Chapin v. Ford

194 S.W. 494, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 384
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 4, 1917
DocketNo. 5836.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 494 (Chapin v. Ford) 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
Chapin v. Ford, 194 S.W. 494, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 384 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

FLX, C. J.

This is a suit instituted by appellee against D. Sullivan, D. J. Sullivan, May Sammons, and D. B. Chapin, to recover against them the amount of nine promissory notes for $1,500 each, dated January 16, 1915, due respectively in one to nine years from date, with interest at 7 per cent, per annum, and a note for $S,715 of same date due in ten years after said date, each note providing that past-due interest should bear interest at 10 per cent, per annum, and providing that in case of default of payment of principal 10 per cent, additional on the same should be paid for attorney’s fee, if placed in hands of an attorney for collection, or if collected by suit, and also providing that the failure to pay any one or more of the notes at maturity would cause all of them to become due and payable if the holders thereof should so elect. The notes were alleged to have been *495 executed by Albert Sammons and wife, May Sammons, for part of the purchase money of certain lands, being 7,732.61 acres, in Kerr county and a city block in Kerrv'ille, which had been- conveyed to them by appellee, an express lien having been reserved in the deed, as well as set forth in a deed of trust to secure the payment of the notes. Appellee-also sought a recovery of a balance of $1,564.77, alleged to be due on ten promissory notes for $566 each, secured by a deed of trust on the sama lands. It was alleged’ that appellant purchased the land from May Sammons, the widow of Albert Sammons, deceased, -and had assumed payment of the notes as a part consideration for the conveyance. The two Sullivans and May Sammons disclaimed all interest in the land, the last named alleging that she had sold her equity in the land to appellant for $1,600 and his assumption of the payment of the promissory notes executed by her and her deceased husband.

Appellant pleaded in abatement the pen-dency of a suit instituted by him in the Forty-Fifth district court of Bexar county, which plea was overruled, and then he filed an answer consisting of a general denial, an admission that the notes had been executed as alleged, that they were secured by the liens alleged, and that he had purchased the land and assumed payment of the notes, but claimed the payment of $5,000 to appellee which had been credited on the second lien notes» instead -of on those secured by the first lien. It was further alleged that at the time appel-lee conveyed the land to Sammons it was incumbered by a mortgage to secure a note for $15,000, executed by appellee to the ¿Etna Life Insurance Company. Appellant admitted default in the payment of the first note to become due, and pleaded an offer made by him to pay the full -amount of the notes if appellee would satisfy the mortgage on the land given to’the insurance company, which he refused to do. A cross-action for damages by appellant was dismissed upon exceptions. The cause was. tiled without- a jury, and resulted in,a judgment in favor of appellee for $28,025.

It was proven that the lands were sold, as alleged, by E’ord and wife to Sammons and wife, the ten notes sued on first herein described being given for part of the purchase money for the land, and each note reciting that upon a failure to pay any one note of the series or the interest thereon all the notes should, at the option of the holder, mature. There was provision for past-due interest to bear 10 per cent, interest and for attorney’s fees. A vendor’s lien was expressly reserved in the deed and notes. A deed of trust on the land was also executed by the vendees to secure notes. At the time of sale of the lands to Sammons and wife- appellee owed the .¿Etna Life Insurance Company the sum ■ of $15,000, evidenced by a promissory note and secured by a mortgage on the lands sold to Sammons and wife, and appellee and wife in their deed bound themselves ‡0 protect their vendees from the lien. The note to the insurance company was secured by a deed of trust on the lands in question.

The following clause was placed in the deed:

■ “But it is understood and agreed that we, the said S. B. Ford and Anna B. Ford, our heirs and legal representatives, shall have the right to relieve the foregoing described lands herein conveyed from the incumbrances existing thereon at any time before the last note executed and delivered by the said Sammons, hereinbefore described, matures, it being understood further, however, that we bind ourselves, our heirs and legal representatives, to protect and hold harmless the said Sammons against the enforcement of any of said liens how existing on the said lands, that is to say, the liens existing on the said lands at the time of the purchase of said lands by the said Sammons from us.”.

The clause quoted is somewhat obscure, but was construed by the trial judge to mean that it modified the general warranty, as well as the special one against the liens, to such an extent that appellee could postpone the payment of the $15,000 due the insurance company until the ten-year note for $8,715 became due. The note for the $15,000 will mature on March 1, 1918, and no contract made by and between Sammons and appellee as to when the latter shall pay off the note can .have any effect. It must be presumed that when the note is due the insurance company will demand payment, and if payment is not made will proceed to institute suit to foreclose their lien on the land. If it was the desire to postpone the payment as indicated, a thing was attempted over which neither vendor nor vendee had any control whatever.

Under the general warranty clause in the deed from appellee and wife to Sammons and wife there was the implied covenant that the estate conveyed was free from incum-brances, among the latter being all liens upon the property, unless restrained by express terms contained in such conveyance. Kev. Stats, arts. 1112, 1113. No such restraint can be derived from the words herein quoted from the deed. The words permitting the payment of the $15,000 at any time before. February, 1925, cannot be distorted into an attem'pt to restrain the general warranty. The statute provides that the implied warranties named therein shall arise ’ “unless restrained by express terms contained in such conveyance.” Such restraint cannot be implied, it cannot be read by construction into the deed, but it must appear therein in “express terms.” That there was no intention upon the part of the vendor and vendee to limit, restrict, restrain, or impair the full force of the warranty is evinced by the1 special warranty immediately following the language in question in which it is recited:

“It being understood further, however, that we bind ourselves, our heirs and legal representatives, to protect and hold harmless the said Sammons against the enforcement of any of said *496 liens now existing on the said lands, that is to say, the liens existing on the said lands at the time of the purchase of the said lands by the said Sammons from us.”

The force of that positive and explicit warranty cannot be weakened or impaired by the obscure and uncertain language about when appellee should pay off the lien to the insurance company, a matter over which neither party had any control or any right to contract. The court held that the language used in regard to when the lien should be discharged had the effect of giving Sammons or his assigns the right to refuse payment of the $8,715 note until the $15,000 was paid, or, in other words, that Sammons had contracted for $8,715 worth of

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 494, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapin-v-ford-texapp-1917.