Chamberlain v. Trammell

131 S.W. 227, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 650, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 820
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 23, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 131 S.W. 227 (Chamberlain v. Trammell) 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
Chamberlain v. Trammell, 131 S.W. 227, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 650, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 820 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

WILLS OH, Chief Justice.

— As commenced by a petition filed April 10, 1906, the suit was an ordinary one of trespass to try title. It was brought by plaintiff in error, the widow of Wm. Chamberlain, deceased, against W. M. Trammell, A. P. Luckett, Lousue Moore and AYorth Moore, defendants in error. The land in controversy was a tract of 106 acres in Tarrant County, which plaintiff in error and AVm. Chamberlain in his lifetime, by an instrument purporting to be an absolute deed with covenants of general warranty, dated December 20, 1892, and filed for record January 6, 1893, had conveyed to B. K. Carson. The consideration for the conveyance, as recited in the instrument, was $3,000 paid to the Chamberlains, and the execution and delivery to them by Carson of his promissory note for $1,500, payable twelve months after its date to the order of said Wm. Chamberlain. The vendor’s lien was expressly retained to secure the payment of the note. At the time the deed was made the Chamberlains resided upon the land as their homestead. Evidence heard on the trial was sufficient to support a finding that no part of the $3,000 recited in the deed to have been paid by Carson was in fact paid by him, and that the conveyance to him was a device resorted to to enable AVm. Chamberlain to borrow money to pay debts he owed and secure its repayment by a lien on the homestead, and was not intended by the parties to it to so operate as to pass an absolute title to the land to Carson. At once after it was executed the note mentioned was endorsed by Carson (Chamberlain) and sold to defendant in error Lousue Moore. The evidence was conclusive that if the' transaction between the Chamberlains and Carson was other than on the face of the deed it appeared to *653 be, Mrs. Moore had no notice of the fact. By his deed dated February 3, 1894, and filed for record March 12, 1894, containing covenants of general warranty, Carson conveyed the land to defendant in error Trammell. The consideration for this conveyance, as recited in the deed, was the payment by Trammell of $3,000 and the execution and delivery by him and said Wm. Chamberlain of their promissory note for $1,600, payable to the order of said Carson twelve months after its date. The vendor’s lien was expressly retained on the land to secure the payment of this note. Immediately after it was executed the $1,600 note was endorsed by Carson and so assigned to Lousue Moore to hold in place and stead of the $1,500 note executed by Carson, which was cancelled; and within a short time thereafterwards same was assigned by her to her son, defendant in error Worth Moore, then a minor and her ward, she having qualified as his guardian. At the time, to wit, said February 3, 1894, Carson conveyed the land to Trammell, the latter, by a deed of the same date, conveyed same to defendant in error Luckett, in trust to further secure the payment of said $1,600 note. Evidence was heard on the trial sufficient to support a finding that Trammell paid no part of the $3,000 recited in the deed to him from Carson to have been paid by him, and that .the conveyance to him from Carson was intended to operate only to pass the legal title to the land to him (Trammell) to hold for the Chamberlains. Evidence also was heard sufficient to support a finding that at the time of the transaction between Carson, Trammell and Wm. Chamberlain, the Chamberlains by tenants were in actual possession of the land. By the terms of the trust deed from Trammell to Luckett, in the event default should be made in the payment of said $1,600 note, Luckett was authorized to sell the land to the highest bidder therefor, after giving notice of such sale “as required in judicial sales,” and apply the proceeds of such sale to the payment of the note. May 6, 1902, Luckett, as trustee, sold the land, to said Worth Moore, the highest bidder therefor, who paid the amount of his bid, $1,500, by -crediting same on said note for $1,600. By his deed dated May 7, 1902, Luckett, as trustee, conveyed the land to said Worth Moore as the purchaser at said sale. Notice of the sale made by the trustee was not given by advertising in a newspaper, but only by posting it in three public places in Tarrant County.

The trial court peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendants in error. This appeal is from a judgment rendered in accordance with such a verdict.

After stating the case as above. — If the instrument in form an absolute deed conveying the land to Carson, was not intended by the parties to it to so operate, but was intended to have effect merely as security for money to be obtained by the Chamberlains on the faith of it, it was, as between such parties, void, as an attempt to create a lien against the homestead of the Chamberlains. Const., sec. 50, art. 16; Love v. Breedlove, 75 Texas, 649, 13 S. W., 222. But, though it may have been void as between the parties to it, in determining the rights of Mrs. Moore as the holder of the $1,500 note, it should be treated as valid, because she purchased the note without notice of the invalidity- of the transaction, relying upon the fact that the title was *654 as it was declared to be by the deed of the former to the latter. She had a right, in the event default was made in the payment of the note, to have the vendor’s lien foreclosed and the land sold in satisfaction of the debt, notwithstanding the instrument as between the parties to it may have been. void. Hurt v. Cooper, 63 Texas, 366; Heidenheimer v. Stewart, 65 Texas, 323; Graves v. Kinney, 95 Texas, 214. We do not understand plaintiff in error to controvert this; nor do we understand her as asserting that Mrs. Moore’s position was different as the holder of the <$1,600 note executed by Trammell and Wm. Chamberlain and substituted in her hands for the $1,500 note — except as to $100 thereof claimed to be usurious; nor do we understand her as asserting that Worth Moore, as the owner of the $1,600 note by assignment thereof from Mrs. Moore, was not entitled to have the vendor’s lien retained to secure its payment foreclosed and the land sold to satisfy any sum justly and legally due thereon. Denecamp v. Townsend, 33 S. W., 255; Lippencott v. York, 86 Texas, 276, 24 S. W., 277; Watkins v. Sproull, 8 Texas Civ. App., 427, 28 S. W., 352. We understand her contention to be (1) that while Mrs. Moore, as an innocent purchaser of the $1,500 note and holder of the $1,600 note substituted in her hands therefor, and Worth Moore as her assignee, respectively were entitled while owners of the debt represented by the notes, to have the deed to Carson treated as conveying, as it purported to, an absolute title to the land to Carson, and therefore were entitled to a foreclosure of the vendor’s lien, if necessary to enforce payment of the debt, they were not entitled to have the land sold under the trust deed, because chargeable with notice at the time it was made that she (plaintiff in error) claimed that the deed to Carson was not what it purported to be, but was intended to be and was only a mortgage; and (2) that if, as the owner of the $1,600 note, Worth M,oore was entitled to have the land sold under the trust deed, the sale thereof made by Luckett was unauthorized and void, because notice thereof was not. given as required by the terms.of the trust deed.

We are of the opinion that it should be held, if the Chamberlains by tenants were in actual possession of the land at the time the deed in trust to Luckett was made, that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W. 227, 61 Tex. Civ. App. 650, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 820, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chamberlain-v-trammell-texapp-1910.