Burton Lingo Co.v. Warren

45 S.W.2d 750
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 18, 1931
DocketNo. 930
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 45 S.W.2d 750 (Burton Lingo Co.v. Warren) 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
Burton Lingo Co.v. Warren, 45 S.W.2d 750 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

FUNDERBURK, J.

Of date September 7,1909, S. P. Warren recovered judgment against L. H. Burrus for $417.28, with interest and costs. By the issuance of execution within twelve months thereafter and subsequent executions within each ten-year period, the judgment has been kept alive. An abstract of the judgment was filed and duly recorded and indexed in Taylor county on November 25,1914. Another abstract of the same judgment was filed and duly recorded and indexed in said county on October 19, 1925. L. H. Burrus purchased a quarter section of land in Taylor county on October 22, 1912, which he has continued to own. On February 24, 1930, as community survivor and for himself, Burrus gave a deed of trust lien on said land in favor of Burton Lingo Company. In this deed of trust it was [751]*751declared that the land was not and never had heen the homestead of the grantor. On April 21, 1930, another deed of trust on the land was given in favor of Ellen Purdon Dye. This lien was expressly subordinate to that of Burton Bingo Company.

This suit was brought on January 3, 1931, by said S. P. Warren against B. H. Burrus, individually, and as said community survivor, and against J. D. Brown, Jr., Ellen Purdon Dye and her husband, Ed Dye, Burton Bingo Company, a corporation, Sims Oil Company, a corporation, and Snowden & McSweeney Company, a corporation, to foreclose the abstract of judgment lien. Upon a nonjury trial the court foreclosed all the liens, providing for the priority of payment oi plaintiff’s said judgment. Burton Bingo Company and Ellen Purdon Dye and her husband, Ed Dye, have duly prosecuted an appeal from said judgment in so far as it decreed the existence and priority of the judgment lien assorted by the plaintiff.

The appeal presents for our consideration and determination the apparently novel question of whether or not, after the expiration of ten years from the due filing, recording, and indexing of an abstract of judgment in a particular county, another abstract of the same judgment may be. filed in the same county and recorded and indexed, having thereby the effect to create a further lien to secure payment of the judgment, provided the judgment has never been permitted to be come dormant. Appellants contend that the limitation of a judgment lien to a duration of ten years, as provided in R. S. 1925, art. 5449j has the effect of denying authority for the existence of a lien to secure the same judgment for a longer total time than ten years. If, under the existing laws, a judgment was itself a lien, and the provision's for the recording and indexing of an abstract thereof were merely for the purpose of giving constructive notice of same, the logic of appellants’ contention would, we think, be unanswerable. But, as we recently had occasion to noticé, the recording and indexing of an abstract of judgment is not merely to give notice of a preexisting lien, but such are the statutory means by which a lien, having no previous existence, comes into being. McGlothlin v. Coody et al. (Tex. Civ. App.) 39 S.W.(2d) 133; Spence v. Brown, 86 Tex. 430, 25 S. W. 413.

Previously existing statutes did provide that judgments should operate as .liens. Such was the provision of section IT of the Act of January 26, 1839 (2 Gammel’s Laws, p. 155). So was it provided in section 12 of the Act of Eebruary 5, 1840 (2 Gammel’s Laws, 269). The same provision appeared as section 12 of the Act of 1842 (2 Gammel’s Laws, p. 740). An act approved February 14, 1860 (4 Gammel’s Laws, p. 1479), provided, in section 2 thereof, that no judgment should operate as a lien until filed for registration in the office of the county clerk of the county where rendered. That act made it the duty “of the county clerk of each and every county in this state, to record all certified copies of such judgments as may be filed with him for registration, at the earliest practicable period, in the Book used in said office for the record of mortgages, and to cause a regular and alphabetical index to be made of the names of plaintiffs and defendants in said judgments, and also a reference to the page on which said judgment is recorded, and the judgment so recorded shall operate as a lien on all the real estate of the defendants, situated in the county in which the same may be rendered, and said lien, unless sooner released, shall continue in force four years without being re-inscribed.” Section 4 provided: “That any judgment creditor may preserve his lien by causing his judgment to be re-inscribed or recorded as herein provided, at any time before the lien expires,” etc. An act approved November 9, 1866, entitled “An Act to prevent judgments fro.m becoming dormant, and to create and preserve judgment liens” (5 Gam-mel’s Baws, p. 1036), provided that judgments should be a lien on land of the judgment creditor in counties where judgments were rendered from the date of the judgments, and upon land in other counties from the time of filing a transcript of the judgments in such other-counties. Section 3 of this act provided: “No judgment of a Court of Record shall become dormant unless ten years shall have elapsed between the issuance of executions thereon.” Revised Statutes of 1879,. arts. 3153. to. 3163, inclusive, provided for the keeping of judgment, records; prescribed the duty of clerks and justices of the peace to make and. certify to abstracts of judgments having certain requisites; imposed upon county clerks the duty of filing, recording, and indexing, same; provided that when an abstract of judgment should be duly recorded, etc., it should “from the date of. such record and index, operate as a lien upon all of the real estate of the defendant situated in-the county where such record and index are made, and upon all real estate which the defendant may thereafter acquire situated in said county.” It was further therein provided: “When a •lien has been acquired, as provided in this chapter, it shall continue for ten years from the date of such record and index, unless the plaintiff shall fail to have execution issued upon his judgment within twelve months after the rendition thereof, in which case said lien shall cease to exist.” An act approved January 26, 1895 (10 Gammel’s Baws, p. 732), re-enacted the former provisions of section 3 of the act approved November 9, 1866, the latter act having been repealed by the omission to include it in the Revised Statutes of 1879. The- said provisions of Revised Statutes of 1879, together with said act approved Janua [752]*752ry 26, 1895, have been brought down through the several revisions of the statutes to the present time, substantially without change.

It is to be observed that the act of February 14, 1S60, limited the time of the duration of a judgment lien to four years, with provision for an extension of it by the reinscription or re-recording of the judgment before the expiration of the four years. This act provided that the judgment itself was not a lien. The act of November 9, 1866, repealed the act of February 14, 1860, and manifested a change of legislative policy. Under the latter act judgments were liens from the date of the judgments in counties where the'judgments were rendered. In other counties the recording and indexing of an abstract of judgment became a lien from the time of recording. The duration of a judgment lien was not specially limited and therefore continued, unless lost by a failure of the judgment creditor to use due diligence in enforcing it, until the judgment was discharged or became dormant. Section 3 of the act approved November 9, 1866, which, as already stated, was repealed by omission from R. S.

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45 S.W.2d 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burton-lingo-cov-warren-texapp-1931.