Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association v. Abernathy

102 S.W.2d 410, 129 Tex. 379, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 361
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 17, 1937
DocketNo. 6772.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 102 S.W.2d 410 (Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association v. Abernathy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association v. Abernathy, 102 S.W.2d 410, 129 Tex. 379, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 361 (Tex. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Judge German

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.

On April 14, 1921, W. C. Jackson executed a deed to M. G. Abernathy, conveying certain real estate in the City of Breckenridge. Of the consideration $15,000.00 was paid in cash, and a note for $15,000.00, with vendor’s lien retained, was executed by Abernathy to Jackson. This note with the lien was assigned to the United Home Builders of America, and deed of trust was later executed by Abernathy and wife, Mollie D. Abernathy, upon the property mentioned for further securing the note. The cash consideration at the time of the execution of the deed and all subsequent payments upon the note were paid out of the separate means of Mrs. Abernathy. The unpaid portion of the note was to be paid by her, and the land was to be her separate property. On May 21, 1921, M. G. Abernathy executed a deed to Mrs. Abernathy reciting that the consideration paid therefor was out of her separate funds.

On March 23, 1927, the receiver of the United Home Builders of America recovered a judgment against M. G. Abernathy for the sum of $8,234.93, as the balance upon the purchase *381 money note above mentioned, and a judgment against M. G. Abernathy and Mrs. Abernathy foreclosing the deed of trust lien against the property mentioned. There was no personal judgment against Mrs. Abernathy. In order to prevent a sale of the property under order of sale by virtue of the foreclosure judgment, Mrs. Abernathy made application to the Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association of Missouri for a loan of $8,000.00, the same to be paid out of her separate funds and estate, and no community funds were to be paid on said note. The loan was made to Mrs. Abernathy, and she executed note and deed of trust upon the property mentioned, said M. G. Abernathy “joining his wife in the note and deed of trust as a formal requirement to make them legal under the law.” The $8,000.00 thus obtained by Mrs. Abernathy was used by her in paying off the judgment previously obtained by the receiver of the United Home Builders of America, which judgment appears to have been satisfied, and no order of sale was issued.

In March, 1931, Mrs. Abernathy made default in payment of the note for $8,000.00, and the Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association of Missouri exercised the power of sale under the deed of trust, sold the property by trustee, and became the purchaser thereof for the sum of $5,000.00, which was credited upon the note for $8,000.00. There remained a balance due on the note of $1,824.94, which with interest and attorney’s fees amounted to $2,196.63. This suit was instituted in the district court of Lubbock County by R. E. Stevenson, receiver for the Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association of Missouri, and was for the purpose of recovering against Mrs. Abernathy and M. G. Abernathy a personal judgment for the balance due upon the note. Later the Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association of Missouri was by order of the court substituted as plaintiff instead of the receiver. Judgment of the trial court was in favor of the defendants, and this judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. Stevenson v. Abernathy, 69 S. W. (2d) 850.

The principal question for decision is whether or not Mrs. Abernathy is personally bound upon this obligation. The Court of Civil Appeals held that she was not liable under the well settled rule in this State that a married woman can not make an enforceable contract creating personal liability for purchase money for real estate. On the other hand, plaintiff in error contends that as a married woman is given power to contract in behalf of and for the preservation and benefit of her separate estate, and as Mrs. Abernathy had an equity in this property at the time it was about to be sold in satisfaction of *382 the judgment lien, this contract was in reality a contract made in behalf of her separate estate and for its preservation, and was enforceable against her personally.

1 The precise question has not been decided in this State so far as we have been able to determine; but in principle it has been settled. As above indicated, and as was held by the Court of Civil Appeals, it is definitely settled that a married woman can not contract so as to make herself personally liable for purchase money, as such, for real estate. On the other hand, it is settled by numerous authorities that a married woman may borrow money and make herself personally liable for its payment for the purpose of relieving her separate estate from liens, or to protect and preserve it from the enforcement of a lien. The case of Blair v. Teel, 152 S. W. 878, in which writ of error was refused, is precisely in point on that, point. There Mrs. Blair, while a feme sole, had created a mortgage lien against her property. Later she married, and in order to save the property from a foreclosure of the previous mortgage lien, she borrowed money from Teel, which was used in satisfying the prior debt and releasing the mortgage lien. She was held personally liable for the money borrowed. The cases of Scott v. Collier, (Ind. App.) 77 N. E. 666; Daniel v. Royce, 96 Ga. 566, 23 S. E. 493; McVey v. Cantrell, 70 N. Y. 295, 26 Am. Rep. 605, and Husband v. Epling, 81 Ill. 172, 25 Am. Rep. 273, are cases closely in point. The rule is stated arguendo in the case of Cupp v. Campbell, by the Supreme Court of Indiana, 103 Ind. 213, 2 N. E. 565, in the following very apt language:

“Where her estate is incumbered in such manner as that she is exposed to the hazards of losing it, even though such incumbrance is for the debt of another, it is manifestly beneficial that she should have the power to relieve it from the peril of such incumbrance; and where she and her husband contract a loan for that purpose, it can not be said that the consideration for such loan does not inure to her benefit.”

The case of Daniel v. Royce, supra, approaches very closely in principle the present case. There the husband made ponveyance of certain land to his wife, reciting that it was subject to a deed or mortgage to a third person to secure payment of money loaned to him. Afterwards the wife borrowed money to pay off the debt previously created by her husband, and which constituted a lien against the property conveyed to her as her separate estate. She was held personally liable for the debt thus created, the court saying:

*383 “A note given by a married woman, the consideration of which, pure and simple, is a debt due by her husband, is certainly void. But it by no means follows that she may not bind herself by a note given by her for a loan of money with which to pay off an incumbrance on her own property, although this incumbrance may have been created by the husband himself before she became the owner. In such a case it makes no difference at all that the lender knew the purpose for which the money was borrowed. The policy of the law is to forbid the wife from making herself in any manner liable for the husband’s debt as such; but there is no good reason why a wife, when she becomes the owner of property formerly belonging to the husband, may not use her own means, or borrow money, for the purpose of relieving the property of a lien, of the existence of which she fully knew when she accepted the husband’s conveyance.

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.W.2d 410, 129 Tex. 379, 1937 Tex. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farm-home-savings-loan-association-v-abernathy-tex-1937.