Court Opinion

ID: 3919116
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:46:26.122807+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:16:17.224017
License: Public Domain

On December 27, 1905, the defendant in error, Ben O. Smith, conveyed to Mrs. Mary Todd 736 1/2 acres of land in Rains county. The trial court made findings of fact as to the amount and method of payment of the consideration as follows:
"I find that the consideration for said conveyance was the sum of $3,687.50, paid and secured to be paid by Mrs. Mary Todd as follows:
"Four hundred eight-seven dollars and fifty cents cash, and the execution and delivery by said Mrs. Mary Todd of five promissory notes of even date with said deed, due and payable to the order of Ben O. Smith as follows: Five hundred dollars on December 27, 1906; $675 on December 27, 1907; $675 on December 27, 1908; $675 on December 27, 1909; and $675 on December 27, 1910 — with interest on the said notes at the rate of 9 per cent. per annum, past-due interest to draw interest at the rate of 10 per cent. per annum until paid.
"That each of said notes and the deed of conveyance aforesaid recited therein a vendor's lien upon the land described in said deed and said notes to secure the payment of the notes; said notes being in the ordinary form of vendor's lien notes. *Page 559 
"That each of said notes further provide for the payment of 10 per cent. upon the principal and interest due as attorney's fee if sued upon or placed in the hands of an attorney for collection.
"That none of said notes were paid, save and except the sum of $200 on the first note on February 7, 1907, which was duly credited thereon, and the interest was paid on all of said notes to December 27, 1906."
The court also found that the attorney's fees provided for were reasonable, and that the same had become due and payable.
On July 16, 1915, Mrs. Todd conveyed an undivided one-seventh interest in the land to McCutcheon  Church, and the remaining six-sevenths to William F. Todd. This suit was brought on August 5, 1915, by McCutcheon  Church and William F. Todd against defendant in error, Ben O. Smith, to remove cloud from their title to said land, on the ground that the notes above named, the vendor's lien securing them, and the superior title of the vendor, were barred by limitation. Smith answered on October 30, 1915, and by way of cross-action impleaded Mrs. Todd, and prayed, as against all the parties, for a rescission of the contract of sale and a recovery of the land. He also prayed in the alternative for a personal judgment against Mrs. Todd on the notes, and a foreclosure of the vendor's lien for the amount due on all the notes against Mrs. Todd and plaintiffs in error who had brought the suit. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of defendant in error establishing his lien for the balance due, principal, interest, and attorney's fees on all of the notes as against all parties, and awarding the necessary process for a sale of the land in satisfaction thereof, but did not render a personal judgment against Mrs. Todd. The trial court's judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals (194 S.W. 831), and the case is now before this court on writ of error.
It is unnecessary to discuss the assignments of error in detail. We have examined them, and they appear to be sufficient to raise the questions decided in this opinion.
The first, second, and third notes of the series of notes named above were due respectively on December 27, 1906, 1907, and 1908, and were barred respectively four years from these dates; the last of the three being barred in December, 1912. The trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals, however, held that the lien securing these three notes was revived and extended by that paragraph of article 5695, Revised Statutes, as amended by an act of the Legislature effective on November 18, 1913, which reads:
"And further provided if any such obligations executed subsequent to July 14, 1905, were barred by the four-years' statute of limitation on the 30th of June, 1913, the owners thereof shall have four years within which to bring suit to enforce the lien securing the same." Chapter 27, General Laws of the First Called Session of the *Page 560 
Thirty-Third Legislature (Vernon's Sayles' Ann. Civ. St. 1914, art. 5695).
In an opinion of this court (Cathey v. Weaver, 111 Tex. 515
[111 Tex. 515], 240 S.W. 447) not yet [officially] published, we have held that this paragraph is unconstitutional and void.
The lien to secure these three notes, therefore, was not revived or extended by that act. The notes and liens were barred by limitation, and the court erred in establishing so much of the debt as was evidenced by these notes and directing a foreclosure of the lien in satisfaction thereof.
The fourth and fifth notes of this series were due respectively December 27, 1909, and 1910, and the notes were not barred until four years after these respective dates, to wit, in December, 1913, and 1914. They were therefore valid, subsisting, and enforceable obligations on November 18, 1913, when chapter 27 of the General Laws of the First Called Session of the Thirty-Third Legislature became effective. However, the defendant in error, Smith, did not file suit to foreclose the lien securing these notes until he filed his cross-action in this case on October 30, 1915, and at a time when both of these notes were barred by the statute of four years limitation, unless the limitation period had been extended by the act of the Legislature just named. These notes and the lien securing them being valid, subsisting, and unsatisfied obligations at the time this legislative act became a law, the limitation period as to them could be extended. Voigt v. Gulf, etc., Ry. Co., 94 Tex. 357, 365, 60 S.W. 658; 17 R.C.L., p. 672, sec. 12.
The provision contained in Chapter 27 of the General Laws of the First Called Session of the Thirty-Third Legislature, relied upon as having extended the period of time within which suit might be brought to foreclose the lien securing the two notes now under discussion, reads as follows:
"And provided that the owners of all notes secured by deeds of trust or other liens and the owners of all vendor's lien notes reserved in deeds of conveyance which were executed subsequent to July 14, 1905, shall have four years after this act takes effect within which they may obtain such recorded extension as herein provided for, or bring suit to enforce the liens securing them if same are valid obligations and not already barred by the four years' statutes of limitation when this act takes effect, and if such debt is not extended of record, or suit is not brought within such four years or four years after they mature, they shall be forever barred from the right to extend such debt of record, or bring suit to enforce the lien securing the same."
We have concluded that this provision is sufficient to extend, and that the effect of it was to extend, the time within which suit could be brought to foreclose the lien securing the last two notes referred to for four years from November 18, 1913. Having reached this conclusion, it is clear that the lien securing the last two notes, each *Page 561 
for $675, was a valid, subsisting lien when defendant in error filed his cross-action for its foreclosure on October 30, 1915. Defendant in error, therefore, had the right to maintain an action for the foreclosure of the lien to secure the amount of these notes, principal, interest, and attorney's fees.
Plaintiffs in error contend that these two notes were barred by limitation under the rule of proportion announced in Gautier v. Franklin, 1 Tex. 732, and other cases. We do not agree with this contention, and think the Court of Civil Appeals correctly disposed of this issue.
From the foregoing it follows that the judgment of the trial court must be reformed by reducing the amount for the satisfaction of which a foreclosure is ordered to the extent that the same was based on the first three notes described in the court's findings of fact, heretofore set out in this opinion, but permitting a foreclosure of the vender's lien for the amount of the principal, interest, and attorney's fees due on the last two notes on December 1, 1915, the date of the judgment below.
The judgment of the trial court is therefore reformed by substituting for the amount assessed as being due on December 1, 1915, on all of the notes, the amount due as principal, interest, and attorney's fees on the last two notes, to wit, the sum of $3,151.43; and, in the judgment of the trial court, wherever the amount of $7,000.95 is named, there is hereby substituted therefor and in lieu thereof the sum of $3,151.43.
The judgment of the trial court and of the Court of Civil Appeals as thus reformed is affirmed.
GREENWOOD, J., not sitting.