Court Opinion

ID: 9830484
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-09-01 20:14:42.640834+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:23.347055
License: Public Domain

DUNKLIN, J.
The Lyon-Gray Lumber Company instituted this suit against the Nocona Cotton Oil Company and W. A. McCall and Cadmus McCall to recover a debt against the oil company for $1,134.10 for building material sold to that company to be used in the construction of repairs on said defendant’s oil plant, and certain additions thereto, and to foreclose a lien upon the entire plant as against all the defendants; W. A. and Cadmus McCall being subsequent purchasers of the property under sales made by virtue of deeds of trust given thereon by- the company, and also being the owners of certain other liens thereon which had not been foreclosed.
The court rendered judgment against the oil company for the amount of plaintiff’s debt, and found that the plaintiff was entitled to a lien on a part of the property in controversy for th$ sum of $117.25 of the debt sued for, but further found the plaintiff was not entitled to a lien upon the rest of the property for any sum. The judgment further recites that the defendant W. A. McCall had paid into court, subject to plaintiff’s order, the said sum of $117.25 to satisfy plaintiff’s lien so found by the court, and, having thus satisfied said lien, judgment was entered in favor of the McCalls denying a foreclosure of any lien upon the property and quieting the title of the two McCalls to the property. From that judgment, the plaintiff has prosecuted this writ of error.
No statement of facts appears in the record, but the trial judge filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and such findings of fact are therefore conclusive here. From those findings it appears that the plaintiff sold to the oil company certain building material on open account during the year 1913, to be used in building an additional room to the oil plant and in certain repairs and other improvements thereon. Material to the extent of the value of $1,094 was used in the construction of such improvements.
The first material purchased was delivered April 24, 1913, and such deliveries were continued on divers days thereafter up to and including November 14, 1913, and a few items as late as January 8, 1914. All said building material was sold under and by virtue of a contract and agreement made in April, 1913, and prior to any delivery thereof, that the amount of indebtedness therefor should be paid on October 7, 1913. On February 7, 1914, plaintiff filed with the county clerk a verified account for such building material to be recorded in the records of mechanics’ liens of the county, for the purpose of fixing a lien upon the oil company’s plant, in accordance with the statutes. Material to the amount of $117.25 was sold during the four months next preceding the filing of said account, and the trial judge found that plaintiff was entitled to a lien for that amount on certain additions made to the plant in which said building materials *634were used, but on no other part of the plant, and further found that plaintiff was not entitled to a lien for the material sold prior to October 7, 1913. In other words, the trial judge held that the statutory requirement that, in order to fix a mechanic’s or material-man’s lien upon a building, under such circumstances, the account therefor must be filed for record in the mechanics’ liens record of the county within a period of four months after such account is due, applied to the lien claimed by plaintiff and was controlling, and that therefore plaintiff was not entitled to any lien' for material furnished prior to October 7, 1913. It further appears that on September 20, 1912, the oil company executed a deed of trust upon all of its property to secure the payment of two promissory notes of $4,500 each of the same date, which was duly recorded on September 27, 1912. Those two notes were in favor of the defendant W. A. McCall and became due March 1, 1914. The oil company haying failed to pay them, or any part thereof, the trustee in the deed of trust sold all the property on the first Tuesday in April, 1914, to satisfy said debt, and W. A. McCall became the purchaser; said sale appearing to be in all respects regular. It thus appears that this deed of trust and the record thereof antedated by some six months the contract under which the plaintiff agreed to sell the building material to the oil company.
On June 21, 1913, some two months after the plaintiff began to deliver building material to the oil company under the said contract of purchase, the oil company executed another deed of trust in favor of W. A. McCall upon all of its property to secure the payment of another promissory note dated June 12, 1913, in the principal .sum of $10,000, and on the first Tuesday in April, 1914, said McCall bought in all of the property under a trustee’s sale made by virtue of that deed of trust also, the oil company having wholly made default in the payment of the note for $10,000. Proper deeds of conveyance wer^ made to W. A. McCall by the trustee when each of those sales was made.
W. A. McCall also purchased the following liens and the notes for which they were given, all of which notes are wholly unpaid and the liens are still valid and subsisting, to wit: A promissory note for the principal sum of $4,000, dated September 27,1912, and secured by a chattel mortgage of the same date, duly recorded, upon all of the machinery in said plant; a certain other note in the sum of $3,800, dated June, 1912, and secured by a chattel mortgage, duly recorded, on a part of the machinery in said plant; a promissory note for $600, dated August 20, 1913, secured by a chattel mortgage duly recorded on a part of the machinery in the plant; a promissory note for $5,000, dated August 21, 1913, secured by a mortgage, duly recorded, upon all of the property of the oil company.
It thus appears from the foregoing that the liens upon the entire plant to secure the payment of the two promissory notes in the sum of $4,500 each, and also the two liens, one given September 27, 1912, for $4,000, and the other in June, 1912, for $3,800, on the machinery situated in the plant, were clearly prior and superior, in any event, to the lien claimed by the plaintiff in this case.
It is to be noted further that there was a foreclosure of the mortgage lien given to secure the two $4,500 notes, and that W. A. McCall bought in the property under such foreclosure sale.
The following is another finding by the trial judge:
“No proofs were made as to the value of the improvements above mentioned (meaning the improvements in the construction of which the material furnished by plaintiff was used), nor as to the value of the oil plant, and I do not find as to the values of either.”
We agree with the plaintiff in error in its contention that, as the material was furnished to the oil company under a contract between it and the plaintiff, and not to a contractor or subcontractor, a lien accrued under and by virtue of section 37, art. 16, of the Constitution to secure payment therefor, and that the right to such lien was not impaired by the provisions of chapter 2, tit. 86, Vernon’s Say les’ Texas Civil Statutes, requiring certain things to be done in order to fix a lien, under such decisions as Strang v. Pray, 89 Tex. 525, 35 S. W. 1054; F. & M. Nat. Bank v. Taylor, 91 Tex. 78, 40 S. W. 876, 966; Howell v. McMurray Lbr. Co., 62 Tex. Civ. App. 584, 132 S. W. 848; Cameron & Co. v. Trueheart, 165 S. W. 58.
But, as shown above, the constitutional lien in plaintiff’s favor was subordinate to the lien for the two $4,500 notes upon the entire plant, which was foreclosed. It does not appear that any of the machinery in the plant, which was covered by the various mortgage liens was ever so fixed to the building as to become a part of the realty, and therefore it does not appear that plaintiff’s lien ever did attach to any of the machinery; and in this connection it is to be noted further that the two liens upon the machinery given in 1912 for an aggregate sum of $7,800 antedated any possible lien in favor of plaintiff on said machinery by several months. Hence the lien in plaintiff’s favor never attached to any greater interest than the equity owned by the oil company after giving the mortgage lien to secure the two promissory notes for $4,500 each.
This suit is an equitable proceeding for foreclosure, and it is a familiar rule of equity that the court will never do a useless thing, in other words, will never sit to determine mere abstract questions of law, and that in order to invoke the aid of such a court it is incumbent upon the complaining *635party that he show a violation of some legal or equitable right which has resulted in injury or loss to him. Unless the property upon which plaintiff sought to enforce a lien was of a value in excess of the prior and superior liens, then plaintiff has lost nothing by its failure to secure a foreclosure of the constitutional lien above noted, and in the absence of any proof upon that issue it does not appear that the error in the judgment of the trial court, if error there be, in. refusing plaintiff the relief prayed for, was harmful. It is incumbent upon the plaintiff in error in this court to show, not only error in the judgment complained of, but that such error was reasonably calculated to cause, and probably did cause, some injury to him. Kynard v. Tucker, 171 S. W. 1086; Flynn v. Radford Gro. Co., 174 S. W. 902; Braun v. Hickman, 176 S. W. 879; P. & G. N. Ry. Co. v. Flanders, 165 S. W. 98; Renshaw v. Arnett, 158 S. W. 1197.
For the reasons just stated, the judgment of the trial court is in all things affirmed, without attempting to pass upon the merits of the various assignments of error presented in plaintiff in error’s brief.
Affirmed.