302 S.W.2d 446 | Tex. App. | 1957
Appellee Rudolph Hoefs brought suit in Reeves County against appellants Norris Shook, T. P. Heyne, M. Sorrel, II, M. J. Heyne, and Sorrel-Heyne & Co., a co-partnership, composed of Norris Shook, T. P. Heyne, M. Sorrel, II, and M. J. Heyne, all residents of Wharton County, Texas, and Clyde Reeves, a transient person whose place of residence was unknown to appellee, for conversion of landlord’s interest in 78 bales of cotton.
All appellants filed a plea of privilege, seeking transfer of the cause as against each of them to Wharton County, Texas. Appellee, in his controverting affidavit, sought to maintain venue in Reeves County, Texas, by invoking Subdivision 9, Article 1995, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. The plea of privilege was tried before the court without a jury. The court overruled appellants’ plea of privilege, from which ruling appellants perfected their appeeal.
It is undisputed that Clyde Reeves was a tenant of the appellee Rudolph Hoefs, and that the cotton in question was raised
Appellee’s rights would not have been disturbed had appellants bought this cotton from Reeves subject to appellee’s lien. It is said in Adams v. A. A. Paton & Co., Tex.Civ.App., 173 S.W. 546, 548:
“There is no impairment of the security in the mere assignment of the title to the property.subject to the lien. Hence a waiver of the landlord’s lien is not to be inferred from the mere transfer of the ownership of the property by the tenant, but by the fact that such transfer is made with the under- ■ standing that the property is to be appropriated by the purchaser free from the incumbrance.”
There is evidence herein that Reeves had no authority to sell the cotton free of in-cumbrance, and that he made no such sale. The court, by overruling the plea of privilege, impliedly found that there was a conversion of appellee’s interest in said cotton, and that Subdivision 9, Article 1995, V.A.T.S. controls the venue. The record justifies such finding.
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.