Bass v. Albright

59 S.W.2d 891, 1933 Tex. App. LEXIS 628
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 11, 1933
DocketNo. 4294
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 59 S.W.2d 891 (Bass v. Albright) 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
Bass v. Albright, 59 S.W.2d 891, 1933 Tex. App. LEXIS 628 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

LEVY, Justice

(after stating the case as above).

There is presented for decision the points in view of: (1) The validity of the judicial sale of the land by the sheriff on July 4, 1876, and (2) the sufficiency of the description of the land in the official return of the sheriff on the writ of execution and in the [893]*893sheriff’s deed to identify tlie land levied on and sold. The appellees sought to show divestiture of the title out of John N. Reynolds hy an execution sale under a judgment against John N. Reynolds. It was proven that on June 12, 1876, the execution was levied on the whole 320-acre tract as belonging to John N. Reynolds. On June 28, 1876, sixteen days after the levy, John N. Reynolds and his wife executed and delivered a warranty deed to B. R. Bass and Y. A. Davis, ancestors of appellants. On July 4, 1876, six days after the date of the deed mentioned, the sheriff sold the entire survey, less 200 acres reserved for a homestead, to W. G. Carroll. The execution under which the judicial sale was made was issued by the district clerk of Gregg county on February 5, 1876, and was by its terms made returnable “on or before the next term of said District Court to be holden on the second Monday in May, A. D. 1876.” The law then in force provided for the writ to be returnable to the first day of the next regular term of the court. Acts of 1873, p. 209, 7 Gammers Laws of Texas, p. 661. The next regular term of the district court of Gregg county after the date of the execution was fixed by law at that date in 1876 to begin on the second Monday in May. 8 Gammel’s Laws of Texas, p. 382. The new Constitution of 1876 was effective by official proclamation of the Governor on April 18, 1876. It is insisted by the appellants that the judicial sale was a nullity and wholly ineffectual to divest title out of John N. Reynolds, and as well out of Bass and Davis, his grantees, because the- levy was made and sale was held after the return date of the writ of execution and at a time when the writ was functus officio. The appellees insist to the contrary -that the writ of execution was not functus officio at the date of the levy and of the sale, because its return date had been extended and continued in force from the May term of the district court which was in existence when the writ of execution was issued, to the term of court which was afterwards altered by law to a later date in July, which convened July 17, 1876. It is urged by appellees that the entire ordinance of the constitutional convention, fixing the terms of the courts of the new districts throughout the state, is a part of the Constitution of 1876, and even though it be held not adopted as a part of the • Constitution, yet the ordinance has the full force and effect of law as the result of the legislative power vested in the convention.

It is well settled, and may not be regarded as a matter of legal doubt, that a sale of real estate made under an execution after the return day on the writ is void and the purchaser acquires no title. Towns v. Harris, 13 Tex. 507; Mitchell v. Ireland, 54 Tex. 301; Robinson v. Monning Dry Goods Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 211 S. W. 535. Therefore, if the general principle stated has no application to the present case it would be so because the grounds, as urged by the ap-pellees, that the writ remained in full force at the date of the levy and sale by the express provision of law extending the return day as previously fixed by law. In the proceedings of the constitutional convention appears a duly adopted ordinance, reading, as far as need be set out:

“An Ordinance Fixing the Terms of the District Courts of the .-State of Texas.
“Be it ordained by the people of Texas in Convention assembled, that until otherwise provided by law, the terms of the District Courts of the several judicial districts shall be as hereinafter prescribed: * * *
“Section 7. That the District Courts of the Seventh Judicial District be holden at the times hereinafter specified, to-wit: * * * In -the County of Gregg, on the Eighteenth Mondays after the second Mondays in March and September, and may continue in session two weeks. * * *
“Section 27. All writs and process, civil and criminal, heretofore issued by or from the District Courts, in the several counties of this State, and made returnable to the former terms of said courts, as said terms are now fixed by law, shall be returnable to the next ensuing terms of said District Courts in each county, as they are prescribed in this ordinance; and'all such writs and process that may be issued by or from said courts at any time within five -days next before the holding of -the next ensuing terms of said courts, as prescribed herein, are hereby made returnable to said terms respectively; and all such writs and process hereinbefore mentioned are hereby legalized and validated, to all intents and purposes, as if the same had been made returnable to the term or terms of said court, as the terms thereof are herein prescribed. '
“Section 28. That in ease where the time has partly elapsed for holding any term of the District Court, as herein prescribed, at the time of the qualification of the District Judge of said District, then said Judge shall proceed to hold said court for the remainder of said term.” 8 Gammel’s Laws of Texas, pp. 763, 766, 774.

The above ordinance was adopted by the constitutional convention in the purpose of effecting a transition from the old Constitution to the new, when the new Constitution wa-s put into effect, by fixing the time of convening the courts in the rearrangement of the judicial districts throughout the state, with pro-vision regulating all pre-exist-ing and pending writs and process. Its terms are clear and unmistakable. The intention appears especially to have all pending writs and process continue in full force and in all things legal and valid, until such later day [894]*894of return altered by the law. As will be observed, by express provision of section 27: (1) Tbe term of court to which pre-existing and pending “writs and process” were made returnable was altered to the later date, namely, “to the next ensuing terms of said District Courts, * * * as they are prescribed in' this ordinance,” and (2) all such pre-exist-ing and pending “writs and process” were declared “hereby legalized and validated, to all intents and purposes, as if the same had been made returnable to the term or terms of said courts, as the terms thereof are herein prescribed.” Such a general provision has, as was intended, the same effect as a saving clause in a repealing statute. A saving clause is intended to save something which would otherwise be lost. Legal objection may not be predicated against such, cumulative and remedial provision. A provision of the kind, being only cumulative in its nature, could not operate to the legal injury of a defendant in execution for the provision for a return day is beneficial mainly, if not solely, to the plaintiff, because it fixes a time when he may expect the enforcement of his judgment, by compelling the officer to have the writ satisfied. The defendant in execution, provided he has notice of the time of sale, has no interest in merely the time of return, whether it be returnable in thirty days or three months. It is believed that where the term of court to which the writ of execution is returnable is after-wards, as here done, altered by law to a later date, the writ remains in full force until such later day.

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Bluebook (online)
59 S.W.2d 891, 1933 Tex. App. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bass-v-albright-texapp-1933.