Hollon v. Hale

51 S.W. 900, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 194, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 315
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 51 S.W. 900 (Hollon v. Hale) 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
Hollon v. Hale, 51 S.W. 900, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 194, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 315 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

BOOKHOUT, Associate Justice.

This was a motion filed by defendant in error as plaintiff against plaintiff in error as defendant, to set aside and cancel the satisfaction theretofore entered on a certain execution issued on a judgment of said court in favor of said Hale against said Eollon, on the ground that plaintiff got no title to the property she *195 bought in satisfaction thereof. Defendant resisted the motion on the ground that the rule of caveat emptor precluded the relief sought in such cases. On the hearing of said motion by trial without a jury, the court rendered judgment setting aside and canceling such satisfaction, and reviving the judgment and awarding execution thereon the same as if no such satisfaction had ever been entered. To said judgment and the findings of law and fact filed, Hollon duly excepted, gave notice of appeal, and brings up his case in writ of error.

The material facts, which are shown in the findings, are as follows:

“In No..5752, of Hattie S. Hale v. D. P. Hollon, the plaintiff, Hattie S. Hale, owned and held a judgment of the District Court of Lamar County, Texas, against the defendant, D. P. Hollon, which was the enforcement of a vendor’s lien on certain real estate in Paris, Texas (Lamar County), dated in April, 1894, for near $2500, and the lien was enforced and the real estate sold thereunder, and there was a balance: left unpaid on her judgment of about $1300. Afterwards, and in June;, 1894, among others, an abstract of said judgment with balance due thereon, was duly and legally filed, recorded, and indexed as provided by law, in McLennan County, Texas; on the 15th day of October, 1894, an execution was duly issued by the clerk of said court on said judgments for a balance due on each, and levied on an undivided interest of defendant in certain real estate in McLennan County, as the property of D. F. Hollon, which was duly sold by the sheriff of McLennan County on the-first Tuesday in December, 1894, at Waco, after advertising, etc., as the law requires, and at said sale V. W. Hale, who was the agent and attorney of Mrs. Hattie S. Hale and the other plaintiffs in execution, bought said property, in trust for them, but had the deed made by the sheriff made to him for convenience, but held it in trust for them, and the amount of her, Hattie S. Hale’s, bid was about $1300, which, after paying the costs in cash, was credited on the execution, and it returned ‘satisfied.’ At said sheriff’s sale at Waco one W. B. Hollon, brother of D. P. Hollon, gave notice that the property about to be sold was not the property of the latter but was the property of him, the said W. B. Hollon, and the agent of plaintiffs in all the several executions was present when said notice was given, he having purchased it from D. P. Hollon before that time.
“The abstracts of said judgments were filed, recorded, and regularly indexed in June, 1894, and prior to any transfer from D. P. Hollon to W. B. Hollon of the property levied on. At the time the abstracts were filed the property (real estate) afterwards levied on and afterwards sold by the sheriff, was the property of one S. E. Hollon, who was a sister of D. P. and W. B. Hollon, and she was a iron compos mentis, and had been from infancy, and she was then aged and infirm,- and at her death D. P. Hollon would by inheritance be entitled to one-third of her property. Some time in October, 1894, she died intestate, after which the execution of Mrs. Hattie S. Hale (who was the widow of Y. W. Hale’s deceased brother) was issued and levied on the property, together with other executions, controlled by Y. W. Hale, the levy being made on a *196 one-third, interest therein, as the property of D. P. Hollon, and the sale made, and deed made to V. W. Hale, in his own name, but as matter of fact he purchased in trust for Mrs. Hattie S. Hale and others for whom he purchased at the same time.
“Subsequent to the sale and sheriff’s deed to Y. W. Hale, he, the said V. W. Hale, purchased the interest of Mrs. Hattie S. Hale and all others under whose executions the land was sold (except Elizabeth Carpenter’s interest) and paid their debts, some of them in full, and he paid J. J. Miller, who also held a judgment against D. P. Hollon, under which the property was sold, a less amount than the whole judgment, by way of compromise agreement between them, by which purchase and pajment said V. W. Hale became the owner of whatever interest D. P. Hollon had in said property at the time the executions were levied, if any, and of the judgments against Hollon under which the sale was made, and he, by agreement as well as by subrogation, had and has all the rights of the several plaintiffs in execution. Subsequent to the sheriff’s sale and deed to V. W. Hale in trust, he brought suit in the District Court of McLennan County, Texas, against both D. P. Hollon and W. R. Hollon to cancel a deed made by D. P. Hollon to W. R. Hollon for all the interest the former had in and to the estate of his non compos mentis sister, S. E. Hollon, which was dated in June, 1894, and after all the abstracts of Hattie S. Hale, Elizabeth Carpenter (the said Elizabeth Carpenter having judgment against D. P. Hollon for about $1300), J. J. Miller, and Mrs. A. L. Omiby had been hied and property recorded and indexed, and V. W. Hale bought D. P. Hollon’s interest under all the executions in trust for plaintiffs therein. S. E. Hollon died in October, 1894.”

The sole question raised by this appeal is, can the plaintiff in judgment, who purchases the property of the defendant at execution sale and credits the bid upon the writ, have such satisfaction of the judgment set aside upon its being ascertained that the purchaser got no title ?

The decisions of this State as well as those of other jurisdictions are difficult to reconcile in their holdings upon this question. The question was incidentally before the Supreme Court in the case of Harle v. Langdon’s Heirs, 60 Texas, 560, and it was there intimated that in such a case the rule of caveat ernptor applies and that the relief will not be granted. On the other hand, it is held that a levy upon land in this State is not a satisfaction of the judgment. Cavanaugh v. Peterson, 47 Texas, 198. Again it is held that if the title of the land was not affected by the sale, the consequence is that the judgment debtor is the owner of his estate as before, and the judgment remains in force unaffected by anything done under the execution. Townsend v. Smith, 20 Texas, 465.

The case of Stone v. Darnell, 25 Texas Supplement. 435, is more nearly in point than any case we have found in the reports of this State. In that case Stone’s land was sold under valid process and purchased by Darnell. Stone brought suit for the land on the ground that it was his homestead and not subject to levy and sale. He recovered. Stone v. Darnell, 20 Texas, 11. Darnell then brought suit against Stone for the *197 recovery of the purchase money paid by him, claiming that Stone got the benefit of the satisfaction of the judgment against him. It was held that he could recover. In that case the court uses the following language: “When the defendant recovered back the land by the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, the right of the plaintiff to have the money he had paid, and which had been applied in satisfaction of the execution, was perfect.” 25 Texas Sup., 435.

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Bluebook (online)
51 S.W. 900, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 194, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hollon-v-hale-texapp-1899.