Montgomery v. Coates

314 S.W.2d 671, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 2095
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1958
DocketNo. 6772
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 314 S.W.2d 671 (Montgomery v. Coates) 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
Montgomery v. Coates, 314 S.W.2d 671, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 2095 (Tex. Ct. App. 1958).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

Plaintiff, Ansil Coates, filed this suit on September 14, 1955, seeking a declaratory judgment to establish his alleged prior lien upon two tracts of land composing approximately five acres located in Potter County, Texas, by reason of a final judgment he obtained in the District Court of Dawson County, Texas, on December 16, 1950, as against Richard Walker and wife, Sadie Walker, for a debt evidenced by a vendor’s lien note in the sum of $2,267.16, together with interest thereon, and the foreclosure of his vendor’s lien and deed of trust lien executed to secure the debt by Richard Walker and wife, Sadie Walker, as against the said five acre tract of land then owned by the Walkers. In this suit said plaintiff named as party defendants Richard Walker and wife, Sadie Walker, who owned the said land at the time the liens were given to Coates and when Coates obtained his judgment in Dawson County, Texas; Curtis G. Montgomery and wife, Vivian F. Montgomery, who claimed ownership of the said land at the time this suit was filed; and J. Clyde King and Smith and Sons, Inc., each of whom plaintiff alleged claimed some type of lien against the said land but he further alleged that his lien was prior and superior to that of any other party.

Defendants, Richard Walker and wife, Sadie Walker, although cited, failed to [673]*673answer or appear. Defendants Curtis G. Montgomery and wife, Vivian F. Montgomery, answered by joining issues with plaintiff, claiming ownership of the said land by reason of a conveyance to them in good faith and for a valuable consideration by a warranty deed executed by the Walkers on January 6, 1951, as well as by the three and four-year statutes of limitation, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. arts. 5507, 5529, and by a cross action they sought to have judgment rendered removing the cloud cast upon their title to the said land. Defendant J. Clyde King answered by joining issues with all parties who asserted claims against the land in question and sought judgment by a cross action for his claim and a foreclosure of a judgment lien against the land in question as evidenced by a judgment he obtained in the District Court of Potter County, Texas, on June 3, 1950, as against Richard Walker and wife, Sadie Walker, for the sum of $781.89, together with interest thereon, and had the said judgment properly and duly recorded in Potter County, Texas. Defendant, Smith and Sons, Inc., answered by joining issues with all parties who asserted claims against the land in question and by way of a cross action sought judgment for the foreclosure of a judgment lien supported by an alleged materialman’s lien against the land in question as evidenced by a judgment Smith and Sons, Inc., obtained in the District Court of Potter County, Texas on September 8, 1950, as against Richard Walker and wife, Sadie Walker, for the sum of $1,298.76, together with interest thereon, and had the said judgment properly and duly recorded in Potter County, Texas. This latter named defendant further alleged in effect that the land in question was fraudulently conveyed by Walkers to Montgomerys for the purpose of defeating the claims of Walkers’ creditors and that no consideration for the land was paid the grantors by the grantees, for all of which reasons judgment was sought to set aside the said deed and declare it void.

Thereafter on March 13, 1957, the Mont-gomerys filed a motion for a summary judgment with a supporting affidavit attached thereto claiming in effect that they bought the said land in good faith and paid a valuable consideration therefor and attempting thereby to show their claims were superior to the claims of Ansil Coates, J. Clyde King and Smith and Sons, Inc., and further attached to the said motion the certificates of the trial court clerks showing the dates the respective judgments were obtained by the previously named parties as against the Walkers. On June 4, 1957, defendant Smith and Sons, Inc., filed a verified reply to the motion of the Montgomerys for summary judgment, in which reply affiant set out the alleged superior claims of Smith and Sons, Inc., and likewise in effect set out again the allegations of fraud and lack of consideration in the execution of the deed by the Walkers attempting to convey the land in question to the Montgomerys and further alleged that the testimony •■•given by defendant, Curtis G. Montgomery, in his deposition taken in this case on November 9, 1956, and filed with the record, reveals the fraudulent acts of the parties and lack of consideration in the transaction. The record does not disclose any action taken by the trial court upon the motion of the Montgomerys for a summary judgment or the reply thereto. Neither does the record reveal whether or not such a motion was ever called to the attention of the trial court.

It was stipulated by all the parties in attendance at the trial that Sadie Walker was the common source of title since she alone had actually owned the land in question but she was joined by her husband, Richard Walker, in all of their transactions.

On September 27, 1957, the case was tried bn its merits to the court without a jury and after hearing and considering the evidence, judgment was thereafter rendered on November 11, 1957, finding in effect that Richard Walker and wife, Sadie [674]*674Walker, had been legally cited but failed to answer or appear and wholly defaulted, but the remaining named parties appeared and announced ready for trial; that the deed executed on January 6, 1951, by Richard Walker and wife, Sadie Walker, purporting to convey the five acre tract of land in question to the Montgomerys was without consideration and was fraudulently executed, particularly as against the claims asserted by the parties in this suit, for which reason the said deed was by decree of the trial court set aside, canceled and held for naught and it was further decreed that Curtis G. Montgomery and wife, Vivian F. Montgomery, take nothing by reason of their cross action or other claims. Judgment was further rendered for plaintiff, Ansil Coates, as the first lien holder upon his total claim in the sum of $3,196.64 secured by a vendor’s lien note and as beneficiary under a deed of trust executed on May 11, 1950, by the Walkers on the five acre tract of land in question, which claim so secured had been reduced to judgment on December 16, 1950, in the trial court of Dawson County, Texas; then judgment was rendered for J. Clyde King as the second lien holder as against the said land for his claim in the total sum of $1,125.80, which claim had been reduced to judgment on June 3, 1950, in the district court of Potter County, Texas; then judgment was rendered for Smith and Sons, Inc., as the third lien holder as against the said land for its claim in the total sum of $2,034.72, which claim had been reduced to judgment on September 8, 1950, in the district court of Potter County, Texas; and a foreclosure sale of the said land was ordered with the proceeds therefrom to be applied in so far as they extended in liquidating the said claims in the order designated in the judgment. Curtis G. Montgomery and wife, Vivian F. Montgomery, excepted to the trial court’s judgment and gave notice of appeal and perfected their appeal by timely filing an appeal bond. Smith and Sons, Inc., likewise excepted to the trial court’s judgment and gave notice of appeal but failed to perfect an appeal by failure to file any appeal bond.

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Bluebook (online)
314 S.W.2d 671, 1958 Tex. App. LEXIS 2095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-v-coates-texapp-1958.