Kennard v. Mabry

14 S.W. 272, 78 Tex. 151, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1357
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1890
DocketNo. 7570
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 14 S.W. 272 (Kennard v. Mabry) 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
Kennard v. Mabry, 14 S.W. 272, 78 Tex. 151, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1357 (Tex. 1890).

Opinion

STAYTON, Chief Justice.

Heard, Allen & Floore held the prom[154]*154issory note of T. M. Westbrook for $7500, on which M. L. Kennard was surety, and to indemnify the latter against loss Westbrook executed to him a mortgage on the land in controversy, as well as on cattle of about the value of $7000.

In June, 1886, to enable Westbrook to negotiate a loan of $4000 from the Texas Loan Agency, Kennard released his mortgage on the land, retaining, however, his mortgage on the cattle.

Westbrook secured the loan and mortgaged the land to secure it, the mortgage being in the form of a trust deed, with power to trustee H. Gr. Damon to sell. Ho question is made as to the proper record of this mortgage before the rendition of the judgment under which Mabry claims.

On October 9, 1886, the note to Heard, Allen & Floore being then in part unpaid, Westbrook again executed to Kennard a deed which on its-face appeared to be an absolute conveyance of the land, it being, however,, intended only as a mortgage to secure Kennard on account of his liability as surety for Westbrook.

That instrument was filed for record in the office of the clerk of the court of the county in which the- land is situated on May 28, 1887, and on the 30th of that month it was recorded in the record of deeds.

On July 6, 1887, Knox Thompson recovered a judgment in the County Court for Johnson County for $880.09 against Westbrook and C. B. Taylor-as principals and the defendant J. C. Mabry as their surety.

An abstract of that judgment was filed, recorded, and indexed on Au-. gust 10, 1887, in the proper office in the county in which the land is situated, but Westbrook appealed from the judgment and it was not affirmed until June 13, 1888.

The mandate of the Court of Appeals having been filed in the County Court on July 4, 1888, on the same day an execution issued on the judgment and that was paid by the defendant Mabry, who a few days after-wards caused another execution to issue to the county in which the land is situated, which was levied on the land, and it advertised to be sold on August 7, 1888, but the sale was prevented by the injunction sued out in this case by Kennard.

On September 17, 1887, Kennard, on learning that the instrument intended as between himself and Westbrook as a mortgage had been recorded in a book used to record' deeds, caused it to be recorded in the book kept for the record of mortgages.

On March 10, 1887, there was still due Heard, Allen & Floore on the-note made by Westbrook and Kennard the sum of $4532.75, at which time, to secure that debt, Westbrook as principal and Kennard as surety executed a new note, which was made payable to Allen alone by agreement between the parties.

That note matured in ten months after its date, and on January 13, 1888, Kennard paid' the sum due on it, and on same day brought an action [155]*155on it against Westbrook, praying judgment for sum due and for foreclosure of the mortgage on the land.

Soon after a judgment was rendered in his favor as prayed for, for $5339.25, and the land was sold under that judgment on the first Tuesday in May, 1888, when Kennard bought it for $4000, which was credited on his judgment against Westbrook.

The interest on the sum borrowed from the loan company by Westbrook was payable semi-annually and fell due on the first days of February and August of each year.

The trust deed provided if any one of the interest coupons should remain unpaid for ten days after its maturity that at the option of the holder the entire principal and interest should become due and the trustee have power to sell to satisfy the entire debt.

Westbrook having failed to pay two of the coupons for interest when due, on December 4, 1888, after having given proper notice, the trustee sold the land and the loan company became the purchaser, bidding therefor the sum of $5000.

Subsequently Kennard bought the land from the loan company, paying-therefor the sum of $5000.

There are 400 acres of the land in controversy, and it is shown to have been worth $20 per acre.

Kennard brought this suit to enjoin the sale under the execution issued under the judgment in favor of Thompson against Westbrook, and it resulted in a judgment dissolving the injunction and awarding to Mabry damages equal to t.he sum due him from.Westbrook. The judgment further declared the existence of the judgment lien and directed the sale of the land to satisfy it.

The court below held that the record of the deed from Westbrook to Kennard in the book used for recording absolute conveyances did not give notice of the real contract between the parties, and that for this reason the record and index of the abstract of the judgment in favor of Thompson against Westbrook gave the superior lien.

There is some conflict in the decisions on this question, but it is probably true that this, in the main, arises from the difference in the statutes on which the decisions are based.

In New York, Pennsylvania, and Louisiana it seems to be held that the record of a deed absolute on its face in books kept for the registry of deeds is not effectual as against subsequent mortgagees or purchasers who-have no other notice than that furnished by such registration; but it is-believed that the decisions in those States rest on the provisions of statutes which require such a construction.

In so far as the question of notice is concerned—and the giving of notice is the main purpose of registration—it seems to us that the record of a paper purporting to be an absolute deed in a book kept for that [156]*156purpose ought to be held to give notice of the adverse right, whatever it may be.

One seeking to acquire title to land, or lien on it to secure a debt, and having a due regard for his own interest, would not content himself with an examination to ascertain whether there was a mortgage on the property. but would further inquire whether the person who proposed to sell or mortgage the land was its owner. This would or ought to induce an examination of the records showing absolute conveyances, as well as those showing mortgages or other liens.

Every person is presumed to know that a deed absolute on its face may have been intended by the parties to it only as a mortgage, and that the courts will so hold it to be, if executed only for the purpose of securing a debt.

So knowing, every person ought to be held to be affected with notice of every right less than absolute ownership the person holding under a deed so recorded has.

If the record shows an absolute conveyance, it gives notice of the fact that the vendor has parted with all interest he had in the land; and such notice ought to be binding on a subsequent purchaser or mortgagee, who must know that, as between the parties, on proof of the fact that it was executed to secure a debt, the courts will hold it to be only a mortgage.

The decisions.which take this view of the question we think the better. Clemons v. Elder, 9 Ia., 274; Haseltine v. Espry, 13 Ore., 306; Wicklin v. Betts County, 50 Am. Rep., 477; Young v. Thompson, 2 Kans., 83; Gullet v. Hilsborn, 4 Mo., 526,; Ruggles v. Williams, 1 Head, 141.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W. 272, 78 Tex. 151, 1890 Tex. LEXIS 1357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennard-v-mabry-tex-1890.