Davis v. Walker

233 S.W. 521
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 6, 1921
DocketNo. 9593.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 233 S.W. 521 (Davis v. Walker) 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
Davis v. Walker, 233 S.W. 521 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

DUNEDIN, J.

• On March 29, 1912, A. W.

Walker conveyed to D. T. Davis a certain lot of land situated in the city of Fort Worth. The consideration recited in the deed was $305 cash paid, and two vendor’s lien notes, one for $809, carrying a first lien on the property, and the other for $745, secured by a second lien. Later, the second note was paid off and the lien securing the same was released by the vendor Walker. The other note for the principal sum of $800 was sold by Walker to the Texas Securities Company, who later filed suit thereon, and under a judgment of foreclosure of the lien securing the same, decreed in that suit, the property was sold under a writ of execution and purchased by A. W. Walker, who later sold it to J. R. Black. Prior to the institution of that suit, D. T. Davis and wife, Mrs. M. C. L. Davis, conveyed the property to Mrs. Lilly Matkin and her husband, J. T. Matkin, the consideration recited in that conveyance being $1,000 cash and a vendor’s lien note for $1,000, payable to the grantor D. T. Davis. In that suit D. T. Davis, A. W. Walker, Lilly Matkin, and her husband, J. T. Matkin, were made parties ■ defendant, and a personal judgment was sought against D. T. Davis as the maker of the note and A. W. Walker as indorser, and a foreclosure was prayed for against the Matkins as subsequent purchasers of the property.

After the institution of the suit and prior to its trial, D. T. Davis died intestate. After his death, J. R. Black, assuming to act as attorney for Mrs. M. C. Davis, wife of D. T. Davis, and for J. T. Davis, Walker Davis, Mattie Butcher, and Mrs. Lilly Matkin, as children and heirs of D. T. Davis, deceased, and for Shirley Butcher, husband of Mattie Butcher, and J. T. Matkin, husband of Mrs. Lilly Matkin, filed a plea of intervention in the suit, alleging the deatli of D. T. Davis, and that the interveners were his only heirs, and prayed that they be substituted as parties defendant in the foreclosure suit instead of D. T. Davis, deceased. Accordingly, the judgment of foreclosure was against all of those interveners as such heirs of D. T. Davis.

That plea of intervention also contained allegations of the execution of the $1,000 vendor’s lien note given by Mrs. Lilly Matkin and her husband J. T. Matkin, in favor of D. T. Davis, in part consideration of the sale of property by him to them, coupled with a prayer for judgment on that note and for foreclosure of that lien which it was alleged was superior to the lien claimed by the plaintiff, the Texas Securities Company.

In the judgment foreclosing the lien of the plaintiff Texas Securities Company, there was also a foreclosure of the lien claimed in the plea of intervention just noted, but subject to the .lien asserted by the plaintiff, which was decreed to be a prior and superior lien. And it was provided in the judgment that any excess remaining after the satisfaction of the plaintiffs’ judgment be applied to the judgment in favor of the interveners against Mrs. Lilly Matkin and her husband, J. T. Matkin. At the sheriff’s sale under the foreclosure decree, the property sold for the sum- of $1,260, which was the exact amount of the judgment rendered in favor of the Texas Securities Company, with the court costs added.

The present suit was instituted by J. T. Davis, Walker Davis, Mattie Butcher, joined by her husband, Shirley Butcher, Lilly Mat-kin, joined by her husband, J. T. Matkin, and D. W. Evans, guardian of the estates of Willie and Harry Davis, minors, who were grandchildren of D. T. Davis and Mrs. M. C. L. Davis, and who were not parties to the former foreclosure suit, to set aside the foreclosure sale and to cancel the deed made thereunder to Walker, and also the deed from Walker to Black, and that said property be ordered resold to satisfy whatever may be justly due thereon and plaintiffs be given an opportunity to purchase the same at such sale, and further that said judgment of foreclosure be so reformed as to dispose of the interests of all the parties to this suit. It was alleged that Mrs. M. C. L. Davis had died intestate soon after the rendition of the former judgment of foreclosure, and plaintiffs sued as heirs of her and D. T. Davis.

The principal ground alleged for the relief sought was that the plea of intervention had been.filed in the suit by Black without the authority, knowledge, or consent of the plaintiffs in this, suit, for which reason it was alleged that the judgment in the former suit was without binding effect upon these plaintiffs; and the jury, in answer to special issues, sustained all of those allegations as to plaintiffs Mrs. Butcher and her husband, Shirley Butcher, J. T. Davis, and Walker Davis, hut further found that plaintiffs Lilly Matkin and her husband did authorize Black, as their attorney, to file the plea of intervention against them. The jury further found that Walker Davis did authorize Black to represent him as a defendant against the suit of the Texas Securities Company to foreclose the lien claimed by that company, but there was no finding that Mrs. M. C. L. Davis did not authorize Black to file the plea of intervention in her behalf.

*523 The jury further found that at the time J. R. Black purchased the property from Walker he knew that the minor plaintiffs in this suit were the heirs of D. T. Davis and Mrs. M. 0. L. Davis. The jury further found that the price realized for the property at the sheriff’s sale was its full market value. In the present suit judgment was rendered denying the plaintiffs any of the relief prayed for, and plaintiffs have appealed.

The record shows without controversy that in the foreclosure suit instituted by the Texas Securities Company Mrs. Lilly Matkin and her husband were duly cited to answer the petition, and at that time they were the owners of the equity of redemption, having previously purchased the property from D. T. Davis and wife, Mrs. M. C. L. Davis. Thus it appears that the plaintiffs in the present suit are the sole owners of the note upon which the plea of intervention was based; that the judgment of foreclosure on that note under and by virtue of the plea ,of intervention was Valid as against Mrs. Lilly Matkin and her husband, as defendants in that intervention, and as to Mrs. M. C. L. DaviS, plaintiff in that intervention, but was not valid as to Mrs. Butcher and her husband, and Walker Davis and J. T. Davis, and the minor plaintiffs in this suit, Willie and Harry Davis, represented by their guardian, D. W. Evans.

In the present suit, plaintiffs did not allege that the property was sold for less than its market value at the foreclosure sale, nor did they offer to pay off the amount of the judgment rendered in favor of the Texas Securities Company in that suit, nor do they pray specially for a foreclosure of the vendor’s lien note inherited by them from D. T. Davis and wife, which was executed by the Matkins when the latter purchased the property, but they did pray:

“That said judgment be so reformed as to dispose of the interests of all parties to this suit * * * and that said property be resold ■for the amount due thereon, and these plaintiffs be given an opportunity to purchase said property at said sale, * * * and plaintiffs further pray that the court render such further orders, judgments, and decrees in this case as under the facts of this case they may be entitled to, either at law or in equity.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 S.W. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-walker-texapp-1921.