Roy v. Clarke

12 S.W. 845, 75 Tex. 28, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1019
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 5, 1889
DocketNo. 6153
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 12 S.W. 845 (Roy v. Clarke) 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
Roy v. Clarke, 12 S.W. 845, 75 Tex. 28, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1019 (Tex. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

HOBBY, Judge.

The first error assigned relates to the action of the court in overruling the exceptions to the plaintiff’s first amended and first supplemental petition. The substance of these exceptions was, that as it .appeared from the face of the petition that the last purchase money note was in the hands of Roy, the defendant, and there was no" offer to pay the same, there could be no recovery. The suit was for the recovery of the possession of the laud which appellee had purchased from Roy, and which possession Roy had contracted to deliver by the 1st of November, 1884, a date prior to the maturity of the note; and also to recover damages for destruction to timber, cedar rails, buildings, etc., and to recover a certain sum which the plaintiff had paid as taxes on the land, and which Roy admitted he was liable for in the event of a recovery by plaintiff. The damages sought to be recovered amounted to about $700. It is true the petition showed that the $500 purchase money note, representing the last payment to be made, was due in April, 1885, and was in the hands of Roy, but it was alleged to be held by him subject to whatever equities the plaintiff Clarke had against the defendant. If the damage was done as alleged, and a recovery was had by Clarke against Roy for that amount, it would have constituted an offset to the note held by Roy. It would have been inequitable to have required Clarke to pay the $500 note referred to in the hands of Roy, if the proof authorized a recovery in favor of Clarke against Roy for $700 for the trespass and the taxes paid by Clarke, which Roy admitted he was liable for in the event of a recovery by Clarke. There was no error, we think, in overruling the exceptions.

The third and fifth assignments, which relate to the same subject matter, may be appropriately considered together. They are in substance that the court erred in the first paragraph of the charge in this, that the charge informs the jury “that the legal title to the land is in W. C. Roy, but that plaintiff can recover notwithstanding,” because Roy had transferred the vendor’s lien note yet due. The charge complained of is that “the conveyance from Roy to appellee expressly retaining the vendor’s lien was an executory contract, the legal title remaining in Roy, but that the undisputed evidence showed that all of the purchase money, amounting [31]*31to $5500, had been paid except a note for $500, which Roy alleges he transferred to an innocent purchaser before maturity for value, and that upon such state of facts Roy could not make whatever legal title remained in him available to defeat this suit.” The appellant requested a special charge announcing the converse of the foregoing principle, which was refused, and the refusal of which is made the basis for the third assignment.

The appellant, defendant below, alleged in his answer “ that the note mentioned had been transferred by him before maturity to an innocent purchaser for value, who is now the owner of the same,” but he does not ask that the assignee"of the note be made a party. Such assignee Ave do not think would be a necessary party. Whatever rights Roy may have been clothed with by reason of the fact that the note had been executed to him no longer existed. These rights were transferred to the assignee with the note. As to Roy, the note had been paid when he received its value from the assignee. Whatever may have been the rights vested in the assignee of the note by its transfer, they could not be in any manner injured or affected in this case. If the judgment had been for the appellant, that would not have affected the right of the holder to the lien acquired by the transfer of the note. There was no error in the charge given, nor in refusing that requested.

The seventh, eighth, and ninth assignments are that the court erred in the charge in this: The charge informs the jury that “ defendant W. 0. Roy could convey the homestead without the wife’s consent to pay the purchase money on the same unless such conveyance was made for the purpose of defrauding the wife, and even if done Avith a fraudulent purpose, yet such conveyance would pass the title unless the purchaser Avas charged Avith notice of such fraud;” and that “possession of the homestead by the Avife and her refusal to sign a deed of conveyance therefor, both facts being known to one Avho purchases said homestead from the husband alone, does not charge said purchaser with notice of any fraudulent purpose of the husband in. making such conveyance.”

The charge informed the jury that the evidence showed that the land was occupied by appellant and Roy under a verbal contract with Williams; that improvements were made thereon and part payment Avas made, Avhich facts vested an equitable title in appellants sufficient to give them a homestead estate, if they actually occupied it as such, subject to unpaid purchase money. And that if 200 acres of the land had been selected and taken possession of by defendants as their homestead prior to the sale to appellee, a temporary removal by the family Avould not destroy the homestead estate unless such removal was Avith the intention of abandonment. The jury were also told that if this homestead estate existed, it could not be conveyed by Roy without the concurrence of his Avife in the manner and form required by law, and that the deed of Roy to appellee Avas void as to such estate of appellant Mrs. Roy, if it existed, unless the evidence [32]*32showed that the conveyance to appellee Clarke was executed for the purpose of adjusting and paying off the encumbrances of the land by reason of the unpaid purchase money due Williams by Roy; and that if the conveyance was so made it would be valid unless Roy made such conveyance to defraud his wife of her homestead rights, and Clarke had notice of that fact or knowledge of such facts as would put a reasonably prudent man upon inquiry.

The jury were also told in effect that if the conveyance by Roy to Clarke was made for the purpose of paying the balance of the purchase money due Williams, the fact that Mrs. Roy was in possession of the land, and knowledge of her failure or refusal to join in the conveyance, would not charge Clarke with notice of Roy’s purpose to defraud his wife of her homestead rights.

The evidence is uncontroverted that appellants had only a verbal contract with H. G. Williams for the purchase of the land, and had paid comparatively a small portion of the purchase money, and were unable to- or did not comply with the contract. A large sum (about 44000) was. still due on the land. Ho title to the land was obtained by them until Clarke, under the contract made with W. C. Roy, long prior thereto, paid or furnished the purchase money, about $4000, with which to pay Williams and discharge the encumbrance then existing, which stood in the way of the acquisition of title by Roy. When this payment was made, with Clarke’s money, Williams executed title to Roy, who at the same moment executed title to appellee. There had never been any title in appellants divested of encumbrances until then. Nor had they, as far as is: disclosed by the evidence, ever been in a position to assert homestead rights to the land until the payment made by Clarke.

The legal question arising out of this state of facts is, did Roy have the power to make the sale to appellee, and were the homestead rights of appellants subject to such sale, made to discharge the existing encumbraces? That the husband is clothed with this power in the absence of any intention to defraud the wife of her homestead rights appears to be well settled. Clements v. Lacy, 51 Texas, 160.

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.W. 845, 75 Tex. 28, 1889 Tex. LEXIS 1019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-v-clarke-texapp-1889.