McOutcheon Church v. Smith

194 S.W. 831, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 422
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 1917
DocketNo. 7668.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 831 (McOutcheon Church v. Smith) 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
McOutcheon Church v. Smith, 194 S.W. 831, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 422 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

Appellants sued appellee to cancel the vendor’s contract lien, retained in a conveyance by appellee to Mary Todd, securing the payment of a series of promissory notes executed in part payment of 737½ acres of land in Rains county, of which appellants at the time were the owners in fee simple, on the ground that the notes were barred by the statutory period of limitation, as was also his right to recover the superior title to the land, Ibut all of which constituted a cloud upon appellants’ title. All issues presented in appellee’s brief were amply pleaded below, because of which it will not be necessary to detail same here.

There was trial without jury, whereat judgment was rendered for appellee ascertaining the amount of appellee’s debt, but rendering no personal judgment therefor against Mrs. Todd, establishing his lien on the land against all parties, and directing the issuance of proper process for its sale in satisfaction of the debt. 'From such judgment this appeal is taken.

The facts found by the court and those apparent of record necessary to be stated in considering the issues presented are these: On December 27, 1905, appellee Ben O. Smith, in consideration of $3,687.50, conveyed to Mrs. Mary Todd 737½, acres of land in Rains county. Of the consideration $487.50 was cash, the balance being represented by five promissory notes, all dated December 27, 1905, one for $500, due one year from date, and four each for $675, due respectively in two, three, four, and five years from date. The conveyance and each note retained the vendor’s lien upon the land to secure payment of the unpaid purchase price. Each of said notes provided that in the event same were placed with attorneys or sued upon 10 per cent, of the amount of the principal and interest should be added as attorney’s fees. On July 16, 1915, Mrs. Mary Todd conveyed to appellants McCutcheon & Ohureh an undivided one-seventh interest and to Wm. F. Todd an undivided six-sevenths interest in said land. On August 5, 1915, appellants MeOutcheon & Ohureh and Wm. F. Todd sued appellee for the relief stated. Appellee on October 15, 1915, answered, and by cross-action interpleaded his vendee, Mrs. Mary Todd, praying as against all parties for the recovery of the land and cancellation of the deed to Mary Todd, and in the alternative for judgment against Mary Todd on his notes, with foreclosure of his lien for the full amount thereof against Mary Todd and Mc-Outcheon & Ohureh.

The issues in this case depend upon the construction to be placed upon certain amendments to the statutes of limitations enacted *833 by the Legislature in the year 1913, and the application thereof to the facts controlling the transactions between the parties in this suit. In such connection it was contended by appellants at trial and is vigorously maintained in this court that under said amendment and at a time prior to that when ap-pellee filed his answer and cross-bill in the court below seeking affirmative relief his right to recover the land on the ground that he retained the superior title thereto in his deed to Mrs. Todd, as well as his right to foreclose the lien retained to secure payment of the notes, was barred by the respective statutes of limitation governing both remedies, by reason of which appellants’ right to defeat appellee’s claim became a vested one. In view of such contention and the further contention that the effect of the amendments was retroactive, and hence unconstitutional, it will be of assistance to state the limitations of the legislative authority in changing, modifying, substituting, and destroying the remedy by which rights may be enforced.

[1, 2] It is settled law in this state, arising upon a construction of section 16 of article 1 of our Constitution, that no citizen’s rights of any character can be affected by retroactive laws, and that as a consequence of that general rule the Legislature may not, in prescribing the period of time in which rights must be enforced in courts or otherwise, 'destroy a right which one person is entitled to enforce against another which exists in consequence of given facts or the right which one person has to resist the enforcement of a claim urged by another in consequence of given facts. Mellinger v. City of Houston, 68 Tex. 37, 3 S. W. 249. Applied to the present case, the rule means, simply stated, that if at any time prior to the filing of appellee’s cross-action, such a state of facts existed that upon suit filed at that time they would have been a bar to appellee’s cause of action, then any subsequent act of the Legislature would have been ineffective to restore the lost remedy, and appellee could not maintain a suit based upon such act, because retroactive.

[3, 4] In consonance with the rule stated, however, and sound in principle and reason, are two other rules. One is that that authority to'legislate on any subject, not expressly or by necessary implication, denied by the Constitution is lodged with the Legislature. The other is that the Legislature may, because that authority is not denied it, change, modify, abolish, and establish new remedies for existing rights. De Cordova v. Galveston, 4 Tex. 470; Parker v. Buckner, 67 Tex. 20, 2 S. W. 746; Fristoe v. Blum, 92 Tex. 76, 45 S. W. 998. The reason that the legislative power may so proceed, as said in Mellinger v. Houston, supra, is because the citizen has no vested right in the procedure by which his rights may be enforced, save that his remedy may not be altogether taken away or so unreasonably incumbered as to render it useless or impracticable or to give an action where none existed.

[5] In the light of the rule stated we will ■now state the substance of the statute of limitations existing at the time of the amendments, appellee’s remedies thereunder, the amendments and the effect of such amendments on appellee’s remedies under the original act, and his rights under the amendments. Prior to the amendments the statutes declared that when the vendor’s lien was retained in deeds to secure the purchase price the vendor could recover the superior title at any time before the expiration of ten years after maturity of the debt. Article 5694, R. S. 1911. Such liens and debt, however, could be extended, and when extended as directed the vendor had ten years from the maturity of the debt as extended in which to sue to recover the land under the superior title. Article 5695, R. S. 1911. Prior to the amendments all actions for debt evidenced by or founded upon any contract in writing were required to be prosecuted within four years after such cause accrued. 'Article 5688, R. S. 1911. By act effective July 12, 1913, article 5694, above, was amended by providing that the right to recover any real estate by virtue of the superior title retained in the conveyance or in any vendor’s lien notes theretofore or thereafter made should be barred four years after the maturity of the debt, unless extended, provided, if several obligations were so secured, such right might be enforced at any time within four years after the last maturing obligation had matured, as to all notes not then four years overdue.

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Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 831, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 422, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcoutcheon-church-v-smith-texapp-1917.