Parker v. G. Y. Coop.

60 Tex. 111, 2 Tex. L. R. 178, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 275
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1883
DocketCase No. 4876
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 60 Tex. 111 (Parker v. G. Y. Coop.) 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
Parker v. G. Y. Coop., 60 Tex. 111, 2 Tex. L. R. 178, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 275 (Tex. 1883).

Opinion

Stayton, Associate Justice.

The fact that the homestead was not designated before the levy of the attachment furnishes no ground for setting the levy aside. The judgment protects the homestead claim and gives the appellants the right to designate it in the manner that the law permits such designation to be made. This furnishes to the appellants full protection in so far as the homestead is concerned.

The record evidences that the land levied upon was acquired by exchange for two other tracts of land, one of which was the separate property of the wife and the other community property.

The deed to the land attached was made to the wife during coverture, and recites that the purchase money was paid by her; but there is nothing in the deed showing that the purchase money was paid by the separate means of the wife, nor that the land was conveyed to her in her own separate right.

It has been settled by a line of decisions in this state, that, as against a purchaser for value from the husband, or through an execution against him, without notice of the right of the wife, she will not be permitted to hold the land upon proof that the same was bought with her separate means, or was a gift to her from some other person, unless there be that in the deed which will put such purchaser upon inquiry as to her separate right in the property, and this even though the deed to the land be made to her during coverture. Cooke v. Bremond, 27 Tex., 459; French v. Strumberg, 52 Tex., 109.

The same rule has been applied in case of a mortgage of land by the husband, which had been deeded to the wife during coverture by a deed reciting that the purchase money was paid by her, which, however, did not recite that the purchase money was the wife’s, separate property (Kirk v. Navigation Company, 49 Tex., 215); and this even though the land was bought with the separate means of the wife.

These cases all proceed upon the theory that the purchaser in good faith may rely upon the real title being where, by the deed, it appears to be, and that he or she who wilfully or negligently per[115]*115mits property to stand in the name of another person, at least as apparent owner, cannot be heard to say that such is not true, to the prejudice of a person who, relying upon the apparent ownership, has bought and paid a valuable consideration for the land.

As has been often said, land purchased during coverture, whether the deed be made to the husband or the wife, is presumed to be community property, if there be nothing in the deed to indicate to the contrary.

This is now certainly the law in this state, and it is now too late to inquire whether or not, from the fact that deeds are not ordinarily made to married women, unless there be an intention thereby to convey to her a separate estate, or unless her separate property is the consideration, it would not have been better to have held that, when deeds were so made, it was the duty of a purchaser to make inquiry as to the real ownership.

It cannot be denied that the enforcement of the rule, in many cases, operates harshly upon the interests of married women, where their separate means have been invested in lands, through deeds not containing recitals held sufficient to put purchasers from husband upon notice of the separate rights of the wife; and it may place the wife in a more unfavorable attitude than her dependent relationship to her husband would justify. Be this as it may, such is the established rule.

The question in this case is: Does an attaching creditor of the community, or one who, through operation of law, has acquired an apparent lien upon land which has been purchased in whole or in part with the separate means of the wife, occupy such position as precludes the wife from proving the facts and thereby having protection to the extent of her interest?

This question, we are of the opinion, must be answered in the negative. There is nothing in the relation of husband and wife which should place her in a more unfavorable position with reference to her right to assert and maintain her right to her separate property than are other persons under the same circumstances.

If a deed to land is made to A., in the absence of something upon its face to indicate that he holds in trust for some other person, by reason of such other person having paid the purchase money, or from some other reason, the law presumes, and persons dealing with A. in reference to such property, may, in the absence of notice to the contrary, rely upon the title being as it appears upon the deed; yet it is well settled if a judgment lien is acquired upon the land through a judgment against A., or through an attachment levied [116]*116upon the land for his debt, that a person who is the real owner of the land, by reason of his money having been paid for the land, may show such facts and defeat the lien or passing of title if the same be done before sale; and this upon the theory that the title of the real owner comes through operation of law which creates a resulting trust in his favor, which is the superior title, and not affected by registration laws, which in many cases give protection, not only to purchasers, but to creditors, also, who have acquired liens.'

The law presumes that land conveyed to either the husband or wife during marriage is community property, nothing to the contrary appearing in the deed by which the conveyance is made; but certainly not more conclusively so than it presumes that land conveyed to A. belongs to him; and in the one case, as in the other, we see no reason why the facts may not be shown and protection given, if justified and called for by the facts.

To the mind of the writer, if there be a difference it should be in favor of the wife, for it is only by construction that property conveyed to a wife is held to be prima facie community property. Between the husband and wife and those taking by descent from either of them, the facts may be shown and the superior title determined thereby, as may be done between other persons, the right of third persons not having attached.

Whatever right Mrs. Parker has results from the fact that one hundred and three acres of the land which was given in exchange for the land attached was her separate property, and this creates a resulting trust in her favor in the land so acquired, in proportion to the value which her land so exchanged sustains to the value of the whole of the land given in exchange.

That resulting trusts are not subject to the registration laws is not an open question in this state (Blankenship v. Douglas, 26 Tex., 227; Grace v. Wade, 45 Tex., 532; Oberthier v. Stroud, 33 Tex., 522; Senter & Co. v. Lambeth, decided at present term), and the rights-of the parties must be determined by an application of the general principles of equity, unaffected, under the facts of this case, by the laws of registration, which by their terms, as against unregistered conveyances, secure not only to purchasers, but also to lien creditors, rights which they would not otherwise have.

The bona fide purchaser, i. e., one who pays value and has no notice of an adverse right, is as much protected in equity as under registration laws; but under registration laws, which protect lien creditors who have no notice of adverse rights at the time their lien attaches, persons may be protected as purchasers who are not bona fide pur[117]

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Bluebook (online)
60 Tex. 111, 2 Tex. L. R. 178, 1883 Tex. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-g-y-coop-tex-1883.