Oakwood State Bank of Oakwood v. Durham

21 S.W.2d 586
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 24, 1929
DocketNo. 836.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 21 S.W.2d 586 (Oakwood State Bank of Oakwood v. Durham) 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
Oakwood State Bank of Oakwood v. Durham, 21 S.W.2d 586 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

This suit was filed by appellant against appellees as the heirs at law of Belton Durham, deceased, for the foreclosure of an alleged judgment lien upon certain lands in Freestone county, Tex. Appellant alleged in its petition, in substance, that” about April 7, 1914, it recovered a judgment in the county court of Leon county against Belton Durham and others, jointly and severally, for $386; that execution had been duly issued on said judgment to both Leon and Freestone counties and returned nulla bona; that said judgment had been duly abstracted and recorded in Freestone county, Tex.; that no part of said judgment had ever been paid, and that said judgment' was, and is still, a valid and subsisting lien upon all property, lands, and tenements belonging to the estate of Belton Durham, deceased, and who was at the time of the institution of this suit, deceased ; that, at the time of the death of Bel-ton Durham, he was possessed of a tract of land in Freestone county, Tex., consisting of about 106½ acres, and that appellant’s judgment lien attached to and became fixed against said land prior to the death of said Belton Durham; that appellees are all and the only heirs at law of the said Belton Durham, deceased, and as such acquired by inheritance all the property of which said decedent died seized and possessed, subject, however, to appellant’s judgment lien and the debt secured thereby. Appellant also sued' T. S. Watson, J. B. Daniels, and O. M. Wroe, alleging that they were claiming some interest in said land under a purported mineral deed executed by some of the heirs of said Belton Durham, deceased. As against said heirs, appellant prayed judgment for its debt, and, as against all defendants, for foreclosure of its judgment lien against the tract of land described.

The heirs of Beltón Durham answered by general demurrer, special exception, general denial; that said land was the homestead of Belton Durham; that no judgment lien ever attached, etc., and that said judgment was barred by limitation; that the district court had no jurisdiction, and that the county court sitting as a probate court had exclusive jurisdiction to administer the estate of Belton Durham, deceased. W. O. Gorman intervened, pleading a judgment against Belton Durham, deceased, the abstracting of same, and claim-, ing a judgment lien on said land, upon practically the same facts as alleged by appellant. In a supplemental petition, appellant pleaded that there were, no other debts, against the estate of Belton Durham, deceased, except its own, and W. O. Gorman’s, and that there was no administration upon said estate and no necessity for any, etc.

The ease was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment of dismissal entered without prejudice to the rights of plaintiff and intervener to proceed in the probate court to collect their said claims. From said judgment appellant, Oakwood State Bank, has duly appealed and presents the record for review.

The trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law. There is also a statement of facts with the record. Appellant, under its first and second assignments, contends, in effect, that the court erred in holding that appellant’s judgment and the abstracting and filing of said abstract in Freestone county did not create a lien against the 106½ acres of land involved. The court found, and the record shows, and the parties agreed on the trial, that the land involved was acquired during the marriage relation of Belton Durham and his first wife, Manda Durham, and that it was community property of said marriage, and that said land was occupied by Belton Durham and wife, Manda Durham, as their homestead until 1905, when Manda Durham died, leaving eight children as the issue of said marriage; that Belton Durham, together with his said chil-. dren, continued to occupy said land as their homestead until 1916, when Belton Durham married a second wife; that Belton Durham and his second wife occupied said land as their homestead until the death of the second Wife in 1924; and that the said Belton Durham thereafter continued to live upon said, land with a married granddaughter until his death in June, 1927; that the appellees in this suit, except the three claiming a mineral deed, mentioned above, are the heirs of Bel-ton Durham and his first wife, Manda Durham ; that appellant’s judgment against Bel-ton Durham was rendered April 7,1914; that executions were issued to both Leon- county and Freestone county, on April 29, 1914,- to Leon county, and on May 29, 1914, to Freestone county, and both executions were returned “nulla bona,” and that no other execution was shown to have been issued on said judgment; that on March-27, 1919, appellant caused an abstract of said judgment to be prepared and duly filed and recorded in, the abstract records of Freestone county.. Under the uncontroverted facts stated above,; there can be no question but that the prem *588 ises in question constituted the homestead of the said Belton Durham continuously from the death of his- first wife in 1905 to the time of his death in June, 1927. This would have been true even if he had not married the second wife, and had not had any one living on the land with him. Where the marital relation is severed by death, the exemption of the family homestead continues in the survivor for life, or so long as such survivor elects to occupy same. Constitution, art. 16, §§ 50 and 52; L. Blum et al. v. Gaines et al., 57 Tex. 119; Hoefling v. Hoefling, 106 Tex. 350, 167 S. W. 210; Kessler v. Drabb, 52 Tex. 575, 36 Am. Rep. 727; Schneider v. Bray, 59 Tex. 670; Watkins v. Davis, 61 Tex. 416.

As above stated, appellant’s judgment was obtained April 7, 1914. The last execution on same was issued May 29, 1914, and was returned “nulla bona.” On March 27,' 3919, an abstract of said judgment was made and placed of record in Freestone county. Belton Durham was living on the property in question with his family as a homestead at the time the judgment was obtained at the time the executions were issued, and at the time of the filing and recording of the abstract of judgment, and thereafter continued to live on said property, using same as his ■homestead, until his death In June, 1927. Appellant, as we understand, does not controvert these facts, but does contend that, notwithstanding the homestead right in said parties, the recording of said abstract fixed a lien against said property, although such, lien could not be foreclosed while the property continued to be homestead, but could be foreclosed as soen as the property ceased to' be ■homestead, which it did on the death of the second wife in 1924, or, at least, on the death of Belton Durham in June, 1927. There are several reasons why these contentions cannot be sustained. The property being homestead at the time the abstract of judgment was filed March 27, 1919, the filing thereof created no lien whatever. The rule of law seems to he well settled in this state that the levy of an execution or attachment upon a homestead is absolutely void, and the fact that the property afterwards ceases to be exempt does not give life and validity to such levy. It ⅛ also true that any contract lien on the homestead is void, unless within one of the constitutional exceptions, and a subsequent abandonment of the homestead will not give validity to such a contract. But where an abstract of judgment is duly recorded and indexed, while it creates no lien against the homestead of the judgment debtor, yet, if such property ceases to be homestead, while it still belongs to the judgment debtor, the judgment lien will attach as of the date the property ceased to be homestead. Marks v. Bell, 10 Tex. Civ. App.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W.2d 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oakwood-state-bank-of-oakwood-v-durham-texapp-1929.