Couger v. Allen

25 S.W.2d 666
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 1, 1930
DocketNo. 12259.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 25 S.W.2d 666 (Couger v. Allen) 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
Couger v. Allen, 25 S.W.2d 666 (Tex. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

The appellee, S. J. Allen, instituted this suit on November 22, 1928, against John Couger to recover upon two promissory notes, each in the sum of $1,062.50. The notes purported to have been given by John Couger as the consideration for a deed of conveyance from Allen and wife to John Couger, dated the 12th day 'of September, 1925, in which the vendor’s lien was retained to secure the *667 payment of said notes. The plaintiff prayed for judgment for the principal, interest, and attorney's fees due upon his notes, alleged ■to have been unpaid, and for a foreclosure of the vendor’s lien upon all of the Luther Brawner survey of land, abstract No. 34, situated in Stephens and Palo Pinto counties.

The defendant Couger was cited and answered in his first amended answer and cross-complaint by demurrers, general and special denials, and specially that the notes declared upon were without consideration; that, at the time of the conveyance of the plaintiff to the defendant, plaintiff was without title; that the plaintiff’s purported title was a deed from the sheriff at a foreclosure sale on the 4th day of August, 1925, ordered by a judgment of the district court of Young county, rendered at the June term, 1925, in a cause styled J. K. P. Hughes v. John Couger et al., Nos. 7748, 7749, and 7778, consolidated; that the plaintiff, Allen, -had intervened in the cause in which.said judgment was rendered and declared upon a note executed by the defendant for the sum of $2,500, dated July 1, 1922, executed by John Couger and Breckie E. Couger, his wife, to secure which John Couger had executed a trust deed to one C. P. Marshall, as trustee, covering about 1,000 acres of land, including said Brawner survey; that at the time of the exeoution of the said $2,500 note and the said trust deed the Brawner survey was the homestead of the defendant and wife, and was actually occupied as such at that time and for long prior thereto; that in said consolidated suit he had pleaded his homestead right, but by an agreement among parties and counsel, to which he was not a party and to which he did not consent or authorize, his homestead plea was ignored and foreclosure made with order of sale, which resulted in the sheriff’s deed under which the plaintiff, Allen, claimed title at the time of the execution of the notes declared on in this suit; that defendant did not discover the fact of the foreclosure of the trust deed on his homestead until after the court had adjourned, whereupon it occurred to him that, if he would do equity, he might still retain his homestead, and it was thereupon agreed by him and Allen that Allen should bid at the sheriff’s sale $2,800 for the land included within the trust deed and judgment of foreclosure that formed no part of defendant’s homestead, the same being some 800 acres of a value largely in excess of the judgment rendered against Couger, and that he (Couger) would pay Allen the sum of $500, and that he had already paid the sum of $575, but that Couger had failed to bid the $2,800 for the sale of the excess acreage.

’ Breckie E. Couger intervened in the suit, and, so far as is necessary to state, alleged in substance that the Brawner survey had been the actual homestead of herself and husband, John Couger, since the year 1901; that she had not been cited to appear, and had not appeared, in the consolidated suit in which the. judgment of foreclosure had been made, and that she had not authorized any one to appear and answer for her in that suit; that she had no knowledge of the foreclosure of the trust deed upon their homestead until service of citation upon her in the present suit, etc.

In reply, among other things, the plaintiff presented what is termed a plea in abatement, to wit:

“S. J. Allen v. John Couger No. -
“In the District Court of Young County. December Term. A. D. 1928.
“Now comes the plaintiff herein, and says that the court should wholly abate and dismiss the cross action of the defendant John Couger and the Plea in Intervention of Breckie E. Couger for the following reason:
“That the identical matters and things attempted to be pleaded by said parties herein -were formerly adjudicated in the 30th District Court of Young County, Texas, at the June term 1925, in a cause styled J. IC. P. Hughes v. John Couger et al., No. 7748, and 7749, and 777S consolidated, as more fully appear by the judgment roll of this court, and that said judgment was more than two years before the filing of the pleas herein, and no appeal was taken by the said Johii Couger and his wife Breckie E. Couger, and no writ of error sued out and said judgment has long since become final and determined and in said judgment it was determined.
“1. That S. J. Allen filed an answer and appeared in person and by counsel; and that John Couger and wife Breckie E. Couger were duly cited to appear and answer in said cause, and filed answers and appeared in person and by counsel.
“2. It was further determined in said judgment that S. J. Allen had a demand which was liquidated and proved by an instrument in writing, and that, there was! due him, principal and interest $3,000.60, and $300.06 attorney’s fees, making á total of $3,300.66 that was due and unpaid by John Couger and Breckie E. Couger, and that said indebtedness was secured by a first and superior lien upon the lands described in said Allen’s deed of trust and note and especially upon .the fourth tract, known as the Luther Brawner Sr. Survey, Abstract #34, situated in Stephens and Palo Pinto County, Texas, and that said abstract was not the homestead of John Couger and wife Breckie E. Couger on July 13, 1922, and that said land was the homestead of the defendants at the time of said judgment, subject, however, to the lien thereon and debt held by S. J. Allen, as found by the^ court.
“3. That the pleadings of John Couger and Breckie E. Couger now before the court are no more than a collateral attack upon said judgment.
*668 “Wherefore, plaintiff prays the said cross •action and plea of intervention be dismissed and for all costs.”

The record discloses that a jury had been invoked in behalf of the defendant and in-tervener, and that the jury had been duly impaneled and. sworn prior to the noon hour, whereupon the court dismissed the jury until the afternoon session, with the statement that he would in the meantime hear the plaintiff’s plea in abatement. The parties thereupon offered evidence, which, ini behalf of the plaintiff, Allen, consisted largely of the judgment in the consolidated suit and the testimony of the plaintiff, Allen, to the effect that, at the time of the execution of the $2,500 note by John Oouger and wife in 1922, John Oouger told him that his homestead was in the town of Graham, where they both lived, and not upon the Brawner survey, and that such in fact was the case. Mr. O. E. Marshall testified in behalf of the plaintiff that he represented Mr. Allen in the consolidated case, and had made diligent inquiry and investigation to ascertain whether an answer had been filed for Breckie E. Oouger by Judge Penix with reference to homestead rights, but that he could find no such answer. His recollection was however, that one was filed, but the only one found among the papers was one by John Oouger.

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Bluebook (online)
25 S.W.2d 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/couger-v-allen-texapp-1930.