Buetell v. Courand

29 S.W. 1146, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 564, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 401
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 1895
DocketNo. 778.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 29 S.W. 1146 (Buetell v. Courand) 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
Buetell v. Courand, 29 S.W. 1146, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 564, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 401 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

— Appellee Courand brought this suit upon a promissory note executed by appellants for part of the last installment of the purchase money of a piece of land on Galveston Island, and to foreclose the vendor’s lien upon the land by which the note was secured. Appellee Bryan, represented by his guardian, intervened, and sought a like recovery and foreclosure upon another note of appellants, payable to himself, of same date and amount as that sued on by plaintiff, and given also for part of the last installment of the purchase money of the same land.

From the petition and plea of intervention, it appears that the two notes were given February 3, 1891, one payable to plaintiff and the other to intervenor, for the installment of the purchase money of the lot, which had been on that day sold by the sheriff of Galveston County and bought by appellants, under an order of sale issued January 13, 1891, from the District Court of Galveston County, in cause number 14,971, entitled Ellis Bryan, by next friend, versus Joseph Courand; that the sale was confirmed by said court on the 6th day of February, 1891, and that a deed of conveyance was accordingly executed to appellants by the sheriff on the 13th day of February, 1891, retaining a vendor’s lien to secure the notes. The notes also recited that they were so secured.

*566 The appellant’s defense was a plea of failure of consideration of the notes, consisting in the fact that appellants obtained no title by their purchase. Appellants also pleaded in reconvention for a rescission of the contract, and for the recovery of the portion of the purchase money paid by them.

The answer alleged, that cause number 14,971 was a partition suit brought in behalf of the intervenor, a minor, against Courand, the present plaintiff, for partition of the lot, in which the parties by their pleadings alleged themselves to be the joint owners thereof; that it was “instituted in bad faith, with intent to defraud those who might become purchasers of said land out of the money that said land might bring at said sale. That said suit was a friendly action in which each party knowingly and wrongfully admitted that each party was the owner of an undivided interest in said land, when in truth and in fact neither party had at filing of said partition suit any title to said land, were neither of them possessed of said land, and were not entitled to such possession.” That defendants bought in ignorance of the want of title of the parties to that suit, and believing and relying on the statements made in their pleadings, paid for the land $75 cash, and executed their four notes for $37.50 each for the remainder of the purchase money, two of which were payable in one year, and two others payable in two years from the date of purchase.

The answer further alleged in detail, that three persons, named, were in possession of the land at the institution of the partition suit and at the time of sale, adverse to the parties to that suit, and had by such adverse possession for ten years acquired title under the statute of limitations. That this fact was known to the parties to that suit, but that appellants did not know of it when they bought, nor until long thereafter. Rb warranty of title in the sale was alleged, except that it was stated that the deed from the sheriff used the words ‘ ‘ sold, grant, and convey,” thereby warranting the land to be free from incumbrances.

It was averred that appellants had paid the two notes which matured at one year from the sale, and there was a prayer for recovery back of the payments so made, as well as of cash paid at the sale, for a rescission of the contract, a cancellation of the notes sued on and of the sheriff’s deed, and for general relief.

The answer sought to implead the parties in possession of the land,, and to have a trial of title between them and defendants, claiming that the plaintiffs and intervenor, as warrantors of title under the sheriff’s deed, were bound to defend the title against such possession.

To this answer plaintiffs and intervenor filed a general demurrer and special exceptions, the latter being as follows:

“1. That the same is insufficient in law, (1) because the same shows no defense to plaintiffs’ and intervenor’s petition, and is wholly insufficient in law. (2) Because the allegations of fraud are vague, indefinite, and wholly without any specifications of fact. (3) And they specially except to all that portion of said answer which alleges possession by *567 Mott, Evans, and Ellis, because the same presents no defense to this action; and further, because the said Mott, Evans, and Ellis are not proper or necessary parties.”

Mott, Evans, and Ellis, the parties alleged to be in possession of the land, were cited to answer defendant’s plea, but on hearing the above exceptions the court struck out that part of the defendants’ answer seeking to make them parties, and they filed no pleading. After this ruling was made the defendants moved for judgment by default against them, which was denied. The court also sustained the exceptions to the plea of failure of consideration and in reconvention, and rendered judgment against defendants for the amount of the notes sued on, and for a foreclosure of the lien.

The first assignment complains of the refusal to render judgment by default against Mott, Ellis, and Evans. After the pleading seeking to make them parties had been stricken out, there was nothing for them to answer, and no judgment could have been properly rendered against them. They were no longer to be treated as parties to the suit.

The fourth assignment of error attacks the ruling sustaining the exceptions to the part of the plea seaking to make Mott, Ellis, and Evans parties. We will not pause to determine whether or not they could have been properly brought into the case for the purpose sought to be attained, under more perfect pleadings, for it seems plain, that if the facts alleged showed no right to relief against plaintiff and intervener, in case the title of Mott, Evans, and Ellis should prevail, the introduction into the case of the issue of title between them and the defendants would have been futile, and therefore improper. In other words, if defendants’ answer was insufficient to relieve them from payments of the notes, in case the adverse claim was found to be the better one, there could be no reason for examining the merits of the two titles. As we have reached the conclusion that the plea of failure of consideration and prayer for rescission were insufficient, it follows that the ruling in question is to be held correct.

A judicial sale of land in partition proceedings imports no warranty of title. Freem. on Coten. and Part., sec. 547, and cases cited.

There is no provision in our statute which imposes upon the parties to such proceedings a warranty of title where the land is sold for the purposes of partition. Where a partition is actually effected, the decree vesting the title is given the force of a warranty to each party from the others of the title to the part received by him; but this is so because such would be the effect of a voluntary division or exchange effected by deed, and this statute is declaratory of the law as laid down in the decisions. Rev. Stats., art. 3483; Word v. Drouthitt, 44 Texas, 368; Ross v. Armstrong, 25 Texas Supp., 369; James v.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W. 1146, 9 Tex. Civ. App. 564, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buetell-v-courand-texapp-1895.