Harle v. Langdon's Heirs

60 Tex. 555, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 377
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1883
DocketCase No. 1396
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 60 Tex. 555 (Harle v. Langdon's Heirs) 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
Harle v. Langdon's Heirs, 60 Tex. 555, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 377 (Tex. 1883).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

On April 2, 1861, David McCandless sold the land in controversy to R. E. & F. S. Tate, for which he received a note on Lockhart, which seems to have been indorsed by the Tates. June 2, 1864, the Tates sold the land to W. S. Langdon. September 15, 1866, McCandless brought suit against the Tates and Lockhart on the note which he had received for the land, and asked a foreclosure of the vendor’s lien.

To this suit Langdon was not made a party, and on May 3, 1868, McCandless obtained a judgment against the defendants in that suit for the amount due on the note and foreclosing the vendor’s lien, and under this judgment he caused the land to be sold and himself became the purchaser, bidding therefor $100, which was credited on his judgment.

July 20, 1871, McCandless brought a suit of trespass to try title against two of the three children of Langdon, he being then dead, and also against Mrs. Langdon, who was also dead.

One of the children of Langdon made a party to the suit, as well as one that was not made a party, was a minor. In that suit, on November 25, 1872, a judgment for the land was rendered in favor of McCandless.

On February 5, 1872, pending that suit, McCandless sold the land to John B. Jones, who on April 2, 1873, sold three hundred acres of it to the appellant Harle.

On July 1, 1874, the heirs of Langdon prosecuted a writ of error, and at the Austin term, 1881, of this court, the judgment in favor of McCandless was reversed and the cause remanded. That cause is numbered 941.

August 4, 1880, the children of Langdon brought a suit against Jones and Harle for the land, and that is numbered 2003.

Judgment was rendered by confession against Jones for three hundred acres of the land.

Pending cause 941 McCandless died, and his heirs made themselves parties thereto, but they in no respect changed the character of the suit, except that they alleged the purchase of the land by their ancestor and prayed that the satisfaction of his judgment against Lockhart and the Tates be vacated to the extent of his bid for the land, in case it should be found that Langdon’s heirs had the better title to the land, and that a vendor’s lien to that extent be established and enforced against the land. Neither Lockhart nor either of. the Tates was a party to this suit, and a demurrer was sustained to the pleadings of the heirs of McCandless. ..This is assigned as error.

[560]*560Causes 941 and 2003 were consolidated, and this is assigned as error.

The appellant Harle set up in his answer the purchase by Jones pending cause 941, and his purchase from Jones after a judgment was rendered in that cause and before a writ of error was sued out by the Langdon heirs, in bar of their action. To his pleading a demurrer was sustained and this is assigned as error.

The appellees not having been parties to the suit brought by McOandless against Lockhart and the Tates, no facts are shown which could make the judgment rendered in that case binding upon them. Lockhart and the Tates are not parties to either of the consolidated suits before us, and it certainly is true that no action could be taken to vacate satisfaction of judgment in that case in one in which they are not parties; and besides, McOandless got whatever title to the land Lockhart or Tate and wife had at the time he obtained judgment against them, and that this may not have been good title, nor any title at all, does not furnish sufficient ground for setting aside the satisfaction of judgment to the extent of his bid.

A case is not shown in which the purchaser failed to get title by the sale, such as the judgment debtor held, through some defect in the process or in the manner of its execution, as in Howard v. North, 5 Tex., 291; Brown v. Lane, 19 Tex., 203; Morton v. Welborn, 21 Tex., 774; Herndon v. Rice, 21 Tex., 455.

While the parties, in name, in the two suits, were not the same, yet in right and privity the plaintiffs in cause 941 were the same as the defendants in cause 2003, and the subject matter of the suit, so far as cognizable by the court with the parties before it, was the same in both cases, and at most the consolidation was only technically irregular, and in such case no prejudice to the right of any person having been shown to have resulted, the consolidation, even if irregular, would be no sufficient ground for reversing the judgment.

Neither Langdon nor his heirs were parties to the suit of McOandless against Lockhart and the Tates, and, as before said, no facts are stated which could make the judgment rendered in it in any manner binding on them; hence no title which they held could possibly pass by the sale at which McOandless bought.

It is contended, however, that, as liarle the judgment was rendered in favor of McOandless in cause No. 941, against some of the children of Langdon, and before they sued out a writ of error, he is entitled to protection, although upon error [561]*561the judgment was subsequently reversed by this court. To support this proposition counsel for appellant have filed briefs which indicate great evidence of research and industry.

This is made the question in the case, and in disposing of it we will not take into consideration the facts that one of the defendants in that case was a minor, another dead at the time the suit was brought, and that one of the children of Langdon was not before the court at all in the case until after the reversal; nor need we consider what might be the effect of the fact that Harle bought from Jones, who was a purchaser from McCandless,'after he brought suit, but before he obtained a judgment.

The naked question then is, whether a person buying land from one who has obtained a judgment in a suit of trespass to try title takes title which will not be annulled by a reversal of the judgment upon writ of error sued out subsequently to his purchase.

It is contended that there was no Us pendens at the time Harle bought from Jones, and that therefore the former should be protected from the effect ordinarily following the reversal of a judgment.

The office which Us pendens performs in regard to purchasers is simply to give notice of such right as is in litigation; and that no party to a pending suit may be deprived of the just results of litigation, every one who buys from a party pending a suit is held to take subject to the judgment to be rendered in the cause. When, in cases like this, notice is unimportant, the question of lis pendens or not is equally so.

It is not contended that the right of McCandless was based on the judgment in case 941, but upon a prior purchase, which, it is claimed, gave him title. The judgment gave him no other or greater title than he had when he brought that suit. It is, however, contended that the judgment in that case was evidence of his title on which a purchaser might rely in purchasing from him or from his vendee.

This position is suicidal when we consider the effect of the existence or non-existence of Us pendens

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Bluebook (online)
60 Tex. 555, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harle-v-langdons-heirs-tex-1883.