Brooks v. O'Connor

15 S.W.2d 182
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1929
DocketNo. 9176.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 15 S.W.2d 182 (Brooks v. O'Connor) 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
Brooks v. O'Connor, 15 S.W.2d 182 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This is the second appeal in this controversy. The opinion of this court in the former appeal is reported in Booty v. O’Connor, 287 S. W. 282-289. In the case cited the appellees in this case sued in trespass to try title to recover of appellant herein, R. E. Brooks, and the adminis-tratrix of the estate, and the heirs, of E. P. Booty, deceased, the identical 160 acres of land involved in this suit. The plaintiffs in the former suit recovered in the court below against all of the defendants. Upon the appeal, this court affirmed the judgment as to all the defendants except appellant, R. E. Brooks, and reversed and rendered judgment in favor of Brooks, that the plaintiffs take nothing by their suit against him.

The record on the first appeal, Booty v. O’Connor, 287 S. W. 282, before cited, disclosed that plaintiffs in that suit, appellees here, recovered the land on the superior title held by them as the owners of a vendor’s lien reserved in the deeds of conveyance under which E. P. Booty obtained his title, and further showed that the plaintiffs had, subsequent to the purchase of the land by him, loaned Booty .$4,500 and taken his note therefore secured by a deed of trust on the land. This note and the security therefor, which constituted a second lien on the land, was then and is now held by Brooks under transfer and assignment from the plaintiffs. Upon the facts disclosed in the former case, we held that plaintiffs, under the pleadings and evidence in that suit, were estopped from recovering the land as against Brooks so as to foreclose his equities as a second lienholder, and rendered judgment in his favor as before stated. Our opinion in the former case, after directing the rendition of the judgment in favor of Brooks, declares that “this judgment shall in no wise affect the O’Connors’ right as against Brooks to foreclose their prior lien.”

The suit from which this appeal is prosecuted was brought by the plaintiffs in the former suit against the appellant, R. E. Brooks, for the settlement and adjustment of the rights of the appellant, R. E. Brooks, in the land, if any he has, and in the alternative to have the record of appellant’s second lien upon the land removed as a cloud upon plaintiffs’ title. Plaintiffs’ petition is necessarily lengthy, and we shall only state such of its substance and allegations as are required to show the character and purpose of the suit.

After naming the parties plaintiff and defendant in this and the former suit, and describing the vendor’s liens under which plaintiffs held the superior title to the land, the amounts due upon the several vendor’s lien notes, and also the note for $4,500 and the second lien given for its security, which plaintiffs had transferred and assigned to appellant, Brooks, and which is now held by him, the petition alleges the recovery of the judgment in the court below in the former suit against the administratrix and heirs of E. F. Booty for1 the 160 acres of land involved in this suit and the affirmance of that judgment on appeal to this court, and further alleges:

“Plaintiffs do not know and cannot accurately state what the facts are in regard to whether the said $4,500.00 note so assigned to defendant, principal or interest, or any part thereof, has been paid in whole or in part. No release of said second lien deed of trust so assigned and transferred to said Brooks has been recorded in the office of the County Clerk of Jackson County, Texas.
“Upon the trial of said former suit No. 1746 in this court these plaintiffs requested the said defendants in that suit, and particularly the said Brooks, to pay these plaintiffs the amount due them on their said purchase money notes, and plaintiffs then and there offered to receive the same, in satisfaction of their claims on said land, but the said defendants, and particularly the said Brooks, failed and refused, and have ever since failed and refused to pay or to offer plaintiffs the amount due them on said purchase money notes for said land, although the plaintiffs have continuously offered, and here now offer, and will continue to offer, to accept and receive the amount owing them on said purchase money notes, if defendant or any one else, will pay them the same, and to transfer to and subrogate the person paying same to all the rights of plaintiffs to said land.
“None of the principal of the purchase money aforesaid has ever been paid, and no interest has been paid thereon since October 5, 1920. The said E. F. Booty is dead and his estate is'wholly insolvent. No other person, within the knowledge of plaintiffs, is legally bound or obligated to pay said money, or any part thereof. Plaintiffs have no security of any sort for the money so justly duo them other than their interest in said land, and plaintiffs will wholly lose the said money if they are not allowed to resort to the proceeds of the sale of said land under the decree of this court, in the event the defendant, *184 Brooks, is equitably entitled to bave the said land sold under decree of the court, or in case the said Brooks is not so entitled, then unless they can have, hold and enjoy said land free from the claims and pretensions of said Brooks and from the cloud on the plaintiffs’ title cast thereupon by the unreleased second lien assigned to the said Brooks as aforesaid.
“If the said Brooks has now, or claims to have, any lien or interest upon said land, then plaintiffs aver that by reason of the express stipulations in said written assignment from Wm. J. O’Connor, executor, etc., to the said Brooks, of the said $4,500.00 note and second lien deed of trust, which assignment and indorsement of said note to Brooks expressly stipulated that same were without recourse, and which assignment was accepted by said Brooks, and contained the stipulations set forth in paragraph YII hereof, the said Brooks contracted, agreed and bound himself with plaintiffs that said second lien deed of trust and said note should be, and they are now, in every respect subordinate, inferior and junior to the rights, titles, liens and interests of the plaintiff in said land to the extent of the purchase money and interest and attorney’s fees thereon.
“Defendant Brooks well knew of the existence of the superior title in plaintiffs, and of the deeds of trust extending and securing the purchase money owing plaintiffs by Booty, as before stated, and had actual notice and knowledge thereof, and by reason of the recor-dation of the teansfer of the vendor’s lien and superior title, to plaintiffs, and of the said deeds of trust extending same, he had constructive knowledge of all of the same, at and before the time he acquired any lien or interest in said land.
“Plaintiffs believe and so allege that any sum owing defendant by Booty or his estate, secured by any lien or claim 'on said land, is past due, and plaintiffs do- not know of any reason, and therefore allege that none exists, why defendant should not set up his rights, - if any, to the said land in this suit, and have the sama determined, in order that -there shall be an end of litigation and contentions between the parties, and that plaintiffs and defendant may have their due.

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Related

Brooks v. O'Connor
39 S.W.2d 14 (Texas Supreme Court, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.2d 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooks-v-oconnor-texapp-1929.