1 S.W.2d 857 | Tex. Comm'n App. | 1928
This case involves the question of priority of a certain vendor’s lien for $7,200, held by H. D. Kone, trustee, over other liens claimed on the same land by the Kansas City Life Insurance Company, as as-signee of the Ward-Harrison Mortgage Company. The material facts are substantially as follows:
On June 1, 1921, J. C. Harper deeded the land to Dave Harper. This deed was recorded on November 26, 1921. Against the land there existed outstanding liens approximating $10,000, which liens had been created by J. C. Harper’s predecessors in title, and were of record. These liens constituted first or prior liens, and will be so designated in our discussion of the case. As part of the consideration for said conveyance, Dave Harper, as shown by recitals in the deed, assumed payment of these prior lien debts, and, in addition, executed his note to J. C. Harper for $7,200, which was secured by the vendor’s lien reserved in the deed. Hence this vendor’s lien was a second lien on the land covered by the prior liens. On December 26, 1921, J. O. Harper transferred this $7,200 note and lien to the Colonial Trust Company. This transfer was recorded on the day it was executed, but was not properly indexed. On April 28, 1922, Dave Harper made written application to the Ward-Harrison Mortgage Company for a loan of $25,000, offering as security, among o.ther lands, the land incumbered by the liens mentioned above.
In the application, the several liens outstanding against this land were listed, including the $7,200 lien, which latter lien was described in the following words: “$7,200 due to Colonial Trust Company.” The application specified that the proceeds of the loan sought were to be used “to take up and extend” the existing liens on the property. On August 14, 1922, the application for loan having met with favor, Dave Harper executed a deed of trust bearing date August 10, 1922, for the purpose of securing the loan of $25,000, evidenced by notes of Dave Harper to the Ward-Harrison Mortgage Company. This deed of trust embraced the land covered by the several liens that have been mentioned, and was recorded on August 14, 1922. In connection with the making of this loan, the Ward-Harrison Company had been furnished with an abstract of the title, duly certified by the abstractor as containing all instruments of record pertaining to the land here in question. But through oversight of the abstractor, resulting from the improper indexing of the instrument by the county clerk, the transfer of the $7,200 note and lien from J. C. Harper- to the Colonial Trust Company was omitted from the abstract. On August 18, 1922, J. C. Harper, reciting in the instrument that he then was the legal owner and holder of the $7,200 note, executed a subordination agreement, by the terms of which he purported to subordinate the said note and lien to the $25,000 loan covered by the Ward-Harrison Company deed • of trust. Acting in good faith and in reliance upon this instrument, and upon the ab-tract which had been furnished it, the Ward-Harrison Company proceeded, during the ensuing 30 days, to pay, from the proceeds of the $25,000 loan, the several prior lien debts. The holders of these several prior liens executed releases, and on September 30, 1922, these releases, together with the subordination agreement of J. C. Harper, were duly recorded. In these transactions it was the intention and purpose of the Ward-Harrison Company and Dave Harper to make the $25,000 loan a first lien on the land, and render it superior to the $7,200 note and lien. The Ward-Harrison Company had no present knowledge, when these transactions took place, that J. C. Harper was not the holder of said $7,200 note, but believed in good faith that he was; and further believed that its deed of trust lien was being made a first lien on the land by the transactions. Acting upon this belief, that company took releases from said prior lienholders instead of having the prior liens formally assigned to it.
On October 6, 1922, the Ward-Harrison Company assigned to the Kansas City Life Insurance Company, for a valuable consideration, the notes representing the $25,000 loan, and the lien securing same. On October 19, 1922, Dave Harper deeded the land in question to the Shear Company, subject to the $25,000 loan and the $7,200 vendor’s lien'note. This latter note matured on January 1, 1924. Some time prior to its maturity, the holder, the Colonial Trust Company, had a correct abstract made to the lands in question, which disclosed all the recorded instruments which have been mentioned. From an examination of these several instruments, the Trust Company,
A mistake of fact, of which equity takes cognizance, has been defined to be “an unconscious ignorance or forgetfulness of the existence or nonexistence of a fact, past or present, material to the contract.” H. & T. C. Ry. v. McCarty, 94 Tex. 302, 60 S. W. 431, 53 L. R. A. 507, 86 Am. St. Rep. 854; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. 839. An examination of the record here has convinced us that there (is evidence to show that, in taking up the prior liens from the proceeds of the $25,000 loan, and procuring releases from the lienholders, the Ward-Harrison Company labored under a mistake of fact with respect to J.' C. Harper being the holder of the $7,200 note. This was a fact issue raised by the evidence, • which issue the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals resolved in favor of the Kansas City Life Insurance Company, the assignee of the Ward-Harrison Company. We are bound by that finding, notwithstanding there is evidence to sustain a contrary finding, if one had been made.
The direct result of the mistake was the taking of releases from the prior lien-holders instead of formal assignment of their liens. The Court of Civil Appeals correctly held that the execution of these releases will not be regarded in equity as extinguishing those liens. The Ward-Harrison Company became subrogated to the rights of the prior lienholders, and its assignee, the Kansas City Life Insurance Company, is entitled to enforce those rights against any holder of the $7,200 note other than such as purchased same for value, without notice of such rights.
The Court of Civil Appeals (as well as the trial court) found that the Shear Company bought the $7,200 note from the Colonial Trust Company, with notice of the mistake of the Ward-Harrison Company, and of the resulting rights of that company. There is evidence upon which to base this finding. Before the purchase of the note by the Shear Company, -Mr. Siddons discussed with Mr. Orrand his reasons for believing the $7,200-lien to be a first lien. Among those reasons was the fact that J. C. Harper was without power or authority to make the subordination agreement that he did. In the negotiations leading up to the purchase of the note by the Shear Company, the latter company requested, and was furnished, a correct abstract, which disclosed all the instruments of record concerning this land. From these facts the' trial court was authorized to infer that, when the Shear Company purchased the note, it had actual knowledge of all the facts revealed by the abstract. The evidence justifies the finding that the Shear Company was put on inquiry concerning the mistake of the Ward-Harrison Company and of the equities of that company in the premises. The inquiry, if followed up, would have led to full knowledge of the rights to which the Ward-Harrison Company and its assignee, the Kansas City Life Insurance Company, had become subrogated. This being so, the original •status of the $7,200 lien, as a second lien, was maintained with respect to the prior liens to which the Ward-Harrison Company was subrogated, and the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals properly so held. Under the facts of this case, the Cantrell Investment Company and H. D. Kone stand in the shoes of the Shear Company.
Judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and district court both affirmed, as recommended by the Commission of Appeals.