That all notes, etc., due and to become due said bank, were to be collected by the newiy organized bank in so far as collections could be made by notice to and demand on the debtors; and when collections could not be made in that way the newly organized bank was to turn the notes, overdrafts, etc., not then collected, to an attorney selected by D. J. Toung, one of the defendants, said attorney to sue upon the same in the name of said newly organized bank, reduce the same to judgment, and, if possible, collect by execution. If collections could not thus.be made, then defendants were to pay plaintiff the money due on all uncollected notes or the amount of said judgment or said overdrafts, etc., paying same, if the judgments, on a proper transfer of the judgments to them-, and paying all in the ratio as follows: Defendants Young and Robert and Thomas F. Moody were to pay nineteen-twentieths of such demand and Martin one-twentieth thereof.”

The second paragraph alleged:

“That, in the performance of its duty under said contract, it placed in the hands of the attorney to receive the same, appointed and selected under the contract by defendant Young, to wit, H. E. Hoover, a note covered by said, contract of guaranty hereinabove mentioned on H. J. Newman, R. F. Gilman, and D. G. Dana, for the sum of $3,578.90, with interest at 10 per cent, per annum from July 8, 3911, and said Hoover instituted suit thereon in the name of said newly organized bank, in the district court of Roberts county, Tex., and recovered judgment thereon in said court for the sum of $4,790.14, on the 17th day of September, 1913.”

And it further alleged the issuance of an execution, the failure to collect thereby, and the impossibility to collect at all times; that appellees prepared a duly executed transfer of the judgment to appellants under the terms of the contract; and that appellants refused to pay in accordance with the guaranty. Upon exceptions presented by ap-pellee to the effect that the appellants, being privies to the judgment, if not parties in the suit, set out in the petition, were concluded from setting up the facts alleged in paragraphs 3, 4, 5, and 6 of subdivision 3 of appellants’ answer, the trial court struck out that part of said answer above mentioned upon said exceptions, to which action of the court appellants present several assignments of error.

This action of the court is the only issue presented for our determination. If ‘the facts, as alleged in plaintiff’s petition, are sufficient to render the appellants privies or parties to the judgment, then we think the action of the court was correct.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.W. 1102, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-bank-of-miami-texapp-1915.