Drake v. Davidson & Bailey

66 S.W. 889, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 184, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 8, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 889 (Drake v. Davidson & Bailey) 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
Drake v. Davidson & Bailey, 66 S.W. 889, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 184, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 79 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

GILL, Associate Justice.

This is an action of trespass „o try title brought by the appellant, Sam J. Drake, against the appellees, Davidson & Bailey, to recover of them certain lots of land in the city of Cuero, Texas. A trial before the court without a jury resulted in a judgment for the appellees, from which this appeal is prosecuted. The following facts appear practically without dispute:

*185 The A. B. Frank Company, of San Antonio, held a judgment against B. C. Patterson, of Cnero, De Witt County, and had same abstracted and recorded in said county in 1896. At that time Patterson was an insolvent, having failed in business a short time prior thereto. He was a married man, and he and his wife owned a homestead in or near Cuero on which they resided.

Thereafter he decided to sell his homestead to Sam C. Lackey for $800 cash and the lots in controversy valued at $450. His wife, however, refused to join in this deed unless the lots forming part of the consideration should be deeded to her in her separate right. To this the husband assented and the homestead was deeded to Lackey on the terms above named, he executing a deed to Patterson’s wife for the lots. Although Mrs. Patterson was named as grantee in this deed, Lackey, who drew it at the request of the parties, inadvertently failed to embody therein a clause indicating that the land was conveyed to Mrs. Patterson in her separate right. The Pattersons negligently failed to place this deed of record. They then moved to Sweetwater, Texas, and acquired another home. At the time of the sale of the homestead Patterson owed many other debts in addition to that owed to the A. B. Frank Company, which he was unable to pay. The $800 cash received from Lackey was appropriated by him to the payment of his indebtedness.

Thereafter on April 1, 1899, Mrs. Patterson, joined by her husband, conveyed the lots in controversy to the appellant for a recited consideration of $500 cash, and this deed wás recorded in De Witt County, January 15, 1900.

On December 18, 1899, an alias execution based on the A. B. Frank Company judgment was levied upon the lots as the property of B. C. Patterson, and on February 8th were sold thereunder, one W. F. Harris, as agent for the judgment, creditor, becoming the purchaser on a bid of $25.

Prior to this sale Lackey notified Harris that the property did not belong to B. C. Patterson but had been deeded by him, Lackey, to Mrs. Patterson as part of the consideration for the sale of her homestead, and that she claimed it as her separate property. Harris was at the same time apprised of the deed from Mrs. Patterson to appellant, which by that time had been placed of record. Thereafter the appellees, Davidson & Bailey, bought the lots and judgment from the A. B. Frank Company with full knowledge that Mrs. Patterson claimed them as her separate property. The deed from the Pattersons to Drake,'the appellant, was given in satisfaction of a debt due him for money borrowed.

This statement of the facts indicates the title as relied on by each party respective^, Sam C. Lackey being the agreed common source.

The trial court found as a fact that Mrs. Patterson parted with her homestead rights under an agreement that she should have the lots in controversy in her separate right, and that the deed from Lackey to her was intended to have that effect and was executed to induce her to sign the deed by which the homestead was conveyed. It was also held *186 that such an arrangement would render the lots in controversy the separate property of the wife if the deed executed in pursuance thereof contained the necessary recitals to convey notice to third parties of the nature of the title.

Because of the absence of such stipulations the trial court adjudged the land to appellees, and for this the appellant assigns error.

The creditor has no interest in the homestead exemption. The owner may give it away and the creditor will not be heard to complain. In dealing with the owner the creditor is not presumed to take it into consideration as a possible asset or to extend credit on account of it. Cox v. Shropshire, 25 Texas, 123; Eaves v. Williams, 31 S. W. Rep., 86; Connor v. Hawkins, 66 Texas, 639; Baines v. Baker, 60 Texas, 139. It is true, when abandoned it becomes subject to execution for the satisfaction of the debts of the owner, and it is equally true that property taken in exchange therefor is alike subject unless appropriated to homestead uses.

The wife, however, has a distinct interest in the homestead whether the title be separate or community,—an interest which she may assert independent of and contrary to the wishes of her husband. For this reason it has been held that property deeded to her in her separate right to induce her to part with her homestead interest becomes absolutely her own and is exempt from forced .sale for the satisfaction of community debts. Blum v. Light, 81 Texas, 415, and authorities cited.

The case of Giddings v. Ogden, 15 Texas, 485, relied on by appellees, seems to us to be inconsistent with the doctrine announced in Blum v. Light, supra, and illogical as well. For instance, it holds that property conveyed to the wife in her separate right in exchange for her homestead interest becomes her separate property, but further holds that the subsequent acquisition of another homestead by the head of the family divests this separate title and renders it subject to community debts. How in both the cases cited above the property claimed by the wife was personal property. If in Giddings v. Ogden the property had been realty and the title thereto had been vested in the wife by the terms of the deed, the effect of the rule announced in that ease would have been to divest one of title to real estate, not by a deed of writing and with her consent freely and understandingly given, but by the mere force of the independent act of her husband by which she is supposed to be benefited. In so far as the cases are at variance with each other we incline •to follow Blum v. Light, which is a well considered case and the latest utterance of our Supreme Court on the question. See also Gatewood v. Scurlock, 21 S. W. Rep., 55.

It follows, therefore, that had the deed by its terms declared this the separate estate of the wife, those dealing with it as the property of the husband could acquire no interest therein.

Thiá brings us to a consideration of the question whether the failure to insert the necessary clause in the deed to Mrs. Patterson was fatal to her separate right in the property.

*187 It is well settled that property bought with the separate iunds of the wife becomes hers independent of the recitals in the deed, and the fact may be shown by paroi. Parker v. Coop, 60 Texas, 114; Railway v. Durett, 57 Texas, 48; Blum v. Rogers, 71 Texas, 668.

The deed containing the necessary recitals is not the creator of the separate right, but the evidence of it. In this ease the land in question became the property of the wife by force of the agreement of the parties and the fact of her consent to-the alienation of the homestead. As said in Blum v. Light, supra, she parted with a valuable right which constituted a valuable consideration supporting the deed to her.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 889, 28 Tex. Civ. App. 184, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drake-v-davidson-bailey-texapp-1902.