Harrison v. First Nat. Bank of Lewisville

224 S.W. 269, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 875
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1920
DocketNo. 9252.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 224 S.W. 269 (Harrison v. First Nat. Bank of Lewisville) 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
Harrison v. First Nat. Bank of Lewisville, 224 S.W. 269, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 875 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

On September 25, 1911, J. D. Hagler purchased a house and lot in the city of Ft. Worth for a recited consideration of $25,000, the true consideration being paid in other property. Hagler was a married man, having a wife and family of several children. Immediately after the purchase he moved into the house and made it his resident homestead. The occupation of the property as a homestead continued until April *Page 271 29, 1917, when Hagler and wife abandoned the same as a homestead, and moved to Tom Green county, where they acquired another homestead. On April 28, 1916, about one year prior to such abandonment, Hagler and wife made a fictitious, or simulated, transfer of the property to C. O. Crockett. The fictitious transfer contained a recital of a cash payment by Crockett, the grantee, of $10,000 paid in cash, and a promissory note for $15,000, executed by Crockett and payable to the order of Mrs. Cora B. Hagler, wife of J. D. Hagler. The note recited that it was the separate property of Mrs. Hagler, and contained the further stipulation that it was payable five years after date, with option on the part of the maker to pay one-half of the principal at the end of three years, and that it would draw interest at the rate of 8 per cent. per annum, payable annually. In the deed from Hagler and wife to Crockett, and also in the note, a vendor's lien was retained to secure the payment of the note, which was further secured by a deed of trust on the property executed by Crockett to James Harrison, trustee for Mrs. Hagler, and the legal holder of the note. The deed of trust contained the usual provisions for the sale of the property by the trustee for the purpose of paying the debt secured upon default of the maker in the payment of it according to its terms. The note bore the same date as the deed. On the same day it was executed, Hagler and wife sold and conveyed the note, together with the lien securing same, to Mrs. Sallie H. Culberson. The consideration recited in the transfer of the note and lien was $15,000, paid by Mrs. Culberson to Mrs. Hagler, and that amount was in fact paid in cash, the payment being made by James Harrison, acting as agent and attorney for Mrs. Culberson, who was his sister, and upon such payment the note was delivered to Mr. Harrison for Mrs. Culberson. The deed from Hagler and wife to Crockett and the transfer of the note and lien were all delivered and filed for record in the deed records of Tarrant county on April 28, 1916. On the same day, Crockett reconveyed the property in question to Mrs. Cora B. Hagler as her separate property; the consideration recited in the deed being $500 cash, which was not in fact paid, and the assumption by Mrs. Hagler of the $15,000 note above mentioned. This deed of reconveyance was never filed for record until July 13, 1917. Harrison continued to act as agent for Mrs. Culberson, and neither he nor Mrs. Culberson ever learned of the reconveyance of the property by Crockett to Mrs. Hagler until about April 27, 1917, when Harrison called upon Crockett for payment of the first interest installment, and was then informed, for the first time, of such conveyance. On July 6, 1917, more than two months after Hagler and wife had abandoned the property as a homestead and had moved to Tom Green county, they executed a conveyance of the property to James Harrison, in consideration of the assumption by Harrison of the $15,000 note, then outstanding against the property, mentioned above, which was then owned and held by Mrs. Culberson. The deed to Harrison was in the form of a general warranty deed, and was immediately filed for record in the deed records of Tarrant county, which was about seven days before the record of the deed of reconveyance from Crockett to Mrs. Hagler. After the conveyance to Harrison, he paid off and discharged the note for $15,000, then held by Mrs. Culberson.

James Harrison, claiming title to the property under the deed of conveyance last mentioned, instituted this suit in the form of trespass to try title against the First National Bank of Lewisville, Tex., Durwood McDonald, S. M. Conger, the Texas Bitulithic Company, and two other defendants, G. W. Garrett and P. S. Gray, who filed disclaimers of title and upon such disclaimers judgment was rendered against them. The First National Bank of Lewisville and the Texas Bitulithic Company had each recovered a judgment against Hagler, and abstracts of both of said judgments had been duly filed, recorded, and indexed in the records of deeds of Tarrant county after Hagler and wife had moved into and designated the property in controversy as their homestead, and while they were using it as such, and long prior to the simulated sale of the property by them to Crockett.

While the plaintiff's petition was in the form of trespass to try title, the real purpose of the suit was to clear the title to the property of those two apparent judgment liens. The judgment in favor of the First National Bank of Lewisville against Hagler was also against McDonald and Conger as sureties, and in order to preclude any claim of interest in the property by those sureties they were made codefendants with the bank. The contention made by plaintiff was that both the apparent judgment liens of the two defendants were null and void, because the property was the homestead of Hagler and wife at the time the abstracts of judgment were filed for record. In their answer, those two judgment holders, by proper pleadings, presented the claim that at the time Hagler moved into and designated the property as his homestead the lot upon which the house was built exceeded in value the constitutional limitation of $5,000, exclusive of improvements, and that such lot, to the extent of such excess in value, was subject to the judgment liens. Those defendants further alleged the abandonment of the property by Hagler, and presented the claim that their respective liens attached to the whole of the property after such abandonment by *Page 272 reason of the further fact that the deed from Hagler and wife to Crockett and the execution of the $15,000 note by Crockett in favor of Mrs. Hagler was a fictitious transaction, intended as a mortgage upon the homestead, and that James Harrison, as the agent of Mrs. Culberson at the time he acquired the note, knew of the fictitious character of the transaction, or that he had notice of facts sufficient to put a person of reasonable prudence on notice that such was the character of the transaction, and therefore the $15,000 lien was null and void.

Plaintiff, in addition to a general denial of the facts so alleged by those two defendants, further pleaded that the Texas Bitulithic Company was estopped to claim any lien upon the property, by reason of the fact that the debt owed by Hagler to it, which ripened into the judgment, was for paving the street in front of the property in controversy, and in which suit the Texas Bitulithic Company sought a personal judgment against Hagler, and also a lien upon the property, which it sought to foreclose, under and by virtue of an ordinance of the city of Ft. Worth, which imposed upon Hagler a debt for such paving, and also created a lien upon the property in controversy, if the same was not Hagler's homestead; that in defense to that action Hagler interposed the plea of exemption of the property from said lien by reason of the fact that it was the homestead of himself and family; that upon the trial of that suit a personal judgment was rendered in favor of the Texas Bitulithic Company against Hagler for the paving debt, but denying a foreclosure of the alleged paving lien by reason of the defense interposed that the same was a homestead and exempt from the alleged lien; that said judgment became a final judgment, and was never appealed from or set aside, but is still in force and effect.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 269, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-first-nat-bank-of-lewisville-texapp-1920.