Fikes v. Buckholts State Bank

273 S.W. 957, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 545
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 6, 1925
DocketNo. 6853.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 273 S.W. 957 (Fikes v. Buckholts State Bank) 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
Fikes v. Buckholts State Bank, 273 S.W. 957, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 545 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

McCLENDON, C. J.

This was a suit by the appellee Buckholts State Bank, against its coappellee, A. J. Slone, and appellant J. D. Fikes, in trespass to try title to recover a 63%-acre tract of land in Milam county; and in the alternative to foreclose an abstract of judgment lien in favor of the bank against appellee Slone. The suit was tried to the court and resulted in a judgment in favor of the bank for the land in question. Fikes has appealed from this judgment, naming the bank and Slone as appellees in his .appeal bond. The controversy, however, is solely between the bank and Fikes.

The title of the bank is based solely upon an execution sale foreclosing an abstract of judgment lien under a judgment in its favor against A. J. Slone. Appellant attacks the validity of this lien on the ground that the abstract does not show the court in which the judgment was rendered. In all other respects the abstract of judgment and its proper recording and indexing are conceded to be sufficient to fix a lien upon the property of A. J. Slone. This judgment was recovered in the district court of Milam county, Twentieth judicial district, on May 22, 1914, at which time the Twentieth judicial district was composed of Milam and two other counties. The abstract, in so far as it involves the question urged against it, reads as follows;

“The State of Texas, County of Milam.
“I, Sam Wilson, Jr., clerk of the district court of Milam county, Texas, do hereby certify that in the district court of the Twentieth judicial district of Texas, in a certain suit pending in said court, * * * the Buckholts State Bank, a corporation, recovered judgment against * * * A. J. Slone. * '* * Said judgment is of record in Yolume H, pages 119 to 123, records of said court. * * *
“Given under my hand and seal of office at Cameron, this 5th day of June, 1914. Sam Wilson, Jr., Clerk District Court of Milam County, Texas. [Seal.]”

Appellee’s contention is that since there were three counties in the Twentieth judicial district at the time, and since the abstract states that the judgment was rendered “in the district court of the Twentieth judicial district of Texas,” the judgment is not sufficiently described as being a judgment of the district court of Milam county, because a judgment of the district court of either of the other counties in the Twentieth judicial district would as nearly fit the description .given in the abstract as the judgment in question. There is no merit in this contention, and it is overruled. R. S. art. 5611, makes it the duty of the clerk of a court to make out and deliver, upon application and payment of the proper fee, “an abstract of such judgment, and certify thereto under his hand and official seal.”

Article 5612 prescribes the requisites for *958 such abstract as follows: Names of plaintiff and' defendant, number of the suit, date, amount and rate of interest of judgment, and the amount still due thereon. It will he observed that in these enumerated requisites, the court in which the judgment is rendered is not specified. It may be conceded that it ought to appear from the face of the abstract in what court the judgment was rendered, but we think that this conclusively appears from the abstract in question. It is headed, “State of Texas, County of Milam,” and begins by the recitation that the party certifying is the clerk of the district court of Milam county. It recites that the judgment was rendered by the district court of the Twentieth judicial district; and that said judgment is of record, giving the volume and page of the records of said court. It concludes by reciting that it is given under the clerk’s hand and seal of office at Cameron, and is signed by the clerk in his official capacity as clerk of the district court' of Mi-lam county, Tex., and sealed with his official seal. No one but the clerk of the district. court of Milam county would have authority to certify to an abstract of a judgment rendered by the district court of that county; and the clerk of the district court of that county would not have authority to certify to a judgment of the district court of any other county, whether in the Twentieth judicial district or not. We think it conclusively appears from the abstract that the judgment referred to was rendered by the district court of Milam county.

The undisputed facts in the case, as shown by the court’s findings and the statement of facts, follow:

W.' H. Slone and wife, Elizabeth Slone, were married in 1876, and lived together as man and wife until the death of Elizabeth, in April, 1911. During their marriage they acquired a tract of 1,100 acres of land, of which the land in question is a part. This was community property of the spouses. Eifty-three and three-eighths acres of this land, however, appears to have been previously conveyed by them, and in November, 1911, this tract was conveyed to W. H. Slone; and the trial court found that it was his separate property. The remaining 10 acres in controversy was community property. Elizabeth Slone died intestate, and her interest in the community realty passed, one-half to her surviving husband and the other one-half in equal shares to the four children of herself and W. H. Slone, namely, appellee, A. J. Slone, Myrtle Eikes, wife of appellant Eikes, Mrs. A. L. Ray, and J. R. Slone. As stated above, the bank recovered its judgment against A. J. Slone in May, 1914, which was abstracted and the abstract recorded and indexed in June of that year. On January 16, 1915, A. J. Slone executed a quitclaim deed, conveying to his brother and two sisiters “about 200 acres of land out of the J. A. De Pena survey lying about four miles north of the town of Buck-holts, in the county of Milam, state of Texas, and known and designated as the W. H. Slone homestead.” The consideration recited in this deed is various sums for personal use and expenses advanced by his mother, Elizabeth Slone, at various times during her life, and amounting to $10,000 in excess of any sums that she ever gave to either of her other “heirs,” and for the purpose of doing justice and equity among his brother and sisters, who constituted the only other heirs of his mother. On the same day W. H. Slone conveyed to his daughter, Mrs. Ray, his interest in the community lands and in the 53-acre tract; and on January 29, 1917, Mrs. Ray reconveyed this property to her father. The purpose of these two deeds is not shown by the record, and we can see no bearing they might have on the controversy.

Some time prior to June 28, 1917, W. H. Slone married again, and on that date a partition deed was executed, joined in by W. H. Slone and wife, Eonie Slone, Mrs. Ray and husband, Mrs. Eikes and husband, J. R. Slone and A. J. Slone. This agreement recites that —

It is “for and in consideration of the terms, conditions and benefits derived by each of the respective parties to this contract, and for the purpose of settling and adjusting all rights and equities which the respective parties hereto may have and be entitled to out of the estate of Mrs. S. E. Slone, deceased, by virtue of being the children and heirs at law of Mrs. S. E. Slone, deceased, wife of W. H. Slone.”

The instrument conveys a 100-acre tract to Mrs. Lonie Slone, which is described by metes and bounds, the S. E. corner of which is described as “same being the S. W. corner of a tract of 63% acres allotted to A. J. Slone in the subdivision of the estate of W. H. Slone; thence N. 19 E.

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Bluebook (online)
273 S.W. 957, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fikes-v-buckholts-state-bank-texapp-1925.