75 F.2d 814 | 5th Cir. | 1935
In 1922 the Delta Land & Timber Company (herein called the Delta Company), being engaged in the lumber manufacturing business, and owning a sawmill, and timber land and standing timber, for the purpose of securing bonds issued by it, executed a mortgage or deed of trust which conveyed the various properties then owned by it, and contained an after-acquired property clause. Upon the execution of that instrument it was filed for record and recorded in the counties of San Jacinto, Walker, and Montgomery, in the state of Texas, as provided by X^xas statutes relating to the filing and recording of mortgages, deeds of trust, etc., upon real estate. The Southwestern Lumber Company of New Jersey, a New Jersey corporation (herein referred to as the Southwestern Company), in and prior to 1925 was solely owned by the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fé Railway Company (herein called the Santa Fé Company), which owned and operated lines of railway which served the locality of the timber properties of the Delta Company. On July 14, 1925, the Delta Company entered into a written contract with the Southwestern Company. That instrument contains recitals to the effect that the Delta Company desires to obtain certain tracts in the counties of San
The Delta .Company’s mortgage having been executed and recorded prior to the acquisition by the Delta Company or the Southwestern Company of title to the property which was conveyed to the Southwestern Company for a valuable consideration, under the Texas law the Southwestern Company, when it acquired title to that property, did not have constructive notice of the Delta Company’s mortgage. The Southwestern Company had the status of a purchaser for a valuable consideration. It is a settled rule of Texas law that such a purchaser is not required to examine- the records for conveyances by .his grantor prior to the time the latter acquired the title conveyed by him to the purchaser. Breen v. Morehead, 104 Tex. 254, 136 S. W. 1047, Ann. Cas. 1914A, 1285; Williams v. Cook (Tex. Com. App.) 282 S. W. 574. No Texas decision which has come to our notice indicates that, where •the maker -of an instrument which -contains an after-acquired property clause: conveys property acquired by him after that instrument was recorded, the title of the grantee, •who had no knowledge or notice of that instrument -when the . conveyance to him was made, is affected by such after-acquired property clause. -The.properties conveyed to the Southwestern Company were separate .and distinct • from -those described in and conveyed by the -Delta-Company’s mortgage, ■were properties .which the Delta • Company was not obligated to- its -mortgagee to acquire,, and were acquired by the -Southwestern Company without actual or constructive notice o'f the 'Delta Companyjs mortgage. 'This-being ;so, there is no basis'for;a claim fhat the .-Soúthwésterm.-Company’-s; position .was similar to that of the unsuccessful litigant in the case of Dunham v. Railway Co., 1 Wall. 254, 17 L. Ed. 584, who, with full knowledge that the railway company had mortgaged its railway, entered into a contract with that company under which he claimed the railroad or an interest therein; or for a claim that the Southwestern Company was in a position similar to that of the unsuccessful litigant in the case of Toledo, etc., Railroad Co. v. Hamilton, 134 U. S. 296, 10 S. Ct. 546, 33 L. Ed. 905, who claimed that his mechanic’s lien for building a dock on a lot which was part of the railroad covered by a mortgage thereof was entitled to priority over that mortgage. The position of the Southwestern Company is similar to that of the successful litigant in the case of United States v. New Orleans & O. R. Co., 12 Wall. 362, 365, 20 L. Ed. 434. In that case it was decided that the seller of rolling stock to a railroad company, which gave'a bond for the purchase money wherein it was stipulated that the seller should have a lien therefor on the property sold, was entitled to priority over the railroad company’s previously executed mortgage, .which contained an after-acquired property clause. The ground of that decision is indicated by the statement in the court’s opinion : “A mortgage intended 'to cover after-.acquired property .can only attach itself to such property in the condition in'which it comes into the mortgagor’s hands.”
The timber properties which were .conveyed, to the Southwestern Company ■came into the control or ownership of the Delta Company in. pursuance of a contract which obligated the Delta Company to request the Southwestern Company to acquire the same, as security for the .principal and interest of= advances made by .the Southwestern Company, provided for by the contract.. The contract, as it was modified by the parties during performance under it, resulted in a course of dealings between, the parties extending throughout a period of .several years; the Delta Company acquiring control or ownership of timber properties, and the Southwestern Company making advances to the Delta Company for the purpose of -paying the purchase prices of the properties and the expenses incident to acquiring ownership thereof. What occurred .was substantially what was in the contemplation of the parties when the .contract was entered into. An effect of the contract was to provide for timber properties. so coming into the control or possession of the Delta
In behalf of the appellee it was contended that the after-acquired property clause contained in the Delta Company’s mortgage did not have the effect of conferring on the mortgagee any lien on the timber properties which were conveyed to the Southwestern Company, and that the record of that mortgage was not constructive notice as to standing timber. Those contentions were pot sustained by the trial court. In view of conclusions above indicated, there is no occa
The decree is affirmed.