Pyland v. Sayers

148 S.W.2d 450
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 1940
DocketNo. 8990; Motion No. 9521.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 450 (Pyland v. Sayers) 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
Pyland v. Sayers, 148 S.W.2d 450 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

Thomas G. Sayers, independent executor of the estate of Jessie A. Sayers, deceased, sued S. J. Pyland, his wife, Nellie A. Pyland, and two sons, S. S. and M. C. Pyland, upon a promissory note for $3,000, and to foreclose a vendor's lien given to secure it on certain described property situated in San Marcos, Texas. The two sons denied liability on the note, and disclaimed any interest in the property; and S. J. Pyland and wife defended, among other things, on the ground that the property involved was, when the lien was created, and continuously thereafter had been, their business homestead; and that the lien asserted was valid only as to a half interest therein, and asked that foreclosure be limited to such half interest only. Trial was to the court without a jury and judgment rendered as prayed for, from which S. J. Pyland has appealed.

No complaint is made as to the personal judgment against Pyland for the debt involved, nor the foreclosure of the lien in so far as a half interest in the property is concerned. The only question raised relates to the other half interest. It is here contended that the lien asserted as to such half interest by appellee is void because it was attempted to be fixed upon a homestead interest of Pyland and wife in the property, and for a purpose not authorized by Sec. 50, Art. 16 of the Constitution, Vernon's Ann.St., and Art. 3839, R.C.S. 1925.

The material facts involved are without substantial controversy. While appellee urges that the trial court could have found from the evidence that the Pylands had, subsequent to the transaction in question, abandoned whatever homestead rights they may have had in the property, our present consideration of the question presented is predicated upon a continuing homestead *Page 452 right; and the question of abandonment will be subsequently discussed. The facts and circumstances under which the controversy arose were briefly as follows:

In 1925, S. J. Pyland owned lots 4 and 5 in Block 16 of the City of San Marcos, the two fronting north on San Antonio Street a distance of 158 1/2 feet and extending back 166 2/3 feet, lot 4 on the east, being a corner lot, bordering upon Fredericksburg Street. A business house, claimed by Pyland as his business homestead, fronted 100 feet on San Antonio Street, and extended back 100 feet, thus occupying all of the front of lot 5 and a part of the front of lot 4, leaving as vacant property the east 58 1/2 feet of lot 4 on the street corner. There were then outstanding purchase money notes, aggregating $1,187.50 against lot 4, secured by a lien upon that lot. No indebtedness against lot 5 is shown to have existed at that time. On February 28, 1925, Pyland and wife sold and conveyed to T. Z. Williams an undivided one-half interest in both lots 4 and 5. The consideration for this conveyance was that Williams assume one-half of the $1,187.50 against lot 4, execute to Pyland a note for $3,000 secured by a vendor's lien on the one-half interest conveyed to him, and a note for $2,648.34, secured by a lien inferior to that securing the $3,000 note. The $3,000 note was then by Pyland transferred to Jessie A. Sayers. In 1927 Pyland and Williams executed a partition deed, whereby there was set apart to Williams the vacant portion of lot 4, fronting 58 1/2 feet on San Antonio Street, and extending back along Fredericksburg Street a distance of 140 feet; and to Pyland all of the remainder of lots 4 and 5 upon which were situated all of the improvements. At that time there was outstanding against said property a total indebtedness of $6,835.84, as follows: $1,187.50 against lot 4, payment of onehalf of which Williams had assumed when he bought the one-half interest from Pyland; the $3,000 note owned by Sayers; and the $2,648.34 note, one-half of which was owned by Mrs. Pyland as guardian of the estate of Homer Wimberly, and the other half by S. J. Pyland. The last two mentioned purchase money notes, aggregating $5,648.34, were owed by Williams and their payment secured by liens on his one-half interest in the entire property. In brief, Williams then owed, secured by liens on his one-half interest in the entire property, a total of $6,242.09. The net result of the partition agreement was to reduce this indebtedness owed by Williams to $2,056.25 and to fix a lien on the 58 1/2 feet by 140 feet set apart to him. We are not here concerned with the question of whether this could be done without the consent of the holders of the notes, as that issue is not raised by them.

This partition deed also provided that in consideration of the property set apart to S. J. Pyland and wife, Pyland assumed the payment of the $3,000 note held by Sayers, and further that "it is expressly agreed and understood that the $3,000 note shall constitute a valid purchase money or vendor's lien upon and against the said property so set apart herein to the said S. J. Pyland and wife."

It is not controverted that all of the parties acted in good faith, and that there was no intent to circumvent the homestead law. It is also the contention of appellee that in the partition whereby Pyland obtained the major portion of the property and all of the improvements, much greater in value than the portion set apart to Williams, in adjusting their equities and in equalizing the values of the property set aside to each, the indebtedness (the $3,000 note) assumed by Pyland should be treated as a vendor's lien note, and that the lien should extend to all the property set apart to Pyland. That is, as between cotenants where a lien exists only against the moiety of one, and a partition is affected whereby the other assumes the outstanding debt, the conveyance to him thus creates a lien against the entire property so conveyed to him. If this be done with the consent of the holder of the indebtedness, and absent any homestead question, this contention would be correct. Such seems to be the recognized rule. See 43 Tex.Jur., § 265, p. 460; 47 C.J., § 29, p. 276; Ann. 93 A.L.R. 1268. In none of these authorities, however, was a homestead question presented. And had none been here involved such rule would have been applicable. But manifestly, we think, such rule cannot create or fix an additional lien upon a homestead to secure a debt which it did not theretofore secure, except for the purposes authorized by the Constitution and the statute.

On the issue presented, we think it is immaterial, in so far as the Pylands' homstead rights were concerned, how the *Page 453 partition between them and Williams was effectuated. It is now settled that they could hold and assert a homestead right in their one-half undivided interest in the property. Bielss v. Moeller, Tex. Civ. App.83 S.W.2d 1098, 1101; Boone v. McBee, Tex. Civ. App. 280 S.W. 295; Thompson Sons Lumber Co. v. Clifton, 132 Tex. 366, 124 S.W.2d 106; 22 Tex.Jur., § 167, p. 240. As such homestead it was exempt from any encumbrance save those authorized by law. The lien securing the Sayers' note originally extended only to the onehalf interest conveyed by Pyland to Williams. And when Pyland reacquired the interest of Williams in the portion set aside to Pyland, he merely assumed payment of an already existing debt secured by a lien to the extent of a one-half interest only. To hold that he could thus, by such assumption, enlarge that lien to cover his homestead interest, would result in creating an additional lien on his homestead to secure an existing indebtedness which it had not theretofore secured.

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Related

Sayers v. Pyland
161 S.W.2d 769 (Texas Supreme Court, 1942)
Travelers Ins. Co. v. Nauert
200 S.W.2d 661 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1941)

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148 S.W.2d 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pyland-v-sayers-texapp-1940.