Sinsheimer, Levenson & Co. v. Kahn

24 S.W. 533, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 143, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 1893
DocketNo. 104.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 24 S.W. 533 (Sinsheimer, Levenson & Co. v. Kahn) 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
Sinsheimer, Levenson & Co. v. Kahn, 24 S.W. 533, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 143, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 513 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinions

FLY, Associate Justice.

On January 28, 1891, appellee Clara Kahn, joined pro forma by her husband, A. Kahn, filed suit against appellants, alleging that she was the equitable owner of certain lots of land in the *145 city of San Antonio; that she purchased the same from E. D. L. Wickes on Hay 1, 1890, the consideration being $600 in cash, which was paid by said Clara Kahn out of her separate property, and certain notes executed by her for $2400, which notes had not been paid, and that a lien had been retained by the vendor on said lots to secure the payment of said $2400; that the deed to her did not state that the property was her separate estate. It was further alleged, that appellants had sued her"husband, A. Kahn, and had levied a writ of attachment on said lots; that the attachment was a cloud upon her title; that the property was not subject to the debts of her said husband, but was her separate estate. There was prayer that the levy be cancelled, and that appellants be restrained from further prosecuting said levy.

Appellants answered by special exceptions and by general denial, and specially pleaded A. Kahn’s indebtedness to them, and that the property was community estate of Clara Kahn and A. Kahn.

Appellees afterwards filed a trial amendment, alleging that since the institution of the suit Fanny Josey, the mother of Clara Kahn, had with her own money taken up the vendor’s lien notes, and had made a gift of the notes and a release of the lien to said Clara Kahn. This trial amendment was demurred to, because it set up a different cause of action than existed at time of levy of attachment, and because the amendment did not state that at the time of the purchase of the lots that Clara Kahn had sufficient money to pay the balance of the purchase money, or that she expected to pay the same from her separate estate, or that she had a separate estate sufficient to pay the same. Verdict was for appellee Clara Kahn.

We conclude the following facts were established by the evidence:

1. That on the 1st day of May, 1890, E. D. L. Wicbes, through his attorney in fact, Henry Laager, conveyed by warranty deed to Clara Kahn the lots in controversy, being lots 1, 2, and 3 in block number 10 of a subdivision lying between San Pedro Avenue and what was formerly known as the Bracket property, the consideration being $600 cash and $2400 in three notes, each for $800, payable respectively in one, two, and three years from date, each bearing interest from date, the vendor’s lien being specially retained on said lots to secure the payment of said notes.

2. That this deed was made to Clara Kahn without any mention of it being the separate property of said Clara Kahn.

3. That the $600 payment made at the time of the purchase was the separate property of said Clara Kahn.

4. That on the 26th day of February, 1891, E. D. L. Wickes, in propria persona, transferred the three vendor’s lien notes herein before described to Mrs. Fannie .Josey in consideration of the sum of $2560 paid by her, and in the same instrument, which was properly acknowledged *146 and recorded, granted and conveyed to said Mrs. Josey his superior vendor’s title to the lots herein before described.

5. That said notes were paid off by Mrs. Fannie Josey, who was the mother of appellee Clara Kahn, out of her own money, which she had realized out of the sale of her property.

6. That on March 11, 1891, after the levy of the attachment on the lots, said Fannie Josey made a deed of gift of the notes and the title she had in the land to Clara Kahn, which was properly executed, acknowledged, and recorded.

7. That appellants had a valid and subsisting judgment against A. Kahn, the husband of Clara Kahn, dated March 18, 1891, for the sum of $1217.86, with a foreclosure of an attachment lien on all the interest that A. Kahn had in the three lots in controversy at the time of the levy or since the time of the levy of the attachment, to-wit, on January 2, 1891.

8. That the lots were worth at the time of the trial the sum of $4500.

9. That said lots were not community estate, but the separate property of said appellee Clara Kahn.

Our conclusions of law, as applicable to the facts found in the record, are stated herein after in the order that points depended on by appellants for a reversal are presented to our consideration. All property acquired during the existence of the marital relation is prima facie community property, whether the conveyance or transfer of it be in the name of the wife or husband, and it devolves upon the wife to prove that property conveyed to her husband or to herself, without designating it as her separate property, has been purchased with her separate means. Edwards v. Brown, 68 Texas, 330; Parker v. Coop, 60 Texas, 112; King v. Gilleland, 60 Texas, 271.

It has also been settled by a long line of decisions of this State, that as against a purchaser for value from the husband, or through an execution against him, without notice of the right of the wife, she will not be permitted to hold land upon proof that it was bought with her separate means or was a gift to her from some other person, unless there be recitals in the conveyance to her that will put such purchaser upon inquiry as to her separate interest in the property; and this rule is enforced although the land be conveyed to her during coverture. Or in other words, the fact that she is married, and the deed is made to her alone without a recital that it is intended for her separate use and benefit, does not destroy the presumption that all property acquired during the coverture is community estate. Cook v. Bremond, 27 Texas, 459; French v. Stumberg, 52 Texas, 109; Parker v. Coop, 60 Texas, 112.

This rule proceeds upon the principle, that the purchaser in good faith is authorized, to rely upon the deeds to property showing the real title, and he is protected rather than the person who permits his or her own property to stand in the name of some other person. But in the case of *147 an attaching creditor of the husband, who through his attachment has acquired an apparent lien upon land which has been purchased with the separate means of the wife, a position is not occupied that would preclude the wife from proving the facts and establishing her right to the property. This question has been fully considered and clearly decided in several opinions of our Supreme Court. Parker v. Coop, 60 Texas, 114; Grace v. Wade, 45 Texas, 525; Oberthier v. Stroud, 33 Texas, 522; Blankenship v. Douglas, 26 Texas, 227.

The subject is thoroughly discussed by Judge Stay ton in Parker v. Coop, and following the case of Blankenship v. Douglas, it is held, that an attachment lien upon the land in the name of a debtor is subject to every equity which existed against the land in the hands of the debtor at the time of the levy of the attachment.

The proof in this case shows that at the time the attachment was levied upon the property in controversy, the wife had an equitable title to the land, having paid 8600 of her separate estate as a cash payment on the land, and having given her notes for the balance of the purchase money.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W. 533, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 143, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sinsheimer-levenson-co-v-kahn-texapp-1893.