Bankers Home Building & Loan Ass'n v. Wyatt

162 S.W.2d 694, 139 Tex. 173, 1942 Tex. LEXIS 224
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1942
DocketNo. 7902.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 162 S.W.2d 694 (Bankers Home Building & Loan Ass'n v. Wyatt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bankers Home Building & Loan Ass'n v. Wyatt, 162 S.W.2d 694, 139 Tex. 173, 1942 Tex. LEXIS 224 (Tex. 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Judge S medley

delivered the opinion of the Commission.of Appeals, Section B.

"The trial court’s'judgment in favor of defendant in error "against plaintiffs in error for the title and possession of an *175 improved lot in the City of West University Place in Harris County, with allowance of $3,210.00 in favor of plaintiffs in error Reynolds and wife for the value of improvements made in good faith, was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. 153 S. W. (2d) 216.

H. B. Schlesinger was the common source of title, the lot having been conveyed to him March 25, 1930. Marine Bank & Trust Company, on April 25, 1929, procured a judgment against Schlesinger and others and on December 24, 1930, caused an abstract of the judgment to be filed for record in the office of the county clerk of Harris County, thereby fixing a lien against the lot. A fourth execution issued on the said judgment was levied on the lot as the property of Schlesinger and it was sold thereunder and conveyed by the sheriff to defendant in error Wyatt on March 1, 1938. The foregoing is defendant in error’s chain of title.

Plaintiffs in error claim title as follows: A paving lien against the lot was foreclosed by judgment rendered December 12, 1932, in a suit in which O. K. Willborg was plaintiff and H. B. Schlesinger and others were defendants, and at sheriff’s sale under the judgment of foreclosure the lot was sold and conveyed to O. K. Willborg on February 7, 1933. In another suit in district court of Harris County brought by O. K. Willborg against Pies B. Kennerly, Marine Bank & Trust Company and others, judgment was rendered on December 21, 1935, divesting out of the defendants and vesting in the plaintiff O. K. Willborg all right, title and interest held or claimed by the defendants in and to' the said lot. Willborg conveyed the lot to plaintiffs in error Reynolds and wife. Plaintiff in error Bankers Home Building & Loan Association is the owner of a note, executed by Willborg and assumed by Reynolds, secured by a deed of trust in renewal of a mechanic’s lien note and contract.

The controlling question in the case is whether the judgment rendered in district court in the suit by Willborg against Pies B. Kennerly, Marine Bank & Trust Company and others cut off or extinguished Marine Bank & Trust Company’s judgment lien against the lot. The Court of Civil Appeals held that “the judgment in that case did not impair to the least extent the abstract of judgment lien held by Marine Bank & Trust Coinpany against the property in controversy.”

*176 The contention made by defendant in error and sustained both by the trial court and by the Court of Civil Appeals is that the judgment rendered in the cause styled Willborg v. Kennerly et al was a judgment in a trespass to try title suit and did not affect the judgment lien, because such suit litigates only the question of title and the right of possession and does not dispose of or attempt to adjudicate a lien. In our opinion both courts erred in sustaining the contention.

The judgment is not ambiguous and is to be construed, as it is written. Since the terms of the judgment clearly show what was finally determined by the court, there is no occasion for resort to the pleadings or to other parts of the record. Permian Oil Co. v. Smith, 129 Texas 413, 448-449, 460, 467-469, 73 S. W. (2d) 490, 107 S. W. (2d) 564; 111 A. L. R. 1152; Freeman on Judgments (5th Ed.) Yol. 1, pp. 132-136, Secs. 76, 77.

Prior to the institution of the suit by Willborg against Kennerly and others and the rendition of the judgment therein Marine Bank & Trust Company held a judgment lien against the lot. The judgment in Willborg’s suit against Kennerly and others named the bank and trust company as one of the parties defendant, recites that all defendants have been duly served with citations, that each of the defendants has filed disclaimer, that the court after hearing the evidence finds that the plaintiff Willborg is the owner in fee simple of the lot, describing it, and is justly entitled to title and possession thereof, and thereupon orders, adjudges and decrees that “all right, title and interest now and heretofore held or claimed by the aforesaid defendants in and to the land and premises aforesaid be and the same is hereby divested out of said defendants and is hereby vested in plaintiff O. K. Willborg.” This clear, comprehensive language, in our opinion, is an adjudication by the court that the plaintiff’s right and title to the lot is paramount and superior to any right or claim of any character that the defendants or any of them may have or'assert in or to the lot and that it is the intention of the court by the judgment to invest the plaintiff, as against the defendants, with the full, unincumbered fee simple title.

Defendant in error assumes from the form of the judgment that the suit was a formal action of trespass to try title. He cites cases which hold that a mortgagee has no right of possession and cannot recover in trespass to try title, and *177 draws the conclusion that, because the lien holder does not have title and has no right of possession, his lien is not, and cannot be, in any way affected or impaired by a judgment in an action of trespass to try title.

The petition in the case was not offered in evidence. The only pleading offered, if it is correctly described as a pleading, was the disclaimer filed by Marine Bank & Trust Company. To it defendant in error objected because it was not listed in the abstract of title filed by plaintiffs in error. In the absence of evidence as to what the pleadings were it must be assumed that the issues or question determined by the judgment were within the scope of the pleadings. The petition may have been a formal petition in trespass to try title against the party defendant in possession or claiming title, with added allegations that certain defendants, including Marine Bank & Trust Company, were asserting liens against the property that were inferior and subordinate to plaintiff’s title and with prayer that plaintiff’s title be adjudged to be superior to the claims of all of the defendants and that all rights, titles and interests claimed or asserted by them be divested out of them and vested in the plaintiff. A party who seeks to limit the meaning and effect of a judgment by confining it to the scope of the pleadings should offer the pleadings in evidence.

It is not an uncommon practice for a plaintiff in an action of trespass to try title to join as defendants all persons who assert liens against or claims of any character in or to the premises, to the end that he may by the judgment obtain not only title and the right to possession, but also a clear and unincumbered title. If a defendant is the holder of an existing lien to which the plaintiff’s title is subject or subordinate, proof that there is such lien will not defeat the plaintiff’s title and right to possession, but it will cause the judgment, if correctly drawn, to provide that the plaintiff’s recovery of title and possession is subject to the lien. Thus a valid existing lien may afford a partial defense against the plaintiff’s suit for title in that it may prevent the recovery of an unincumbered title.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W.2d 694, 139 Tex. 173, 1942 Tex. LEXIS 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bankers-home-building-loan-assn-v-wyatt-tex-1942.