Buckley v. Runge

136 S.W. 533, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 219
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 136 S.W. 533 (Buckley v. Runge) 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
Buckley v. Runge, 136 S.W. 533, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 219 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

REESE, J.

This is a suit in trespass to try title by L. H. Runge and others against Ed. McCarthy, administrator of D. G. Kelly, deceased, the unknown heirs of said Kelly, W. C. Morris, D. J. Buckley, Thomas Buckley, and John Buckley to recover certain lots in the city of Galveston. The case was tried with a jury, and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiffs, from which judgment defendants appeal.

Defendants McCarthy, administrator, and the unknown heirs’of D. G. Kelly have filed no assignment of errors, and as to them the judgment will be affirmed without further consideration, which disposes of all the property sued for except lots 10, 11, 12, 13, and 14, and the west one-fourth of lot 9 in the northeast block of outlot 70, which are claimed by the other defendants, and as to which this appeal is properly prosecuted by them.

This is the second appeal. Upon the former trial the court instructed a verdict for plaintiffs, and the judgment was reversed, and the cause remanded by this court, on the ground that the issues as to the payment of the notes executed by Kelly for the land, and of innocent purchaser without notice interposed by Morris and John Buckley, should have been submitted to the jury. Buckley v. Runge, 122 S. W. 597. Upon this trial these issues were submitted to the jury, which found in favor of plaintiffs on both *535 issues. Our conclusions of fact are as follows:

Henry Bunge, ancestor of appellees, was tire owner of tlie property in controversy; Ms title being properly of record at Ms death. Henry Bunge died leaving a will naming independent executors, which was duly probated, and acting under the powers conferred, in 1874, the executors sold and-conveyed to D. G. Kelly the property in controversy. This deed was never recorded. Kelly was drowned in the storm of 1900, which also destroyed his home and all of Ms papers. The sale to Kelly was on credit; he executing notes for the purchase money. Among the notes so executed were two notes for $1,200, each dated “Galveston, October' 12, 1874,” and due respectively in one and two' years from date, payable “to the order of myself,” signed “Daniel G. .Kelly,” and indorsed “Daniel G. Kelly.” The first due of said notes shows a payment of $250 on the day of its date, also interest paid to October 12, 187S. The second -due of the notes shows interest paid to October 12, 1878. Each of the notes contained the following recital on its face: “Secured by S. E. and S. W. quarter of N. E. Bl. of out-lot 70” — which includes the property in controversy. These notes have never been paid. They were inventoried as part of the assets of the estate of Henry Bunge, and after-wards as assets of the estate of Ms children, appellees herein, by their guardian. Efforts were made to collect them from D. G. Kelly up to the time of his death; but he was never able to pay. Efforts were also made to collect them from the appellants Buckley after Kelly’s death. They have always remained in the hands of Bunge’s executors and those claiming as heirs of Bunge, and the evidence is amply sufficient to rebut whatever presumption of payment may arise from lapse of time. The notes are now the property of the appellees.

Henry Bunge, one of the heirs, conveyed to L. H. Bunge, another of the heirs and one of the plaintiffs, all of his-right, title, and interest in and to the property in controversy. As before stated, the deed from the executors of Henry Bunge to D. G. Kelly has been lost — supposed to have been lost — with all of his other papers in the 1900 storm. The evidence authorizes the conclusion that Kelly did not consider that the property belonged to him until he paid these notes, and for that reason never recorded the deed. The recital in the notes above referred to was intended to evidence the fact that the notes, having been given for the purchase money of these lots, were secured by an express vendor’s lien thereon. What reservation of lien there was in the executor’s deed, if any, could not be shown.

At the time of the conveyance to Kelly he was a married man; his wife being the mother of appellants Buckley by a former marriage. After Kelly’s death his estate was administered upon by appellant Ed. McCarthy, and in the probate court, upon partition between his estate and the heirs of Mrs. Kelly, the appellants Buckley, the property in controversy was set apart to D. J., Thomas, and John Buckley on September 22, 1904. D. J. Buckley sold and conveyed to John Buckley his interest in the lots in controversy, and on the Sth of February, 1904, Thomas Buckley sold and conveyed to W. O. Morris his one-third interest. The consideration of this deed was $150, which was paid in cash. The consideration of the deed from D. J. Buckley to John Buckley was an existing indebtedness from the grantor to the grantee of $150. The jury found that both Morris and John Buckley had notice at the time of the purchase and conveyance to them respectively of the facts that these notes had not been paid. At that time the records showed title down to Henry Bunge, and no conveyance out of him.

Under their first, fourth, fifth, sixth, and eighteenth assignments of error appellants submit the general proposition, germane to each of said assignments, that the recitals in the notes “secured by southeast and southwest one-fourth of,northeast block of outlot 70” did not retain the superior title in plaintiffs’ ancestor, nor create an express vendor’s lien.” To support the proposition appellants cite Baker v. Compton, 52 Tex. 252; Ransom v. Brown, 63 Tex. 188; and Carson v. Sweatt, 57 Tex. 380.

[1] It is well settled that a reservation in the purchase-money notes of an express vendor’s lien is sufficient to reserve in the grantor the superior title to the land, until the notes are paid. McKelvain v. Allen, 58 Tex. 387; Lundy v. Pierson, 67 Tex. 237, 2 S. W. 737. This proposition is not denied by appellants; but they contend that the recitals referred to in the purchase-money notes are not sufficient to show a reservation of the lien.

[2] In the cases cited by appellants there was shown to be no reservation of the vendor’s lien in the deeds. The recitals in the notes only showed that they were given for the purchase money, and it was held that this did not create an express contract lien such as was necessary to reserve in the vendor the superior title. This recital was only evidence of a fact which furnishes a basis of the equitable vendor’s lien, which is very different in its consequences, under the decision in this state, from the lien given expressly by contract of the parties in a sale of land on a credit. We are of the opinion that the recitals in the purchase-money notes, of the fact that they are secured by the land conveyed, evidences an express contract that they shall be so secured, and this is in substance all that is necessary to create the express contract lien on the land for the unpaid purchase money, with the consequence that the superior title remains in the vendor, and his successors *536 in title holding the notes, until they are paid.

Probably the most strenuously contested issue in the case is that of whether Morris is entitled to be protected as an innocent purchaser for value without notice.

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Bluebook (online)
136 S.W. 533, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckley-v-runge-texapp-1911.