244 S.W. 824 | Tex. App. | 1922
"This writing witnesseth that whereas, Leonard D. Scott is security for William T. Littlefield upon the following notes, to wit:
"One note in the sum of $1,500.00 dated Oct. 18, 1913, payable to the State Bank of West Terre Haute, Indiana.
"One note in the sum of $500.00 dated Sept. 9, 1913, payable to the State Bank of West Terre Haute, Indiana.
"One note in the sum of $1,000.00 dated Dec. 23, 1912, payable to M. J. Watson.
"One note in the sum of $1,000.00 dated Nov. 10, 1913, payable to the Terre Haute Savings Bank at Terre Haute, Indiana.
"And whereas, it is the intention of the said Littlefield to make payments upon said notes from time to time and make renewals thereof and if the same may become necessary to borrow money elsewhere to pay off any part of said notes as the case may be.
"The total of said notes representing approximately $4,000.00 in indebtedness upon which the said Leonard D. Scott is security:
"Now, therefore, in order to secure save free and harmless the said Leonard D. Scott from the payment of any part of the said notes, the said Littlefield, together with his wife, conveyed unto the said Leonard D. Scott an undivided one-half interest in 1,069 acres of land in Liberty county, Texas, being in the Wm. B. Reed survey.
"And the said Leonard D. Scott, together with his wife, shall reconvey the said real estate unto the said William T. Littlefield upon tile said William T. Littlefield paying in full all of said notes, renewals thereof, or other money secured with which to satisfy said notes upon which the said Scott may be indorser, all together with interest, costs of whatsoever nature and kind, and shall further save free and harmless the said Scott from the payment of any sum of money upon said notes or any part thereof.
"And further if the said Scott or Littlefield or both procure a sale for the said real estate, the price of which shall be agreeable and acceptable to both the said Littlefield and said Scott, which acceptance shall be signified by writing by the said Littlefield to the said Scott, the said Scott shall execute a deed for said real estate to the purchaser thereof, and shall out of one-half of the purchase money received therefor pay in full all of the indebtedness together with interest thereon as represented by said notes or any other notes upon which he may be indorser which has been given for money with which to pay the said notes hereinabove enumerated for any part thereof. And the excess, if any, from said one-half, shall be paid by the said Scott unto the said Littlefield.
"It is further provided that if at the end of three years from the date hereof the said Littlefield shall not have paid in full the said notes that this contract shall be null and void. And also in such event the said real estate shall become the absolute property of the said Leonard D. Scott.
"At any time within three years from this date that Mr. Littlefield can liquidate the above-described indebtedness by a sale of the undivided one-half interest of the above-described tract of land or otherwise, that the said Scott will transfer with his wife to Littlefield an undivided one-half interest in said above-described real estate.
"Dated this 3d day of April, 1914.
"Leonard D. Scott.
"William T. Littlefield."
And, on the theory that it was an indemnity mortgage, he recovered judgment against them, with foreclosure, for the sum of $5,400. Appellants defended under the two and four year statutes of limitation. The proof showed that appellee paid all the notes described in the foregoing contract, some of them on maturity, which was six months after the date of the notes so paid, that one of them was extended from time to time before payment, appellee paying the interest each time to secure the extension, and that one of the notes was not paid until June, 1916, which was less than four years, but more than two years, before the institution of this suit. All the other notes were paid more than four years before the institution *826 of this suit. On the 17th of April, 1916, and on the consecutive years thereafter, appellee paid all taxes on the land for the years 1914 to 1920. The trial court's judgment in favor of appellee rests on the following conclusion of law, which we believe is sound:
"I find that the statute of limitations was not put in motion until three years after the date of the execution of the written contract between plaintiff and defendant, to wit, April 3, 1914, and that limitation was not started until April 3, 1917, and, this suit having been filed on April 12, 1920, it was within four years after plaintiff's cause of action accrued; and in this connection I find that plaintiff's cause of action is based on the written contract of indemnity entered into between plaintiff and defendant, and is not based on the implied obligation which the law would have raised against the principal (the defendant herein) in favor of the surety (plaintiff) on the payment by the plaintiff of the defendant's notes, in the absence of the written contract; that whereas such implied obligation would be barred in two years, that there being a written contract of indemnity executed by defendant to plaintiff, that the four years' statute of limitation applies; and I find in this connection that plaintiff's cause of action did not arise against the defendant on the payment of each respective note by the plaintiff, but under the express terms of the contract it was agreed and contemplated that the defendant would have three years after the date of the deed and contract in which to repay the then payees in each of said respective notes, or to any one else who might at interim have paid said notes, and that the plaintiff on paying the notes had no cause of action against the defendant for reimbursement until the expiration of three years from the date of the contract."
The only question then that we see in this case is: When did limitation begin to run under the foregoing contract? It seems to us that the trial court was correct in fixing this date at three years after the date of the contract, which would be the 3d day of April, 1917. The spirit of the contract, as we understand it, was to give Mr. Littlefield three years in which to pay off all the notes. The contract provides:
"At any time within three years from this date that Mr. Littlefield can liquidate the above-described indebtedness by a sale of the undivided one-half interest of the above-described tract of land or otherwise, that the said Scott will transfer with his wife to Littlefield an undivided one-half interest in said above-described real estate."
And again:
"It is further provided that if at the end of three years from the date hereof the said Littlefield shall not have paid in full the said notes that this contract shall be null and void. And also in such event the said real estate shall become the absolute property of the said Leonard D. Scott."
Also it appears from the contract that Littlefield was not expected to pay the notes at maturity, but was to have the right to renew the notes, and, if necessary, to borrow money from other parties to pay off the notes described in the contract. It is true that nothing is said in the contract about Scott paying the notes, but he was contracting to assist Littlefield, as surety, and to remain as surety for three years. The quotations above made from the contract show that Littlefield was given certain privileges and rights, which he had the right to exercise at any time within the three-year period. These notes matured less than six months after the date of the contract. Could Scott deprive Littlefield of the valuable rights granted him of selling the property by paying the notes himself, as he did when some of them matured? We also think it reasonably appears from the facts of this case that this was the construction placed on it by the parties themselves. During the three-year period, Scott did not seek to fore-close his mortgage nor press Littlefield for a settlement. It is not to be presumed, at least from the state of this record, that Scott negligently permitted his rights against Littlefield to become barred by the statutes of limitation, but, on the contrary, that he and Littlefield construed the contract as giving three years from its date for adjustment of the notes.
The court did not err in granting judgment to Scott for the taxes paid by him against the land. When he paid the taxes on this land, the amount so paid became a part of his debt against Littlefield, and was secured to the same extent as the items set out in the indemnity contract. Stone v. Tilley,
Appellee has a cross-assignment complaining of the court's refusal to give him *827 judgment for attorney's fees, under the following conclusion:
"I find that the plaintiff employed Attorneys Cole Cole to bring this suit, and upon the admission of counsel for defendants, in the event attorney's fees are recoverable herein, that 10 per cent. of the amount of the principal and interest of the notes paid would be a reasonable attorney's fee."
In our judgment, the contract of indemnity did not provide for attorney's fees. The clause:
"And the said Leonard D. Scott, together with his wife, shall reconvey the said real estate unto the said William T. Littlefield upon the said William T. Littlefield paying in full all of said notes, renewals thereof, or other money secured with which to satisfy said notes upon which the said Scott may be endorser, all together with interest, costs of whatsoever nature and kind, and shall further save free and harmless the said Scott from the payment of any sum of money upon said notes or any part thereof,"
was to indemnify appellee against costs arising out of the notes described in the contract, that is, such "costs of whatsoever nature and kind" which might be incurred by suit or otherwise in connection with those notes, that is, as between Scott and the holders of the notes, but the attorney's fees here sought is for the enforcement of the indemnity contract between the parties thereto. American Surety Co. v. Phillips (Tex.Civ.App.)
As an alternative plea, appellee prayed that the contract be construed as a conditional sale, and has cross-assigned error against the judgment of the court for refusing to so hold. We do not discuss the merits of this cross-assignment, as we find in appellee's brief the following statement in relation thereto:
"Of course, if the court finds that appellee's cause of action under the mortgage feature is not barred by limitations, we do not insist upon this contention, because, so long as `all roads lead to Jericho,' it is as agreeable to foreclose the mortgage as to recover the land in trespass to try title; in fact, appellee does not want the land if appellants will pay the debt, and is desirous of appellant having every opportunity to do so."
The judgment of the trial court is in all things affirmed.