Heirs of John Rogers v. Watson

17 S.W. 29, 81 Tex. 400, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1376
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1891
DocketNo. 7127.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 17 S.W. 29 (Heirs of John Rogers v. Watson) 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
Heirs of John Rogers v. Watson, 17 S.W. 29, 81 Tex. 400, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1376 (Tex. 1891).

Opinion

GAINES, Associate Justice.—

The appellees brought this suit to remove clouds from the title and to be quieted in their possession of certain lands described in their petition. The following extract from the brief of appellants; who were defendants in the court below, contains in the main an accurate statement of the grounds of action alleged in the petition:

“On June 23,1887, A. E. Watson, for himself and as next friend to Irene Watson, Carrie Watson, and Armstead Watson, minors, and W. H. Jones, filed this suit in the District Court of Falls County, Texas, against Mrs. Ella E. Rogers and her minor children, John Rogers, Maud Rogers, and Maggie Rogers, heirs of John Rogers, deceased, to remove clouds from title to 1600 acres of land in Falls County. Plaintiffs in their petition claimed that on October 20, 1879, during the marriage of defendant Ella E. Rogers and John Rogers, one James S. Jones sold and conveyed said lands' jointly and in common to R.- T. Smith, John A. Robinson, and John Rogers for the sum of $43,588, for the entire purchase of which the said Smith, Robinson, and Rogers executed their ten joint and several promissory notes, the first due on January 1,1881, and the others due on the 1st day of January of each year thereafter up to January 1, 1891, when the last note was due, each of said notes to bear interest at the rate of 10 per cent per annum from maturity, and each except the first, which fell due on January 1,1881, providing that in case of a failure to pay the same at maturity, that then the entire debt was to become due, and each and all secured by a vendor’s lien on said lands; and in order to further secure the payment of said notes and each of them, that the said Smith, Robinson, and Rogers, as a part of the same transaction, made, executed, and delivered to Thomas E. Battle and Austin Robinson, as' trustees, a deed of trust on said lands, together with other property, which said deed of trust provided that should default be made in the payment of any one of said notes said trustees, upon the request of the holder of said note, should sell said property and make a proper conveyance thereof to the purchaser and appropriate the proceeds of said sale to the payment of said note; that said Jones in the year 1881 died testate, and by his last will bequeathed said notes to plaintiff, which said will was duly probated; that on the-day of September, 1880, the said John Rogers died intestate, leaving the defendant Ella E. Rogers (his widow) and the *402 other defendants, (his minor children) his only heirs, and that no administration was ever had upon his estate; that on the-day of -, 1881, the said Smith, Robinson, and the defendants, as heirs of John Rogers, deceased, abandoned said contract and failed and refused to comply with the same or pay said notes or any part thereof, and surrendered the possession of said lands to the legatees of said Jones, and that plaintiffs have ever since and are now holding possession thereof; that on the 15th day of December, 1884, after the death of said Rogers, with consent and by agreement with the defendants and said Smith and Robinson, said trustees sold said lands and plaintiffs became the pur-, chasers at said sale, and that the said trustees made them a proper conveyance thereto. Plaintiffs claim that said sale by said trustees is perfectly valid as to said Smith and Robinson, and they make no claim to said land, but that these defendants, holding that said trustees’ sale was invalid as to said Rogers, assert claim to said land and threaten to sue them therefor and thus cast a cloud on their title and render said lands less valuable and marketable, and they pray to recover said lands, and that all pretended title be divested out of defendants and vested in them; and that their title be quieted and .perfected and all clouds and doubts on the same be removed.”

The petition also averred that there never had been an administration upon the estate of John Rogers, deceased, and that each of the notes executed was secured by a deed in “trust upon the land of the same date.

The defendants excepted generally and specially to the petition, and their exceptions were overruled. They also filed a general denial and a special plea in the nature of a cross-action claiming title to the land. The special plea admitted the sale of the land and the execution of the deed, the notes for the purchase money, and the deed in trust to secure the latter, in substance as alleged in the plaintiffs’ petition. It also admitted the death of John Rogers and the sale of the land by the trustees under the deed in trust. It did not deny either the date óf his death or the date of the trust sale as alleged; nor did it deny that no administration had ever been had upon Rogers’ estate. It did deny that the defendants assented to the surrender of the land to plaintiffs in the year 1881, but did not deny that Robinson and Smith abandoned the contract and gave up possession as is alleged in the petition. It was, however, alleged in the special answer that the note which fell due January 1, 1881, was paid in part on December 20, 1880, and that afterward the balance was fully paid, but at what particular date is not alleged. The special answer also averred that plaintiffs had taken possession of and converted to their own use certain personal property belonging to Smith, Robinson, and Rogers of the value of $7800; that Rogers, immediately after the sale to himself and Robinson and Smith, had expended $2000 of his own individual funds in improvements *403 which were placed upon the land. The answer also alleged that the rent of the lands was reasonably worth $5000 per annum.

A demurrer to defendants’ special answer was sustained by the court, and all other pleas having been withdrawn judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs.

The assignments of error question the correctness of the court’s rul-. ings in overruling the demurrer to the petition and in sustaining that to the special answer. We are of the opinion that if the trustees in the deed in trust executed by the vendees to secure the payment of the purchase money of the land had the power to sell the land, notwithstanding the death of Rogers, the'allegations in the petition show title in the plaintiff's to the land in controversy, and the court did not err in overruling the defendants’ demurrer thereto. At an early day it was held in the case of Robertson v. Paul, 16 Texas, 472, that a sale made in pursuance of a power given in mortgage after the death of the mortgagor was void, although the mortgage was given to secure the payment of the purchase money of the mortgaged premises. That decision has been followed in subsequent cases in the court and may now be regarded as settled law. McLane v. Paschal, 47 Texas, 365; Black v. Rockmore, 50 Texas, 94; Abney v. Pope, 52 Texas, 288. In Black v. Rockmore, at the time of the sale under the power the widow of the deceased mortgagor had filed a bond and inventory under the statute and was administering the community estate as survivor. In Robertson v. Paul, and in the other cases cited, there were regular administrations pending at the time of the sale. The sales were not held void upon the ground that the death of the mortgagors had revoked the power, because it was recognized that the powers were coupled with an interest, and that they remained in force after the death of the respective constituents.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.W. 29, 81 Tex. 400, 1891 Tex. LEXIS 1376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heirs-of-john-rogers-v-watson-tex-1891.