Senter & Co. v. Lambeth

59 Tex. 259
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1888
DocketCase No. 4773
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 59 Tex. 259 (Senter & Co. v. Lambeth) 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
Senter & Co. v. Lambeth, 59 Tex. 259 (Tex. 1888).

Opinion

West, Associate Justice.—

On July 15, 1881, appellee Bettie

Lambeth filed her petition in this case against Scott Lambeth as the maker of a promissory note, for the recovery of the debt, and to enforce the vendor’s lien on two tracts of land, one of two hundred acres, the other of one hundred and twelve and one-half acres; and alleging that appellants Senter & Co. claimed the two hundred acre tract, and that the widow and minor children of B. P. Lambeth claimed the one hundred and twelve and one-half acre tract. She made these parties defendants also, and claimed in her petition that the two tracts of land had belonged to the estate of M. Lambeth, deceased; that his administrator, B. P. Lambeth, had sold said tracts under an order of the probate court of Lamar county to Scott Lambeth, who was one of the heirs and distributees of said estate, for the sum of §3,125; that said Scott Lambeth executed his note to the administrator for the amount of his bid, less the amount of his distributive share of the estate, and that the administrator made him a deed to the lands; that December 4, 1879, there remaining due on his note the sum of §2,204, and the administrator being anxious to settle up the estate, it was mutually agreed between the administrator, Scott Lambeth, the purchaser, and the heirs, to wit, [261]*261plaintiff Bettie Lambeth, Nannie A. Lambeth, Thomas A. Lambeth and Mrs. S. A. Hammond (the other heirs having been arranged with), that the administrator should surrender up Scott Lambeth’s note to him, and that the latter should execute to the heirs, severally and individually, his note for each of the heirs’ interest in such unpaid balance, all of which was done, the note sued on being the one thus executed to plaintiff. The plaintiff also made her co-heirs, Nannie A. Lambeth, Thomas A. Lambeth and S. A. Hammond, to whom like notes had been executed, parties, and prayed for judgment for her debt, foreclosure of the vendor’s lien, and adjustment of the rights and equities of all parties.

About the same time that plaintiff filed her petition, Nannie A. Lambeth, Thomas A. Lambeth and S. A. Hammond, joined by her husband, D. S. Hammond, filed in the same court their separate suits' on the notes given to each respectively, making the same parties: and the petitions in all four cases being the same, the four causes were consolidated and thereafter conducted under the style of Bettie Lambeth et al. v. Scott Lambeth et al. By agreement of counsel, with the approval of the judge, all the papers of the three causes that were consolidated with this were left out of the transcript as being useless in the decision of the case, it being, by the terms of the agreement, understood that the petition in this case should be considered the petition of all the plaintiffs.

To the consolidated cause Senter & Co., appellants, answered, claiming ownership and possession of the two hundred acre tract under a sheriff’s deed derived through certain attachment suits against Scott Lambeth, embracing levies on the land and eventuating in judgments for debt, and foreclosure of attachment liens, orders of sale, sale, and sheriff’s deed to them for the land, claiming that at the time of the levy of the attachments they had no notice, either actual or constructive, of the existence of the debts and liens claimed by plaintiffs or either of them, and that, having paid oyer $500 in money at the sheriff’s sale, on the faith of the purchase, they were bona fide purchasers, and prayed that the two. hundred acres be held not subject to said liens as claimed by plaintiffs.

The widow and minor children of B. P. Lambeth, answering to the consolidated cause, admitted the facts set up in plaintiffs’ petition, claimed that said B. P. Lambeth, for a valuable consideration paid, purchased the one hundred and twelve and one-half acre tract from Scott Lambeth under a general warranty deed, while Scott Lambeth was the owner of both! tracts of land, and before the rights of Senter & Co. attached to the two hundred acre tract, and prayed [262]*262that, in ordering the sale of said tracts for the payment of plaintiffs’ claims, the two hundred acres be first subjected.

Senter & Co., replying to their co-defendants’ answer, opposed the relief claimed by them, and denied the application of the rule invoked, for certain reasons set up in their replication.

The cause was submitted to the court without a jury, and judg- ment was rendered for plaintiffs respectively for the debts claimed, •foreclosing the vendor’s lien on both tracts, and ordering the two hundred acres to be first sold and exhausting same before resorting to the one hundred and twelve and one-half acres. The judge filed shis findings of the law and facts. Senter & Co., appellants, filed a motion for a new trial, which being overruled, they gave notice of appeal, assigned errors, and bring the case into the supreme court by appeal.

The fourth finding of the court is that the appellants had no notice of the vendor’s lien of appellees until the day of sale, at which time, and immediately before the sale, appellees gave public notice through their attorneys of their lien on the land about to be sold.

The sole question in the case is whether, under the admitted facts, the lien and rights acquired by virtue of the writ of attachment, judgment and sheriff’s sale are superior to those of the appellees, who hold the unrecorded vendor’s lien, of which appellants ■ had notice at or before the sale, but of which no notice was had when the writ of attachment was levied or when the judgment was obtained.

The evidence of the vendor’s lien in this case was not recorded, nor was it. in the form in which it existed (being the lien springing "by operation of law out of the transaction between the parties), susceptible-of registration. Let us examine in this connection some of the adjudged cases in which the effect of this want of registration has been considered.

In Grace v. Wade, 45 Tex., 528; Borden v. McRae, 46 Tex., 396; Ayres v. Duprey 27 Tex., 593; Wallace v. Campbell, 54 Tex., 90, and perhaps in some other cases that have escaped our observation, it has been held that, by force of our registration laws, a lien acquired by a judgment or the levy of an execution on the real estate of the debtor is superior to the legal title which had been, previous • to the date of the lien, conveyed by him by deed to a third party, but which deed had not been recorded, and of which the creditor, at the date his lien was fixed, did not have actual notice; and further, that this superiority was not affected by the fact that actual [263]*263notice of the unrecorded deed may have been given at or before the day of sale.

•In the case of Grimes v. Hobson, 46 Tex., 418, the. rule is laid down by Mr. Justice Moore in substanqe as follows: That an unrecorded deed conveying the legal title is void by reason of our registration acts against a creditor who had acquired, in accordance with law, a specific lien or interest in the land in suit by the levy of an execution, and that the creditor, or any one else who might purchase the land at the sheriff’s sale, would get a good title as against the unrecorded deed, notwithstanding the purchaser might have had full notice of his legal title when he purchased, provided the creditor had no notice prior to the fixing of his lien on the land.

In Wallace v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Roeser & Pendleton, Inc. v. StanoLind Oil & Gas Co.
138 S.W.2d 250 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1940)
McLain v. Guinn
4 S.W.2d 121 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1928)
Johnson v. Darr
272 S.W. 1098 (Texas Supreme Court, 1925)
Darr v. Johnson
257 S.W. 682 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1923)
Barber v. Herring
229 S.W. 472 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1921)
Luse v. Rea
207 S.W. 942 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1918)
Nix v. Albert Pick Co.
203 S.W. 1112 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1918)
Fennimore v. Ingham
181 S.W. 513 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1915)
Luke v. Smith
108 P. 494 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1910)
Long v. Fields
71 S.W. 774 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1903)
McLane v. D. Sullivan & Co.
69 S.W. 191 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1902)
Masterson v. Burnett
66 S.W. 90 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1901)
John B. Hood Camp v. De Cordova
47 S.W. 522 (Texas Supreme Court, 1898)
Hamilton-Brown Shoe Co. v. Lewis
28 S.W. 101 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1894)
Meyer, Bannerman & Co. v. Smith
21 S.W. 995 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1893)
G., H. & S. A. R'y Co. v. Sullivan
2 Posey 315 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 Tex. 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/senter-co-v-lambeth-tex-1888.