Crawford v. Spruill

187 S.W. 361, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 720
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 1916
DocketNo. 5660. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 187 S.W. 361 (Crawford v. Spruill) 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
Crawford v. Spruill, 187 S.W. 361, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 720 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

MOURSUND, J.

On June 26, 1912, A. J. Spruill and wife owned a tract of land of 413 acres in Frio county, Tex., and on that date executed, in favor of Wm. Boon and I. I-I. Clemons, a deed of trust on the. entire tract to secure them in the payment of a $2,-300 note. On January 9, 1913, Spruill and wife executed to W. L. Crawford a deed of trust on said 413 acres of land to secure him in the payment of a note for $1,365. On May 7, 1913, Spruill and wife conveyed to H. Hurst 199.3 acres out of the 413-acre tract. The consideration was recited in said deed, as follows:

“One thousand dollars cash in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and one vendor’s lien note for the sum of $500 this day given, by said H. Hurst, due January 1, 1914, bearing 8% interest. Said note made payable to A. J. Spruill or order. And the assumption of one outstanding deed of trust against said land promising to pay same for the sum of $2,300 due June 26, 1915, bearing interest at the rate of 10'% interest. Also three vendor’s lion notes this day given by the said H. Hurst to A. J. Spruill against said land for the sum of $2,088, divided into three equal payments as follows: Note 1, due May 7, 1917, for $696; note No. 2, due May 7, 1918, for $696; note No. 3, due May 7, 1919, for $696, all notes bearing interest at the rate of 8% (eight per cent.) interest payable annually as it accrues, both notes and interest payable at Dilley, Texas.”

A vendor’s lien was expressly reserved to secure the payment of “the above-described notes.”

On July 1, 1913, Spruill and wife sold to W. L. Crawford the four vendor’s lien notes executed by Hurst, and conveyed to said Crawford, by a written and properly executed conveyance, the equitable title of Spruill and wife, existing by reason of the lien expressly retained in the deed of trust to Hurst, warranting “that said notes are the first and only lien on said land except the $2,300 in said deed assumed.” In consideration of this transfer, Crawford released the deed of trust held by him covering the entire 413 acres, making up the difference in amount by payment of money or its equivalent.

At the time Spruill acquired title to the 413-acre tract of land it had a house and other improvements on it, and about 65 acres in cultivation. The house was situated upon, and the cultivated land was a part of, the 199.3-acre tract sold to Hurst, and said tract was all under fence. The remainder of the 413-acre tract was not under fence, but was inclosed in a larger pasture and was used by Spruill and wife for pasturing their stock, and otherwise in connection with their home. No part of said 413 acres was set apart or designated for homestead purposes, but it was all used for said purposes continuously up to May 7, 1913, when Spruill and wife executed the deed to Hurst for the 199.3-aere tract. At the time Spruill and wife executed the deed, “they were using, and intended to claim and use, for homestead purposes, 200 acres out of the remainder of the 413-acre tract, and shortly after making the deed to Hurst — three weeks or a month afterwards— the defendant Spruill fenced the remainder of the tract amounting to about 213 acres, and about December 1, 1914, constructed a small house on said tract and used it for pasturing stock and otherwise for homestead purposes and lived there a part of that time,' and continuously and uninterruptedly from *363 the execution of the deed, from Hurst intended and have intended to claim and use this property for homestead purposes.” Spruill and wife have no other property than the 213 acres which they own or can claim as a homestead, and they have designated 200 acres of the 213 as their homestead.

Default was made in the payment of interest on the $2,300 Boon-Clemons note, and Boon, who had acquired the interest of Clemons, declared the note due, and requested the trustee, John L. Pranglin, to sell the land to satisfy the debt, instructing the trustee to first sell the 199.3 acres and apply the proceeds to the satisfaction of his debt; and, if such proceeds failed to satisfy his debt, then to sell the remaining 213 acres and apply the proceeds thereof to the satisfaction of the balance unpaid. The trustee advertised the land for sale in accordance with these instructions. Crawford instituted this suit to restrain the sale by the trustee of the land in the manner advertised, upon the ground that such sale would prejudice the sale of the four vendor’s lien notes held by him which were secured by a lien on the 199.3 acres, and prayed that Boon be required to transfer to him the $2,300 mortgage note and his rights under the deed of trust. On January 2, 1915, Hon. J. F. Mullally, judge of the Forty-Ninth judicial district, granted Crawford the relief prayed for to the extent of requiring Boon to accept from Crawford the amount of his debt and to transfer the note and rights under the deed of trust to Crawford, without recourse on him, Boon, with which order of the court Boon complied.

Crawford, thereafter, in the same suit filed his first amended original petition in which he sought to recover judgment on the $2,300 Boon-Clemons note, foreclosure of the deed of trust lien on the 413 acres, and also judgment on the four vendor’s lien notes, and foreclosure of his vendor’s lien on the 199.3 acres. He prayed that the 213.7-acre tract be first sold and the proceeds applied, first, to the payment of one-half of the costs of suit, second, to costs of sale, third, to the satisfaction of the Boon-Clemons note and lien, and the surplus, if any, to be paid to Spruill; that if such proceeds should prove insufficient to satisfy the three items named, then that the 199.3 acres be sold to satisfy the balance of the Boon-Clemons note, and the surplus, if any, from such sale be applied to the satisfaction of the debt evidenced by the vendor’s lien notes. He prayed, in the alternative, that if the court should hold that said 199.3 acres ought to be sold first, then that the proceeds of such sale be applied, first, to one-half of the costs of the suit, second, the costs of sale, third, to pay and satisfy all the debts evidenced by vendor’s lien notes and, fourth, to the payment pro tanto on the indebtedness represented by the Boon-Clemons note, and that plaintiff then have foreclosure and salé of said 213.7-aere tract for the payment of lien against the same represented by said Boon-Clemons note and deed of trust. He further prayed, in the alternative, that in either event he should have a foreclosure of both of his liens and that however said property might be sold that the proceeds thereof be applied, first, to the satisfaction of plaintiff’s lien on the 199.3-acre tract of land, and, second, to the satisfaction of his first lien on said 213.7-acre tract, and prayed for general relief.

Spruill and wife- admitted the execution of the Boon-Clemons note and the deed of trust given to secure the same; that appellant was the holder of the note and lien; that the note was due and unpaid, and that they were liable thereon. They also admitted all the facts relied upon by Crawford for recovery on the four vendor’s lien notes and foreclosure of his lien, and Spruill admitted his liability as an indorser on the four notes. They then plead the facts hereinbefore set out,, with the exception that the pleadings, with reference to homestead, do not show the facts as fully as the evidence hereinbefore detailed, and it will be necessary to state what was pleaded with reference to this matter, because objection thereto is presented by the first assignment of error. The allegation is as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 S.W. 361, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-spruill-texapp-1916.