Ludtke v. Bankers' Trust Co.

251 S.W. 600
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 21, 1922
DocketNo. 8241.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 251 S.W. 600 (Ludtke v. Bankers' Trust Co.) 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
Ludtke v. Bankers' Trust Co., 251 S.W. 600 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

This suit is an action of trespass to try title, and when tried in the court below the defendant in error, who will be hereinafter called appellee, was plaintiff, and the plaintiff in error W. T. Ludtke, hereinafter called appellant, was the sole defendant.

The land in controversy is a part of lot No. 8 in the subdivision made by D. Gregg of the Harris and Wilson two-league grant in Harris county. The petition is in the usual form of an action of trespass to try title. The defendant answered by general and special exceptions, general denial, and plea of not guilty, and by special pleas of limitation of 3, 5, and 10 years, and also by cross-action set up title to the land, and asked for judgment for title and possession thereof. The trial in the court below without a jury resulted in a judment in favor of appellee.

It is unnecessary for the purposes of this opinion to state in detail the chains of title under which the parties claim. It is sufficient to say that appellee has title to the land from the sovereignty of the soil, unless a sheriff's sale and deed made in 1841 passed the title of Robert Wilson, who is the common source of the title of both appellant and appellee, to the purchaser at such sale. The facts bearing upon this issue are as follows:

On June 10, 1839, Andrew Briscoe obtained a judgment in the district court of Harris county against Joseph Evans for $600 debt, with 5 per cent. interest from December 28, 1838, and costs. On this judgment an execution was issued on June 29, 1839, and levied by the sheriff of Harris county on part of lot 10, block 20, city of Houston, which was sold on the 5th day of November, 1839, to Robert Wilson, for $400, on 12 months' credit. He gave bond, as the law then required, for the amount bid, with David Harris and Henry R. Allen as sureties, and, when said bond matured, it was not paid, and an execution was issued thereon from the district's clerk's office of Harris county on November 7, 1840, which was levied on the property involved in this suit (with other land), and sale thereof was made by said sheriff on the first Tuesday in January, 1841, to D. W. Clinton Harris, and a deed therefor executed to him by the sheriff. This deed, which is in proper form, and conveys all of Robert Wilson's interest in the land in controversy, contains the following recitals:

"That whereas, at the spring term of the district court, held at the city of Houston, on the fifth Monday after the fourth Monday of March, 1839, in and for the county of Harris, one Andrew Briscoe obtained a judgment against Joseph Evans in a certain suit then and there pending, for the sum of $600.00, at 5 per cent. per annum from the 28th day of December, 1838, until paid, as well as all costs of court, upon which judgment an execution was issued from the clerk's office of the district court on the 29th day of June, 1839, and was by the sheriff levied upon 16 feet of ground on Franklin street, and running back 50 feet, with a house thereon erected, of lot No. 10, in block No. 20, in the city of Houston; and

"Whereas, by virtue of the execution aforesaid, said property was by the return of the sheriff sold to Robert Wilson on the first day of November, 1839, at public outcry, etc. * * *"

The deed then goes on to recite that the sale was made on 12 months' credit; that Wilson gave bond, and the bond was forfeited; that execution issued thereon, which was levied upon the Wilson half interest in the Harris Wilson survey, and the land sold to D. W. C. Harris.

The papers in the case of Briscoe v. Evans could not be found, and the only record of the levy and sale of the lot under the execution issued in said cause is that found on the execution docket of the clerk of the district court of Harris county, and in the recitals of the deed before set out.

The following entries appear upon the execution docket:

"55. Andrew Briscoe v. Joseph Evans, Judgment, 10 June, 1839. Debt $600.00. Clerk, *Page 602 Holman, $13.38. County tax, $3.00. Sheriff, Moore, $2.50. Attorney's tax, $10.00. Issued June 29, 1839. Directed to Sheriff Moore. Delivered to Sheriff Moore. Return: Levied and sold on 12 mos credit, due 13th December, 1840. (Clks. Additional costs, $2.50.)"

"320. Andrew Briscoe v. Robert Wilson, David Harris, Henry R. Allen, fi. fa. Judgment, 10 June, 1839. Debt $600.00. Clerk, Holman, $18.13. Sheriff, Moore, $21.75. Attorney's tax, $10.00. County tax, $3.00. Issued November 7, 1840. Directed to Shff. H. Co. Delivered to Shff. H. Co. Return: Not returned. Retd. May 9, 1841, principal in part satisfied as per receipts on execution, and costs paid. Recpd. on bond June 28, 1842."

The appellant introduced in evidence the original papers in a number of cases in which judgments were rendered at the June term, 1839, of the district court of Harris county. The execution docket for said court shows that executions were issued in each of these cases on June 29, 1839, directed to the same sheriff who received the execution and made the levy and sale in the case of Briscoe v. Evans. In all of these cases a writ of venditioni exponas is found among the papers, and the execution and return thereon show that the execution was levied before it expired, and that venditioni exponas was issued in aid of the execution, and sales were thereafter regularly made under such executions and assistant writ.

The execution docket does not show that a writ of venditioni exponas was issued in but one of these cases, and the sheriff's deeds made to the purchasers at the execution sales do not recite the issuance of such writs. The sheriff's deed to Robert Wilson conveying the lot sold under the execution issued on the Briscoe judgment recites that the sale was made on the 5th day of November, 1839, and it is shown that the first Tuesday in November, 1839, was the 5th day of that month.

At the request of appellants the trial court filed conclusions of fact and law. These findings of fact, in so far as they relate to the issue of the validity of the execution sale under which appellants claim, are as follows:

"(3) The plaintiff has the record title to said tract of land.

"(4) In the trial of the case the defendant W. F. Ludtke claimed the record title to the land sued for through deed purporting to be from Robert Wilson, by sheriff, to D. W. C. Harris dated January 4, 1841, copy of which, in so far as affects the land in controversy, is attached thereto marked Exhibit B. At the time of such conveyance Robert Wilson owned an undivided one-half interest in lots 7, 8, 9, and 10 of the second tier. The judgment in favor of Andrew Briscoe against Joseph Evans, referred to in said deed, was rendered as recited in said deed, and execution was issued thereunder upon the date recited in said deed. All of the papers in said cause, including the writ of execution, have been lost, but there is an entry in the execution docket in the district clerk's office, as follows: [Here follows the entries upon the execution docket before set out]. No evidence was offered as to the issue and levy of said writ of execution, or the sale thereunder, or the delivery to the sheriff of any bond to secure the purchase money bid at said sale, or subsequent execution issued on said bond and the levy thereof and sale thereunder, other than the entries on said execution docket and the recitals in the sheriff's deed above mentioned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 S.W. 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ludtke-v-bankers-trust-co-texapp-1922.