185 S.W. 1030 | Tex. App. | 1916
T. H. Honeycutt on January 15, 1914, executed a chattel mortgage to the appellants, covering two horses, a wagon, and a crop to be grown during the year 1914. The appellants sue in assumpsit and to foreclose this mortgage lien. On the day the suit was filed, March 22, 1915, a writ of sequestration was levied on the personalty and three bales of mortgaged cotton. Appellee John Gregory, by next friend, intervened in the suit and set up claim to the three bales of cotton, averring that on January 1, 1914, he made a verbal contract with appellee Honeycutt to work for him as a farm hand during the year 1914, and for his wages to be paid out of the cotton produced by his labor when same was sold. When the crop was made, appellee Honeycutt delivered to John Gregory, in satisfaction of his claim for wages, the three bales of cotton in suit. John Gregory did not make duplicate accounts of the service rendered by him to appellee Honeycutt, nor cause a copy to be filed in the office of the county clerk. A judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs for the debt against Honeycutt, and for foreclosure of the chattel mortgage lien on the horses and wagon, but decreeing the three bales of cotton to John Gregory.
The case of Peacock v. Morgan et al.,
Judgment modified and affirmed.