Colwick v. Wright

275 S.W. 152, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 671
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 1925
DocketNo. 230.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 152 (Colwick v. Wright) 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
Colwick v. Wright, 275 S.W. 152, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 671 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, C. J.

This suit was instituted in the district court of Bosque county by appellants, J. H. Colwick and wife, Avilde Colwick, against appellees, Tom C. Parks and W. W. Wrigbt, sheriff of Bosque county, and the sureties on bis official bond, to recover actual damages in the sum of $5,000 and exemplary damages in the sum of $5,000. The parties will be designated as in the trial court. The defendants on the trial presented a general demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition; the court sustained the same and dismissed the case. Plaintiffs excepted to such action of the court and filed an appeal bond. No motion for new trial was made, nor was any assignment of error filed, in the court below. The action of the trial court in sustaining said demurrer is presented as fundamental error, apparent on the face of the record, and entitled to consideration without formal assignment. Independent Farmers’ Gin Co. v. Hander et al. (Tex. Civ. App.) 269 S. W. 1062.

Plaintiffs’ petition covers 27 pages of the transcript. It contains much irrelevant matter. We submit a brief statement of the material facts therein' alleged:

Plaintiffs owned 290 acres of land which they occupied as a homestead. Said land was incumbered'with a vendor’s lien to secure a purchase-money note in the sum of $1,000. Subsequently, plaintiffs borrowed from defendant Parks the sum of $1,500 and secured the same by a mortgage on a certain 90 acres carved out of said 290-acre tract and described in said mortgage by metes and bounds. Said mortgage declared that the said 90 acres was not any part of plaintiffs’ homestead. Said 90-acre tract so mortgaged contained all, or nearly all, the cultivated land on the entire tract and a well of water used by the plaintiffs for domestic purposes, but it did not include the family residence nor the outbuildings appurtenant thereto. Said 90-acre tract was so located as to divide the remaining 200 acres of said original tract into two separate and distinct parcels. Each of said separate parcels contained approximately 100 acres of land. There is attached to plaintiffs’ petition a plat of the entire 290-acre tract, showing the location of the 90-acre tract and each of the two remaining tracts. One of said remaining tracts is shown to have been located west of the 90-acre tract and to have run practically parallel therewith to a point 230 varas from the north line of the 90-acre tract and the south line of the other separate tract. The home of plaintiffs was located on this west tract. The other of said remaining tracts was shown to have been located immediately north of said 90-acre tract. The said vendor’s lien originated in plaintiffs’ purchase of the property in 1910, and the mortgage lien originated, as aforesaid, in 1920.

Defendant Parks, on February 11, 1923, purchased the vendor’s lien note and immediately brought suit against plaintiffs to recover the amount thereof and to foreclose the vendor’s lien on the entire tract. The docket number of tliis suit was 4559. On the same day and in the same court he brought suit against plaintiffs on -said $1,500 note executed by them to him and sought foreclosure of his mortgage lien on the 90-acre tract. The docket - number of this suit was 4560. 'These suits were severally prosecuted to judgment, orders of sale were issued and levied on the land described in said respective judgments, and such land was advertised for sale thereunder. The judgment in cause No. 4559, foreclosing the vendor’s lien on the entire tract, was for the sum of $1, 321.12, with interest from the date thereof and costs, and the judgment in cause No. 4560, foreclosing the mortgage lien on the 90-acre tract, was for the sum of $2,170.20, with interest from the date thereof and costs. It is expressly alleged that all the proceedings to this point were regular and valid. There is no allegation with reference to any issues 'presented and tried at the time said judgments were rendered. 'Neither was there any allegation that there was any provision in the judgment foreclosing the vendor’s lien on the entire 290-acre tract establishing homestead rights as claimed by plaintiffs, or providing for the sale of said tract of land otherwise than as a whole.

According to the allegations of said petition, defendant Wright, in his capacity as sheriff, at the proper time and place, proceeded to further execute said orders of sale by offering the land therein described for sale according to law. He first offered for sale the 90-acre tract under the order of sale issued on the judgment of the court in cause No. 4560, which judgment foreclosed the mortgage lien on said tract of land. To such action of the sheriff plaintiffs objected as follows:

“Plaintiffs by their said attorney publicly objected to the 90 acres of land on which said mortgage lien was foreclosed being sold at that time to satisfy said mortgage lien, for the reason that the said sheriff then held in- his possession an order of sale issued on a judgment of said district court in which a prior lien, to wit, above-named vendor’s lien, was foreclosed against said 90 acres, 90 acres had been also levied on thereunder, and said sheriff pursuant to said levy had duly advertised it for sale at that time and place, and that the lien in said order of sale, to wit, in cause No. 4559, was a prior lien to that under which he was about to sell said land, and that plaintiffs were entitled to have said land sold first to satisfy said prior lien, and that to sell first under the said mortgage lien judgment would tend to cloud the title to said land and stifle bidding and pre *154 vent bidders when it was offered' under said vendor’s lien judgment.”

Defendant Parks demanded that the sheriff proceed to sell said 90-acre tract first under the order of sale issued on the judgment in cause No. 4560, and the sheriff did so. Said land was sold to the defendant Parks for the sum of $500, his bid in said sum being the only one offered. Defendant Wright then offered the 290-acre, tract for sale under the order of sale issued on the judgment in cause No. 4559. Objection to such action was interposed by plaintiffs as follows:

“Plaintiffs’ attorney, S. R. Carruth, objected to the sale of the said 290 acres at one time publicly, and demanded of said sheriff that the 90 acres of said land in excess of their homestead, which was the 90 acres mortgaged to said Parks, in which mortgage plaintiffs had designated their remaining 200 acres as their homestead by declaring in said mortgage that said 90 acres was not any part of their homestead which consisted of 200 acres other than 90 acres, be’first sold to satisfy said vendor’s lien judgment.”

Defendant Parks demanded that said sheriff offer said entire tract for sale as a whole, and the said sheriff thereupon declined to accede to plaintiffs’ demand for a separate sale of said 90-acre tract. Plaintiffs, by their said attorney, then demanded that said 90-acre tract, together with the 100-acre tract lying immediately west of the same and upon which their residence was situated, be offered for sale together before offering the other or north tract for sale. This demand was refused and the entire 290-acre tract offered for sale as a whole. Plaintiffs’ attorney, Carruth, offered $3,000 for said tract of land, and the same was declared sold to him on said bid. The sheriff demanded payment of the sum so bid and offered to make a proper deed to him to the land on such payment.

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 152, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colwick-v-wright-texapp-1925.