Court Opinion

ID: 3906035
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:35:31.548984+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:15:54.860279
License: Public Domain

W.N. George purchased from H.H. Rawlings 1380 acres of land for which he gave his note for $8047.50, dated November 19, 1885, due November 19, 1893. George occupied 200 acres of the tract as a homestead, and while he was so occupying it on the 23d day of October, 1888, borrowed from the Western Mortgage 
Investment Company $16,500, giving his note therefor, which matured prior to the 26th day of December, 1891, and to secure this note George executed to the Western Mortgage  Investment Company a deed of trust on 1180 acres of the land, not including his homestead. The principal and interest of the note given by George to H.H. Rawlings were embraced in the note given by George to the Mortgage  Investment Co., and he received from the investment company the difference between the principal of the said note and unpaid interest up to the date when he borrowed the money from the said investment company and the amount of the note executed to it, being something over $6000. The Mortgage  Investment Company, with the money borrowed by George, paid off the note to Rawlings and received the same with an endorsement thereon, showing that it was transferred by Rawlings without recourse.
The deed of trust included only the 1180 acres of land, describing it by metes and bounds and calling for the 200 acres as the homestead of George on two of its lines. No other land was described in the deed of trust than the 1180 acres. In the deed of trust was a space thus designated: "This space is to be used to secure subrogation of the lien and recite facts where a vendor's or other lien is paid off by the note secured hereby." In the space was written: "It is expressly agreed that the taking of this trust deed shall in nowise impair the vendor's lien existing upon the said land as evidenced by the note of the said W.N. George for $8047.50 executed to H.H. Rawlings and transferred to the Western Mortgage  Investment Company, Limited, and now owned by the said company." It was proved by J.B. Simpson, who was trustee in the deed of trust, that when the said transaction occurred it was agreed between him and George that the note made to Rawlings should be held by the Mortgage  Investment Company as collateral to secure the note made to it for $16,500, which agreement was expressed in the deed of trust. To the admission of this testimony the defendant Morrison objected, upon the ground that the deed of trust was the best evidence of the agreement, and second, that the evidence tended to vary the terms of the agreement expressed in the deed of trust, which objections were overruled and the testimony admitted.
December 26, 1891, the note made by George to the Mortgage 
Investment Company having fallen due and being unpaid, suit was filed upon it by the said Mortgage  Investment Company against George, and praying a foreclosure upon the 1180 acres of land, but not embracing the 200 acres, not declaring any right against the 200 acres, nor asking any relief with regard thereto. *Page 46 
During the pendency of the suit above stated, George and wife, on the 20th day of February, 1892, by warranty deed to appellant Morrison, conveyed the 1180 acres of land, expressing that it was conveyed subject to the deed of trust, and also conveyed to Morrison the 200 acres, the homestead, the consideration of the conveyance of the lands being a note for $1500 and $1000 paid by Morrison for George. On March 29, 1892, the Mortgage  Investment Company obtained a judgment against George for $23,451.40, foreclosing the lien of the deed of trust upon the 1180 acres of land and in July, 1892, the 1180 acres of land was sold under and by virtue of the said judgment and bought in by the Mortgage  Investment Company at the price of $10,000, which was credited upon the judgment.
Lazarus, the defendant in error, gave his own note to the Mortgage  Investment Company for the amount of the principal, $8047.50, of the note made by George to Rawlings and took from the mortgage company a transfer of the latter note and a guaranty that it would be paid. Suit was instituted in the District Court of Dallas County upon the note made by George to Rawlings, George and Morrison, with others, being parties defendant, praying for judgment against George for the amount of the note and a foreclosure of the vendor's lien upon the 200 acres of land, the homestead of George, which had been conveyed to Morrison. The deed of trust given by George to the Mortgage Investment Company was recorded in Dallas County prior to the sale made by George to Morrison. Trial was had before the court without a jury and judgment was rendered against George by default for the full amount of the note sued upon and interest, and against Morrison foreclosing the lien upon the 200 acres of land aforesaid. Morrison appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals, which affirmed the judgment of the District Court
Lazarus is in no better position in this case than the Western Mortgage  Investment Company would be if it were plaintiff herein. If he really owns the note sued upon, the manner in which he acquired it makes it subject in his hands, to all defenses that could be made against it in the hands of the Western Mortgage  Investment Company and imposes upon him the same requirements that the law would impose upon the Mortgage  Investment Company as a condition precedent to enforcing the lien upon the homestead. For the purpose of this case, we will assume that Morrison must stand in the shoes of George and is not entitled to make any defense that George could not make if he were still the owner of the land and occupying it as a homestead.
The effect of the transaction between George and the Mortgage Investment Company, as interpreted and enforced by the judgment of the District Court in this case in connection with the judgment in the former suit foreclosing the deed of trust upon and sale of the 1180 acres thereunder, is to give to the money borrowed by George from the Mortgage  Investment Company in excess of that which was used to take up the vendor's lien note, a lien upon the 1180 acres of land superior to *Page 47 
that of the vendor's lien note made by George to Rawlings and the money embraced in the $16,500 note which represents the vendor's lien note, is given but a secondary lien upon the 1180 acres of land, and in that way the burden of the entire note for $8047.50 is imposed upon the homestead. Plainly stated, the agreement thus construed would be the equivalent of an arrangement as follows: Suppose that George had borrowed the $16,500 of the Mortgage  Investment Company, with a part of which sum it, at his suggestion, took up the vendor's lien note with a transfer thereof to it, and instead of giving one note for the $16,500, as in this case, the Investment Company held the original vendor's lien note, and took from George a note for the excess over the amount paid for the vendor's lien note, and to secure the original note and the note given for such excess, suppose George had given a deed of trust upon the 1180 acres of land with the specific agreement that the vendor's lien of the $8047.50 note should be retained upon all the land, but that the note given for the money borrowed in excess of that which was used to take up the vendor's lien note should have a prior lien upon the 1180 acres. The District Court must have construed the agreement in this case to mean what is expressed in the supposed case stated above, otherwise it could not have allowed the proceeds of the sale of the 1180 acres to be exclusively applied to the payment of the money embraced in the note given by George to the Mortgage  Investment Company not used to discharge the lien, and at the same time refuse to require the vendor's lien to be foreclosed upon the 1180 acres before subjecting the homestead to the original note. If the District Court held the 1180 acres subject first to the purchase money embraced in the note, it must have applied the sum bid for it to the discharge of the purchase money, or that the land was still subject to the vendor's lien, and that it must be exhausted before the homestead can be resorted to. In so far as priority was given to the borrowed money over the vendor's lien note, the agreement thus understood would be in conflict with article 16, section 50, of the Constitution, because it would virtually create a new lien upon the homestead by adding a burden to which it was not before liable, in that, the 200 acres would be made liable for the entire purchase money debt, whereas it was in the first place only liable for its proportionate part thereof.
We do not understand that counsel for the defendant in error claim this to be the proper construction of the agreement, yet it cannot be denied that it is the effect produced by the construction placed upon the contract by the court. The best case which can be made for the plaintiff Lazarus upon the facts is, that the vendor's lien was to be preserved upon the whole 1380 acres of land, the 1180 acres to be primarily liable for the $8047.50 as represented in the $16,500 note, and that the original note given by George to Rawlings should be held by the Mortgage  Investment Company as collateral security for the payment of that sum by the 1180 acres, the homestead being thus made secondarily liable *Page 48 
for the purchase money of the land. By this arrangement the homestead became surety or a guarantor that the 1180 acres would sell for a sum sufficient to discharge that portion of the note secured by the deed of trust which represented the purchase money of the entire tract. Durrell v. Farwell,88 Tex. 98, and authorities there cited; Robertson v. Gee, 1 Ves., Sr., 251.
The homestead occupying towards the remainder of the tract the attitude of guarantor or surety, it would be necessary for the party seeking to enforce the lien to first exhaust the 1180 acres before resorting to the homestead. At least, it would be required, if the primary security had not been first exhausted, that it should in this proceeding be brought before the court and the lien foreclosed so as to subject the 1180 acres first, and by the decree of the court the homestead might be sold if the other land did not sell for enough to pay that part of the note and thus be made secondarily liable. Robertson v. Gee, cited above; Brandt, Suretyship  Guaranty, secs. 98, 99, 100; Evans v. Bell, 45 Tex. 553.
It follows that before Lazarus could subject the homestead to the payment of the vendor's lien debt under the circumstances of this case, resort must first be had to the 1180 acres as the primary security or he must have sought in this suit to subject it first, and not having done so, the plaintiff shows no right as against the defendant Morrison to have a decree foreclosing that lien upon the 200 acres which had been set apart as the homestead of George.
It is claimed on behalf of the defendant in error that by virtue of the foreclosure — in the prior suit against George — of the deed of trust upon the 1180 acres and the purchase of it by the Mortgage  Investment Company the vendor's lien was merged in the title which the Investment Company acquired by its purchase, and that therefore it cannot be now subjected to the payment of this note. If this be true, it must necessarily follow that by the manner in which the Mortgage  Investment Company dealt with the primary security in not foreclosing the vendor's lien thereon, it has put it in such a condition that it cannot be subjected to the payment of the debt for which the homestead stands as surety or guarantor, therefore the lien upon the homestead was discharged. Durrell v. Farwell, cited above. If, however, the vendor's lien for the amount of money embraced in the $16,500 note which represents the purchase money of the land and which held a prior lien upon it was foreclosed upon the 1180 acres, the land having been sold for a sum more than sufficient to discharge the amount due upon the purchase money of the entire tract, the purchase money part of the debt and the lien upon the homestead would be discharged.
Under no phase of this case can Lazarus enforce the vendor's lien upon the 200 acres, the homestead of George. We will restate our conclusions as follows: If the vendor's lien upon the 1180 acres was not foreclosed or extinguished by the proceedings in the former suit, then *Page 49 
Lazarus cannot have judgment of foreclosure against the homestead in this suit because he has not made the Mortgage 
Investment Company a party and sought to foreclose the vendor's lien first upon the 1180 acres and alternately upon the 200 acres, which he might have done but has not sought to do in this proceeding. If the vendor's lien upon the 1180 acres was not foreclosed in the former suit, but by the foreclosure of the deed of trust and the sale and purchase of the 1180 acres under that judgment by the Mortgage  Investment Company, the vendor's lien became merged in the title and was thereby destroyed, then Lazarus cannot have judgment in this case foreclosing a vendor's lien upon the homestead, because the Mortgage  Investment Company has by its dealings with the 1180 acres, the primary security, placed it in a condition that the lien cannot be enforced thereon and has thereby discharged the homestead, which only stood as surety for the other land. Again, if the vendor's lien which existed to secure that part of the note given by George to the Mortgage  Investment Company, which represented the original note to Rawlings, was foreclosed upon the 1180 acres of land in the former suit against George, then upon the purchase of the said 1180 acres by the Mortgage  Investment Company under that judgment the amount of the bid which was more than sufficient to have settled the original Rawlings note must be entered as a credit to the purchase money as represented in the judgment, and that part of the debt being paid which held a prior lien upon the land and for which the homestead stood as surety would discharge the 200 acres and Lazarus would not be entitled to a judgment foreclosing the lien thereon.
The court below erred in holding that the plaintiff showed a right to resort to the homestead for the payment of this debt, and the Court of Civil Appeals erred in affirming that judgment.
It appearing to the court that the plaintiff, under the facts of this case, has no right of recovery against the defendant Morrison, the judgments of the District Court and the Court of Civil Appeals are reversed as to Morrison, and such judgment will here be entered as should have been entered by the Court of Civil Appeals. It is therefore ordered that the plaintiff Lazarus take nothing by his suit as against Hiram Morrison, and that the defendant Hiram Morrison go hence without day discharged and recover of the plaintiff Sam Lazarus all costs in this behalf expended in all of the courts.
Reversed and rendered.