Court Opinion

ID: 4893526
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:53:44.915184+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:09:53.291277
License: Public Domain

Walker, Commissioner.
The assignments of error-present but a single question, and that is, whether the note *470sued on was, at the institution of the suit, secured by a valid lien, to which the lots were then subject.
The first assignment of error, in effect, states as the proposition of law contended for, that under the facts of the case, the note and purchase hen which secured it was satisfied and extinguished by the subsequent contracts of deed, lease, and agreement to reconvey on condition, and that consequently the judgment of foreclosure of the lien and for the debt was erroneous. The second assignment is in effect the same proposition, varied only in form: that as the facts do not show a hen, a judgment to subject the property to the payment ¿of the debt was erroneous.
The evidence showed clearly that the note was given for the purchase money of the lots; the note recited on its face to have been so given. The vendor’s hen existed, therefore, to secure the payment of the note; nor was the right of the vendor in respect to the hen affected or diminished by taking from the vendees and makers of the note a deed of trust. Howards v. Davis, 6 Tex., 182. The deed of trust, therefore, was an effective hen to assure the vendor in his rights as such for the security of the purchase money. The assignee of the note succeeded to the rights of the vendor The assignment by blank indorsement of a note given for the purchase money of land carries with it the vendor’s hen. Moore v. Raymond, 15 Tex., 556. So also of the transfer by dehvery of a note payable to a bearer which is secured by the vendor’s hen; it passes the hen. White v. Downs, 40 Tex., 225.
The plaintiff, consequently, held a vendor’s hen in right of his ownership and the deed of trust at the time when the transactions occurred between the plaintiff’s agent, Sam Maas, and the defendants, on the 28th day of August, 1876, which resulted in making the contracts which have been stated. This hen he continued to hold, unless the same was lost, waived or merged by the effect of the con*471tracts which were entered into at the túne above named. It was competent for the parties to abrogate the then existing hen, and to substitute in lieu thereof other obligations, or to wholly extinguish the debt and the hen by such terms of settlement and adjustment as they saw proper to make.
The plaintiff claims in his petition that the legal effect of the contracts which were made, and the intention of the parties to them, was not to abrogate the then existing hen, nor to settle and adjust the debt by a conveyance to the plaintiff of the lots, but that the deed which was executed was in effect delivered as a mortgage and as a security of the debt, without detriment to the hen which already existed by virtue of the deed of trust. This issue is met by the general denial of the defendants, and their answer setting up the exemption of the property in question from the operation of such a contract, by reason of the fact that the lots constituted the homestead of the defendants. The judge who tried the issue determined it in favor of the plaintiff. The judgment of the court will be entitled to the same consideration upon the facts determined by it, as would be the verdict of a jury. There was evidencé before the court which strongly supported the conclusion of the court, that the deed was delivered to operate and have the effect of a mortgage. There can be no objection, therefore, to the judgment that it is not sustained by the evidence. The evidence was such as to allow of a question whether the deed was intended as a conditional sale or as a mortgage. If it was the former, the plaintiff was not entitled to recover.
The court determined by the judgment which was rendered, that the deed, if it had any effect, was delivered as a mortgage. The rules of law which apply to the proper ascertainment of whether, in transactions like this, a deed is intended to be a conditional sale, or is delivered as a mortgage, well sustain the application which was made *472by the court which passed upon the evidence. It is laid down, that “if it be doubtful whether the parties intended a mortgage or a conditional sale, courts of equity incline to consider the transaction a mortgage, as more benign in. its operation.” Poindexter v. McCannon, 1 Dev. Eq., 377. And again, it is laid down by very numerous authorities, that the test of the distinction is this: “ If the relation of debtor and creditor remains, and a debt still subsists, it is a mortgage; but if the debt be extinguished by the agreement of the parties, or the money advanced is not byway of loan, and the grantor has the privilege of refunding, if he pleases, by a given time, and thereby entitle himself to a reconveyance, it is a conditional sale. Slee v. Manhattan Co., 1 Paige, 48; Goodman v. Grierson, 2 Ball & Beat., 274; Chief Justice Marshall, in Conway v. Alexander, 7 Cr., 237; 2 Edw. Ch., 138; 14 Pick., 467; 2 Sum., 534; 8 Paige, 243. The judgment is well supported, by the evidence to show that the plaintiff had a valid lien upon the lots, by virtue, at least, of the deed of conveyance made by the defendants to him; and it is not necessary to inquire whether he still retained and preserved the hen which he previously had by virtue of the deed of trust, or whether the new hen was given as a substitute for and in lieu of it. The judgment will be equally well' supported, to suppose that the deed was given as cumulative and auxiliary security to the purchase money hen given by the deed of trust. The effect of the mortgage deed and the lease, construed together, was to add to the plaintiff’s former rights as a mere naked mortgagee, that of a mortgagee in possession of the mortgaged property; the lease expressly acknowledged the plaintiff’s possession and right thereto, and that defendants occupied the premises as his tenants, paying monthly rent. It was the' province of the court to determine under the issues, upon the evidence adduced, whether there was a vahd subsisting hen or not, and there is evidence sufficient to support *473the conclusion which was arrived at; there was evidence before the court from which it might reasonably be deduced that the deed of trust was not abrogated; that there was no novation of the contract; and that the subsequent contracts entered into by the parties were intended to effect, not a conditional sale of the property, but to vary the obligation only, by increasing the security which already existed. The evidence showed that the deed, lease and memorandum in writing were executed contemporaneously, between the same parties, in reference to the same subject matter, and they will be deemed one instrument and one contract. Dunlap v. Wright, 11 Tex., 597; Howards v. Davis, 6 Tex., 174; Alexander v. Baylor, 20 Tex., 560. If the deed was executed and delivered by its makers as a security for the debt, it will be construed and held to have the effect of a mortgage; and whether it was in fact a mortgage, irrespective of the form, is a question for the jury under the evidence. Hopkins v. Nichols, 22 Tex., 206. And the court will not disturb their verdict merely because the verdict is not satisfactory. Carter v. Carter, 5 Tex., 101. There was evidence to support that view of the transactions, besides other testimony tending to corroborate, if not to distinctly establish it.
The defense set up, that the lots constituted the homestead of the defendants, is not applicable to the facts of this case. The right of a homestead does not attach until the property is paid for. Farmer v. Simpson, 6 Tex., 303; Clements v. Lacey, 51 Tex., 150. The hen which was sought to be enforced by the plaintiff was to secure the purchase money which the defendants had promised to pay for the lots which they claim as their homestead.
It is urged in the brief of appellant’s counsel, that the contract made by the deed and written agreement of the 28th day of August, 1876, was in contravention of the homestead rights of the defendants, seemed to them under the fiftieth section of article XVI of the constitu*474tion of 1876, and. was therefore void. The construction which the supreme court has given to the provisions which were contained in the previous constitutions of the state, regulating homestead rights, apply equally, so far as the question here presented is concerned, to the constitutional provision which is relied on by the appellant’s counsel. It was held in White v. Shepperd, 16 Tex., 172, in regard to the restraint on the husband to dispose of the homestead without the wife’s consent, that “this restriction applies where the husband has acquired full property in the land, and not where it is charged with preceding equities and incumbrances. These must be discharged, and they have precedence over the rights of the homestead privilege; and the right of the husband to make arrangements in relation to these incumbrances, or to renounce lands thus burdened or subject to conditions and contingencies, could not be questioned by the wife, in virtue of her remote right, which might arise if the incumbrances or conditions were ever discharged or removed, unless in cases where the husband is squandering the property with the fraudulent design of depriving the wife of a homestead.”
The foregoing propositions, quoted from the opinion of Ohief Justice Hemphill, are- quoted with approval in Clements v. Lacey, 51 Tex., 150, in which case it was said, in the opinion by Justice Bonner, that “it has long been the settled doctrine of this court, that a homestead is not acquired, as against parties holding prior equities and incumbrances, until the title to the land on which such homestead is sought to be established has been perfected by the payment of the purchase money, and that all hens accruing before the homestead has been established must be raised, or it will be subject to forced sale for their satisfaction.”
The lots being incumbered by the hen for the purchase money, the husband had the right even to renounce the *475land to the holder of the hen (Clements v. Lacey, supra); and he had the right, a fortiori, to incumber it by mortgage and right of possession to the mortgagee. The consent of the wife thereto was not requisite to the validity of his contract with the plaintiff; nor was the contract so made in derogation of the homestead rights of the defendants. They had acquired none as against the prior equities of the plaintiff.
Whatever question may have been presented as to the erroneousness of the judgment on the ground of limitation, has been waived by the assignment of errors, and is not presented in the brief of the appellant’s counsel. The assignment of errors was filed since the adoption of the “ new rules ” for the supreme court; the twenty-fourth of which provides that “the assignment of errors must distinctly specify the grounds of error relied on; and a ground of error not distinctly specified, in reference to that which is shown in the record, or not specified at all, shall be considered as waived, unless it would be so fundamental as that the court would act upon it without an assignment of errors, as mentioned in rule twenty-three.” The propositions embraced in the assignment of errors already stated and construed in this opinion, we do not believe can fairly be held to present a wider scope than we have assigned to them, so as to raise a question as to the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the judgment for the debt, by reason of the defense of the statute of limitations. If the judgment was in fact erroneous in the respect now under consideration, the error is not of that character which warrants us in considering it without its being assigned. It cannot be classed as a fundamental error in the sense contemplated by rule twenty-three, which provides as follows: “Said record should contain an assignment of errors, as required by the statute. If it does not, the court will not consider any error but one of law, that may be apparent upon the record, if the judg*476ment is one that could legally have been rendered in the district court and affirmed in the supreme court.”
We conclude, upon the whole case, that the judgment of the district court ought to be affirmed.
Affirmed.
[Opinion delivered March 15, 1881.]