Ayres v. Parrish & Potter

40 S.W. 435, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 541, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 109
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 29, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 435 (Ayres v. Parrish & Potter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ayres v. Parrish & Potter, 40 S.W. 435, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 541, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 109 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered by the District Court of Montgomery County, in a suit in which appellees were plaintiffs and appellant J. K. Ayres was defendant, and the appellant Alice P. Ayres, wife of J. K. Ayres, was intervener.

The case, succinctly stated, is this:

The appellant J. K. Ayres, on July 26, 1889, owned two tracts of land, one the Wilson Lang survey, and the other the Kennith Hyman survey. The two surveys adjoined, the Hyman being the older of the two. Upon the Lang, the appellants lived, and claimed their home *542 stead of 200 acres to be exclusively on that survey, and their improvements were situated thereon.

On said day, the 26th of July, 1889, appellants, Ayres and wife, executed a mortgage to appellees to secure a debt due the latter from the husband, declaring at the time that their homestead was situated within the Lang survey; and on September 30, 1890, appellants executed another mortgage to appellees, to secure a loan of $3000, upon 66 acres, a part of the Lang survey, which was described by metes and bounds, and at the same time they designated their homestead by an actual survey, describing it by metes and bounds; and this designation was referred to in the second mortgage.

At the time these mortgages were given, the appellants supposed that the Lang survey contained 260 acres of land. The 66 acres upon which the second mortgage was given was wholly without the boundaries of the designated homestead.

The appellants making default in payment of the debt to secure which the mortgage upon the Hyman survey was given, the appellees foreclosed their lien, and at the sale became the purchasers of the land covered by the mortgage, and received a conveyance therefor from the sheriff who made the sale, the amount of the bid, less costs of suit, being credited upon the judgment; and on January 2, 1894, default having been made by appellants in payment of the $3000 to secure which the second mortgage was given, appellees foreclosed their lien by decree of the District Court of Travis County. The appellants, being parties defendant to the suit, entered their appearance therein and made defense thereto; but no issue of homestead was presented by the pleadings, or considered by the court. Upon sale of this 66 acres, appellees became the purchasers, crediting their bid on the debt, and received a deed from the sheriff for the land.

After this last decree of foreclosure, it was discovered that there was a conflict between the Lang and Hyman surveys, and that 77 acres of the 200 acres designated by appellants as their homestead at the time of the execution of the second mortgage upon the 66 acres lay within the Hyman survey, and was covered by the iirst mortgage, executed on the 26th of July, 1889. This conflict was known to neither the appellees nor appellants at the time of the execution of the mortgages.

In July, 1894, appellees brought suit against the appellant J. K. Ayres, to try title to the 66 acres covered by the mortgage of September 30, 1890, and caused a writ of sequestration to be levied upon the land. On the 28th of January, 1896, the appellant Alice P. Ayres, with leave of the court, intervened and made herself party defendant; and the defendants filed their joint answer to plaintiffs’ suit, in which they plead not guilty, and averred that the plaintiffs’ title to the land in controversy was void, for the reason that their claim of title was made under a sheriff’s sale made under decree foreclosing a mortgage given by appellants upon the land, when the same was a part of their homestead, through an innocent mistake, by which all parties concerned, *543 then, and until after the decree of foreclosure, believed that the land was no part of the defendants’ homestead, and that, had defendants known the land was a part of their homestead, they would not have executed the mortgage; and the defendants prayed that the plaintiffs be forever barred from asserting title to the said 66 acres of land by virtue of the mortgage decree of foreclosure and sheriff’s deed referred to in their answer; but if such relief could not be had, then that the court decree that the plaintiffs be forever barred from asserting title to the 77 acres, part of the land designated as their homestead at the time of the execution by them of the mortgage on the 66 acres, and which 77 acres is a part of the Hyman survey, and which plaintiffs now claim under sheriff’s sale made in pursuance of a decree foreclosing the mortgage given by defendants on the Hyman survey. The plaintiffs, by plea of replication filed the same day that defendants filed their answer setting up claim of homestead to the 66 acres, tendered deed of release to the said 77 acres, and disclaimed all claim of title thereto, and they pleaded res ad judicata and estoppel to the defendants’ claim of title to the 66 acres of land.

Upon trial of the case by the court, without the intervention of a jury, judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs for the 66 acre tract, and the defendants were enjoined from interfering in any way with plaintiffs’ possession of said tract; and judgment was rendered for the defendants for the 77 acres. The defendants excepted to the judgment, and gave notice of appeal, and have brought the case to this court for revision.

Opinion.—The appellants present in their brief but one assignment of error, which is: “The court erred in failing to hold or adjudge that the appellants, James K. and Alice P. Ayers, recover the alleged 66 acre tract in controversy as a part of their homestead, inasmuch as, upon the uncontroverted facts appearing, the mortgage deed of trust under the foreclosure of which the appellees, Parrish & Potter, purchased was invalid, as an attempted lien upon a part of the homestead; and the rendition and finality of the decree of foreclosure were induced by mutual mistake of the parties concerned, in virtue of which it was supposed then, and until long thereafter, that the property in fact was not a part of the homestead.”

This assignment, under the facts disclosed by the record, is equivalent to this proposition: If a mortgagor, in designating his homestead at the time he executes his mortgage, by reason of his mistake as to the division line between the two tracts of land of which he is the owner, places the homestead partially upon both of the tracts, instead of, as he intended, wholly upon one of them, a court of equity will, after foreclosure of the mortgage by a court of competent jurisdiction, in a suit between the parties to the mortgage, and a sale of the property in pursuance of the decree, and the purchase thereof by the mortgagee, permit the mortgagors to relocate their homestead, and place it wholly within the tract of land in which the mortgagors supposed it to be at the time of the execution of the mortgage, notwithstanding the fact that the *544 mortgagors are the owners of the land designated, and are in undisputed possession thereof, and that the homestead so designated contains its full complement of land, and notwithstanding such relocation will effectually defeat the operation of the decree of foreclosure, and deprive the mortgagees of the rights and benefits acquired thereunder.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 435, 15 Tex. Civ. App. 541, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayres-v-parrish-potter-texapp-1897.