Capps v. Edwards

180 S.W. 137, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1029
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 1915
DocketNo. 835.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 180 S.W. 137 (Capps v. Edwards) 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
Capps v. Edwards, 180 S.W. 137, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1029 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

S. B. Edwards, of Deaf Smith county, instituted this suit against William Capps and W. C. Forbess, of Tar-rant county, and against W. B. Forbess, of the state of Colorado, said suit involving a contract for the sale and purchase of land. On the issue of a plea of privilege, the nature of the cause of action, instituted by Edwards against the appellants, is very much in dispute, the latter insisting that the action is one of specific performance of the written contract, constituting a personal action, requiring the cause to be litigated in the forum of their residence, the appellee Edwards contending that the contract is one for the sale and conveyance of the real estate, vesting title to the same in the purchasers, and that, with the additional allegations of a delivery of the deed to the purchasers, with a breach of the contract, made the case one of enforcement of a lien upon real estate, coming within the purview of exception 12, art. 1830, Rev. St. 1911, permitting the “foreclosure of a mortgage or other lien” in the county in which the land is situated.

The contract is; “An agreement whereby first parties have sold to second parties the following described land [omitting the description] for the sum of $16,275.00, on the following terms and conditions, viz., $1,275.00 cash in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, $3,000.00 December 1, 1913” — and providing for successive equal payments annually for each successive year for the balance of the consideration, “all deferred payments to be on or before and to bear six per cent, interest from the date of delivery of deed until maturity.” The contract provides that the vendor should furnish, within 60 days, a warranty deed, with “abstract showing a good and merchantable title,” and in the event the vendor failed in that respect, the cash payment was to be refunded “in full settlement of all damages.” An irrigation plant, then in course of construction, was to be installed, and a certain house was also to be constructed at the earliest possible moment. The appellee alleged that he had delivered the deed and the abstract, and had complied with the Contract requiring him to furnish an abstract exhibiting merchantable title, and alleged in that connection:

“That the defendants accepted said deed, kept it, exercised dominion over it, and still had it in their possession.”

In the alternative, he pleaded that if there were any defects in the title shown by said abstract, the purchasers, by accepting the deed of conveyance and “retaining and keeping the same, waived any and all defects that said title may have had.”

If we interpret properly the contention of appellants, Wm. Oapps and W. C. Forbess, applicable to their plea of privilege, it assumes two phases: (1) Appellee’s allegations sound in specific performance, and the action was personal; (2) “it is a perversion of terms and a violence to the construction of exception 12, art. 1830 * * * to hold that the present action is for the foreclosure of a mortgage or other lien,” so as to give jurisdiction to the district court of Deaf Smith county; that the “mortgage or other lien,” mentioned within the exception of the *139 statute, “obviously mean express contract, and mortgage lien, and not the equitable lien arising against one who originally breaches his written contract to purchase real estate.”

ft] Applicable to the first position we do not think the case of Cavin v. Hill, 83 Tex. 73, 18 S. W. 323, invoked by appellants, affords the complete analogy argued; and, when compared to this ease, we think there is a marked dissimilarity in the real nature of the actions. Of course the character of any suit must be determined from the facts alleged therein, and there is no magic in words to change its real nature. Cavin v. Hill, supra. In this action appellee first pleaded the contract, a compliance by him, a delivery and acceptance of the deed; and, second, that if there are any defects in the title, as shown by the abstract, the defendants, by accepting the deed of conveyance and retaining the same, waived the defects, in fact, in either phase of his case, always alleging delivery and acceptance of the deed, which, in reality, if there was no express vendor’s lien, would pass the whole title. The contract for the land, and the allegations of the petition, referable thereto, place the title in the purchasers, with an alleged breach and an assertion of the lien, with a prayer for foreclosure, which we think does not sound in specific performance to the extent of constituting the cause of action of that nature as to make the action personal and one not in rem. It is true that the contract is proven to obtain the result, but if we concede that only an equitable vendor’s lien existed, still the whole title is in the purchasers, according to the pleading; and, on account of alleged breach, the establishment of the lien is sought, as well as the debt, the foreclosure, and the deficiency judgment, in its essentials different from the Cavin-Hill Case, wherein title was attempted to be obtained by the assertion of a certain contract, and the pleador joined the ordinary form of trespass to try title with that of special pleading, and the court said the latter prevailed over the former, and which special pleading was clearly one of specific performance.

[2] As to the second position, asserting that exception 12, article 1830, does not apply, appellants invoking the rule of construction that the language, “other lien,” in connection with the word “mortgage” in the statute, means other contractual liens, and not an equitable vendor’s lien, the Supreme Court has ruled against the point. Joiner v. Perkins, 59 Tex. 302. An equitable vendor’s was involved only in that case, not an express lien, and the court said:

“In this case the allegations in the pleadings are sufficient to show that the vendor’s lien has not been waived or abandoned, and if, on the trial, this proves to be the fact, the district court of Lee county has jurisdiction of the case, notwithstanding the fact that the residence of the appellee is in Colorado county.”

. We think the trial court properly retained the cause.

[3] On the issues of delivery and acceptance of the deed, submitted specially by the court and decided in favor of appellee, appellants assign that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the submission. If we properly apprehend the channel in which the trial court and appellee diverted this cause, and correctly conceive the import and scope of the issues as submitted on the question of delivery and acceptance, and grasp the condition of the record bearing upon said issues, we unhesitatingly agree that the evidence is insufficient to support the actual issues as submitted and found.

The trial court instructed the jury, and submitted the special issues, as follows:

“In determining your answers to the issues you will bear in mind the following definitions of the words ‘delivery’ and ‘acceptance’:
“By ‘delivery’ as used herein, is meant a transfer of the possession of property from the vendor to the vendee, and, when so transferred, from the seller to the buyer, or vendor to ven-dee, the title vests and he becomes the owner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 S.W. 137, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capps-v-edwards-texapp-1915.