This is an appeal from an order of Hon. Chas. E. Ashe, district judge, dissolving a temporary writ of injunction theretofore issued at the suit of W. C. Cor-bett and wife, Ella Corbett, enjoining the defendants J. J. Sweeney, William Giles, and George J. Mellinger from selling certain lands under a deed of trust executed by said Corbett to secure the payment of a promissory note executed by him to Sweeney fbr $22,500. Temporary injunction was issued upon the order of the district judge September 5, 1912. Defendants filed motion to dissolve, and afterwards a further amended motion setting out in full their grounds therefor, which is, in fact, an answer to plaintiffs’ petition, and is sworn to. Upon hearing of the motion to dissolve evidence was introduced by both parties, and upon the conclusion the motion to dissolve was granted. From the order dissolving the injunction this appeal is prosecuted. It appears that the Union Land Company, claiming to be owner of the land, filed a plea in intervention and also prayed for injunction. In so far as the order dissolving the temporary injunction affects such intervener, there is no appeal by it, and it will not be necessary to refer farther to this branch of the case.
The undisputed facts as they aré shown by the pleadings and evidence are as follows:
On May 30, 1911, W. C. Corbett executed to J. J. Sweeney his certain promissory note for $22,500 for money borrowed by him from Sweeney, being a consolidation of several smaller loans previously made. The note was payable to Sweeney or order three years after date, with interest at the rate of 9 per cent, per annum payable semiannually, and contained a provision that upon failure to pay any installment of interest when due, or to pay the taxes on the land embraced in the deed of trust given to secure the same, the holder of the note at his option might declare the same due, principal and interest, and proceed to enforce collection by sale under the deed of trust. The note also provided for attorney’s fees of $3,000 in case it was not paid at maturity, and was placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. At the same time Corbett executed a deed of trust upon the lands described in the petition to secure the note referred to, naming William Giles as trustee, and containing a provision that, upon failure, refusal, or inability to act as such, the legal owner and holder of the note was authorized to appoint a substitute with the same powers conferred upon the original trustee. The deed of trust authorized a sale of the land, if the note was not paid when due, either upon its face or by reason of the failure to pay any installment of interest or the taxes on the land as they accrued. This note was for value and before due regularly transferred by Sweeney to William Giles. Giles declined and refused to act as trustee in the deed of trust, and, as legal owner and holder of the note, regularly appointed George J. Mellinger substitute trustee, in accordance with the provisions of the trust deed, and on or about the- day of July, 1912, there being then two semiannual installments of interest due and un *860 paid, amounting to $2,025, except the sum of $500 paid thereon, and the taxes for 1911, the said Giles' declared the note due, in accordance with its terms, and called upon the substitute trustee to sell the property embraced in the deed of trust for the satisfaction thereof, whereupon the said Mellinger duly proceeded to advertise the property for sale on the first Monday in August, 1912, at the courthouse door of Harris county; the land being located in said county. ' Notice was given of such sale by publication in a newspaper published in Harris county, as provided in the deed of trust, for the length of time provided, but such sale was stopped by this injunction. No personal notice was given to Corbett as provided for sales of real estate under execution.
The grounds for injunction set up in the petition, and relied upon by appellant on this appeal, are substantially as follows: (1) That written notice of such sale had not been given to appellant as required in case of sales under execution. (2) That the land covered by the deed of trust is the separate estate of Mrs. Ella Corbett, wife of W. C. Corbett, and one of the plaintiffs, and that this fact was known to Sweeney before he took the deed of trust, and to Giles before the transfer of the notes and trust deed to him. (3) That 200 acres of the land is and was at the time of the execution of the trust deed the homestead of plaintiffs, which fact was also known to Sweeney and Giles. (4) That on June 5th Corbett had paid to Giles $500 in consideration of which Giles had agreed and promised to extend the time of payment of the interest due on the note for ninety days. (5) That defendants are claiming $3,000 as attorney’s fees and $3,000 as trustee’s commissions for making such sale, and that said attorney’s fees are an outrageous and extortionate charge.
It was alleged that the property was of the value of $90,000, and that it would be sacrificed at such sale if it was allowed to be sold, and that said W. C. Corbett had tendered the interest due on the note, which defendants refused to receive. Defendants by their sworn answer denied specifically and in detail each of the material allegations of fact of the petition. They denied that the $500 was paid by Corbett to Giles upon any agreement for extension, but alleged that it was simply paid upon the interest on May 30th, when the second installment was due, with a promise by Corbett to pay the balance in a few days. The answer denies that the property is the separate property of Mrs. Corbett, or that any part thereof is the homestead of plaintiffs, alleging that the land stood upon the public records in the name of W. C. Corbett and was acquired by him during the marriage, and denying that it was paid for with the separate means of Mrs. Corbett, alleged that if it was, neither Sweeney, when he took the deed of trust, nor Giles, when he acquired the note, had any notice or knowledge of any claim or interest of Mrs. Corbett therein as her separate-estate. The facts going to show that no part of the land was the homestead of plaintiffs,, but that their homestead was upon certain lots in the city of Houston, were fully set out, in connection with the specific denial off the homestead claim. It was alleged that the note provided for the payment of $3,000 attorney’s fees, that the same had been placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, and that defendants had agreed to pay them said amount and that the amount was-reasonable. The case was heard upon the pleadings and evidence, which is very full, filling 128 pages of a statement of facts. There is no specific assignment of error, nor briefs, but since the oral argument upon submission, on the suggestion of the court, each, party has filed- a brief written statement. That of appellants is confined to the first, ground for the injunction, as above set out, to wit, that written notice of such sale was-not given by the trustee as required in case of sales under execution. We think this question is settled by the decision of the Supreme Court in Fischer v. Simon,
We conclude that the judge did not err in granting the motion to dissolve, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
