Peters v. Clements

46 Tex. 114
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 46 Tex. 114 (Peters v. Clements) 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
Peters v. Clements, 46 Tex. 114 (Tex. 1876).

Opinion

Moore, Associate Justice.

On the 14th of August, 1860, Thomas M. Peters and Haomi Peters executed to W. F. Connell their deed for eleven hundred and fifty-six acres of land, of which the tract here in controversy is a part, retaining in the deed a lien to secure two notes given for a part of the purchase-money, and payable to Thomas M. Peters or bearer. The execution of the deed was acknowledged by the grantees on the day of its date, before the judge of probate of Laurence county, State of Alabama; but the certificate of the judge is not authenticated by a seal, nor does it show that the officer making it was a judge of a court of record having a seal, nevertheless, the deed, by virtue of this certificate, was, on the 27th of December, 1860, copied by the [121]*121clerk of the County Court of Cass county, on the registry of deeds for said county.

On the 14th day of November, 1863, Connell executed a deed for that part of the land here in controversy to G-. H. Fitzgerald, which deed was duly recorded on the 8th of December following, and Fitzgerald went at once into possession of the land, and commenced to improve it. On the 14th of September, 1864, Fitzgerald sold it to Bufas Day, who also placed his deed on record immediately after its execution, and at once took and - retained possession of the land until the 25th day of November, 1867, when he sold it to appellee Clements.

In the meantime, however, Connell having failed to pay said notes on the 25th of November, 1865, Peters brought suit in the District Court of Cass county against him for the amount due on said notes, and to foreclose the hen retained in the deed to secure their payment; and on the 3d day of February, 1869, judgment was rendered in favor of Peters for the sum of three thousand two hundred and eighty-four dollars, and that the land bought by Connell be sold for its payment. In pursuance with this judgment and the order of sale issued by virtue thereof, said eleven hundred and fifty-six acres of land, of which the tract in controversy is a part, was, on the first Tuesday in December, 1869, exposed to sale by the sheriff, and bid off by the agent and attorney of plaintiff in execution. And at the instance and by the direction of said agent and attorney, the sheriff executed a deed therefor to Naomi Peters, the wife of said Thomas M. Peters. And on the trial of this case in the court below, said attorney testified that he had been instructed by said Thomas M. Peters, previous to the recovery of the judgment, if Connell would surrender the land in payment of the notes, to have the deed made to said Naomi, his wife.

From the line of defense in the court below, and argument urged in this court in support of the judgment, appellee seems to suppose, although he purchased the land while the [122]*122suit against Connell to foreclose the hen was pending, as he claimed, under Fitzgerald, who was not a party to the suit, it was immaterial whether he was chargeable with notice of appellant’s claim to the land or not. In this we fully concur ■with him, if he shows the title he acquired, from Fitzgerald is superior to and should prevail over that of appellant, if it was asserted by Fitzgerald. It is also quite evident that the authentication of the deed from Peters and wife to Connell did not authorize its registration, and the copying of it, therefore, by the clerk in the book for the record of deeds is inoperative, and neither affects Fitzgerald nor any one else with notice of its contents.

We are also of opinion that appellants, by their replication to appellee’s answer, admitted that the consideration for the deed to Fitzgerald had been executed. And it may also be conceded that the consideration expressed in the deed after its performance is just as effectual in support of the plea of innocent purchaser as if the full value of the land had been admitted to have be^n paid in gold coin; as to which, however, as it is unnecessary to the decision of the case, we express no opinion. Still, it is most evident that neither Fitzgerald nor any one in privity with him, without the payment of the purchase-money, can, so long as the lien retained in the deed remains valid and subsisting, and is such a one as a court of equity would lend its aid to enforce, claim to have acquired from or under Connell a valid title to the land. For does the failure of Peters to record the deed in the slightest degree relieve Fitzgerald, or any one purchasing from him, from constructive notice of the lien retained in the deed to Connell.

It has been settled, by a long train of decisions, that where the vendor retains in his deed a lien upon the land for the purchase-money, he'has the superior right to the land against his vendee and those in privity with him as long as it remains unpaid. That where the lien for the purchase-money is reserved in the deed, the title does not vest absolutely in the [123]*123vendee until the purchase-money is paid. ■ Until the land is paid for, the vendee and those claiming in his right, as against the vendor, have merely an equitable and not the legal title to the land. Although a hen of this kind is frequently inaccurately spoken of as a vendor’s lien, the legal and equitable rights of the parties affected by it are directly the reverse of what they are in cases of purely equitable liens. The latter is a mere equity, to be enforced against the vendee, who holds the legal title; while in the former, the legal title is in the Aendor, and the rights of the vendee as against him are merely equitable. (Dunlap v. Wright, 11 Tex., 597; McAlpin v. Bennet, 21 Tex., 535; Baker v. Ramey, 27 Tex., 52; Darst v. Trammell, Id., 129 ; Monroe v. Buchanan, Id., 241.) But if the right of Peters to enforce his lien against the purchaser from Connell was dependent upon the same principles which are applicable in cases for the enforcement of vendors’ liens, it is still very obvious that Fitzgerald and the purchasers under him must be held to have had notice of the hen retained in the deed to Connell. It is an elementary principle, than which none is better established, both by reason and authority, that subsequent purchasers are bound by the recitals in the deeds through which they claim, and are held to have had notice of whatever equities are apparent in the line of their title. (Carver v. Astor, 4 Pet., 1; Brush v. Ware, 15 Pet., 93; Scott v. Douglass, 7 Ohio, 228; Cordova v. Hood, 7 Wall., 1.)

Although neither Fitzgerald, nor a purchaser from him, could have successfully resisted the suit of Peters against Connell to foreclose Ms lien, if he had been made a party to it, still it remains to be determined to what extent the judgment agamst Connell and the sale of the land under it, will affect the rights of the parties m tMs case, by reason of the fact that Day, appellee’s immediate vendor, whose deed was upon record, and who was m possession of the land when the suit was brought, was not made a party, as has been repeatedly held by the court he should have been.

[124]*124And first, as to its effect upon appellants.

When the action against Connell was brought, the legal title to the land upon which the lien was retained was in Thomas M. Peters, as the head of the community of himself and wife. He might have sued Connell, or those claiming under him, and recovered the land, if they failed to make good their equitable title by the payment of the purchase-money ; or, if he preferred it, he could, as he did, foreclose his lien, and subject the land to sale for its payment.

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Bluebook (online)
46 Tex. 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peters-v-clements-tex-1876.