Sikes v. First State Bank of Decatur

197 S.W. 227, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 803
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1917
DocketNo. 8651.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 197 S.W. 227 (Sikes v. First State Bank of Decatur) 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
Sikes v. First State Bank of Decatur, 197 S.W. 227, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 803 (Tex. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinions

This suit is one in the nature of a creditors' bill instituted by the First State Bank of Decatur against C. O. Sikes and his wife, Tennie Sikes, and their daughter, Olga Sikes, seeking to establish an attachment lien theretofore adjudged in the county court against C. O. Sikes. Later the First National Bank of Decatur and the firm of Lillard Co., of the same place, intervened in the suit, each alleging that they were creditors of C. O. Sikes and had likewise secured attachment liens which they sought to have established. All of the asserted liens rested upon two certain houses and lots situated in Decatur, the legal title to one of the houses and lots appearing to be in Tennie Sikes, while the legal title to the other appears to be in Olga Sikes. The creditors alleged, however, that the property covered by the liens was at all times the community property of C. O. Sikes and his wife, Tennie Sikes, and subject to the imposition of the liens described in the creditors' pleadings.

The defendants appeared, and C. O. Sikes by his answer disclaimed any interest in the property in controversy. The defendants Olga Sikes and Tennie Sikes answered, setting up the conveyances under which they claimed their respective lots, one being a deed from S. P. Smith to Tennie Sikes, reciting payment of the consideration out of her separate property, and the other being a deed from C. O. Sikes and wife, Tennie Sikes, to Olga Sikes, purporting to convey the lot claimed by her.

To these special answers the plaintiff in the suit alleged that the conveyances under which Olga Sikes and her mother claimed had been executed with intent to defraud the future creditors of C. O. Sikes, and that the property was being held by said Tennie and Olga Sikes in secret trust for the benefit of the community estate of said C. O. Sikes and wife. It was further alleged by the plaintiff that after the conveyance to Olga Sikes C. O. Sikes and wife had expended and invested the community funds in improvements on the lot claimed by Olga Sikes to the extent of $1,500, and that such improvements had been so invested and placed with the purpose of defrauding the future creditors of C. O. Sikes, and that the same in fact were held by Olga Sikes for the benefit of the community.

The cause was tried before a jury, and resulted in a judgment against C. O. Sikes in favor of the plaintiff and each of the interveners for the amount of their debts as respectively claimed by them and established the liens asserted as against all interest owned in the property claimed by Tennie Sikes and against the improvements to the extent of $1,500 upon the lot claimed by Olga Sikes, and accordingly ordered the sale of the properties mentioned and the proceeds thereof to be applied in the payment of the plaintiff's and intervener's claims in the order of their priority as fixed in the judgment, and Olga Sikes and Tennie Sikes have appealed.

The deed to the lot claimed by Tennie Sikes, and upon which a small dwelling house was situated, was made on the 14th day of June, 1902, and duly recorded in the Deed Records of Wise County on the 11th day of April, 1911. It recited a consideration of $50 "paid out of her separate property." The evidence, however, authorizes the conclusion that the consideration in fact was out of the community property of C. O. Sikes and wife, Tennie Sikes. The deed to Olga Sikes for the lot claimed by her was made on the 21st day of March, 1908, reciting a consideration of $50 cash in hand paid, was in due form, and duly recorded in Wise county on the day of its execution. The improvements in controversy on the lot of Olga Sikes were placed thereon some time during the year 1911, and paid for, as we are authorized to conclude from the evidence, out of the community estate of C. O. and Tennie Sikes. It is undisputed, however, that the indebtedness of C. O. Sikes to the plaintiff and to the interveners all arose after the conveyances to Tennie and Olga Sikes and after the Improvements referred to had been erected upon the lot of Olga Sikes, with the possible exception of about $35 due to Lillard Co. The indebtedness of the several banks did not arise until in October, 1913, and that of Lillard Co. originated in an account opened in April, 1911. S. A. Lillard testified, however, that:

"I do not know what part of this went in to that house down there (the house built upon Olga Sikes's lot). I think about $35."

We have therefore the question presented of whether under the circumstances the verdict and judgment subjecting the properties claimed by Olga and Tennie Sikes to the payment of the plaintiff's and interveners' claims is authorized. Appellants insist under the first assignment that the court should have given the peremptory instruction requested by them, and we have concluded that the assignment must be sustained. The question of whether a subsequent creditor can successfully attack a convenance of his debtor on the ground of fraud has been the subject of much discussion in the courts. We have examined many authorities on the subject, but we find it unnecessary to refer to any *Page 229 but our own. Title 118, Revised Civil Statutes, relating to the subject of registration, after providing for the record of conveyances affecting the title to land, provides (article 6828) that:

When any such instrument "which shall have been acknowledged, proved or certified according to law, may be recorded in the county where the land lies, and when delivered to the clerk of the proper court to be recorded shall take effect and be valid as to all subsequent purchasers for a valuable consideration without notice, and as to all creditors from the time when such instrument shall have been so acknowledged, proved, or certified, and delivered to such clerk to be recorded, and for that time only."

The article referred to, however, among other things, provides:

"That nothing in this [article] shall be construed to make valid any instrument which was at the time of its execution from any cause invalid."

A further article (6842) provides that the record of any such instrument so authorized to be recorded "shall be taken and held as notice to all persons of the existence of such grant, deed or instrument."

Appellees therefore cannot be heard to say, as some of them testify, that they had no notice of the several deeds to Tennie Sikes and Olga Sikes. In law it must be held that they had knowledge of these conveyances at and before the time they extended credit to C. O. Sikes, and it would seem that save for the proviso in article 6828, which we have quoted, that appellees, being without dispute subsequent creditors of C. O. Sikes, would be wholly precluded from questioning those conveyances. For the express wording in the body of the article is that when such instrument has been delivered to the clerk of the proper court to be recorded it "shall take effect and be valid as to all creditors," whether with or without notice, from the time the instrument shall have been recorded.

Appellees, however, seek to invalidate the deeds mentioned upon the ground of fraud. It is insisted that they were executed with the design and for the purpose of hindering persons who might thereafter extend credit to C. O. Sikes. No creditor is named; no specific person is designated; there is only the general allegation. It is true fraud will invalidate such an instrument, but to come within the proviso of article 6828 it must exist "at the time of its execution." And it is only upon this ground that appellees can have any standing in this case. On this subject our Supreme Court in the case of Cole v. Terrell, 71 Tex. 549,9 S.W. 668, quotes with approval the following from Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances, to wit:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
197 S.W. 227, 1917 Tex. App. LEXIS 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sikes-v-first-state-bank-of-decatur-texapp-1917.