Smith v. Brown

3 F.2d 926, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3836
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1925
Docket4318
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 3 F.2d 926 (Smith v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Brown, 3 F.2d 926, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3836 (5th Cir. 1925).

Opinion

CLAYTON, District Judge.

On April 2, 1923, the several cases pending on the equity side of the District Court were consolidated in the amended bill of complaint, the cause now here, which is an ancillary proceeding by Brown and Sims, receivers of the Miller-Link Lumber Company, a corporation. The purpose of the suit was to cancel, as clouds on plaintiffs’ title, the deed from B. W. Johnson to Howell, and the deed from Howell' to W. P. Smith, one of the defendants, as trustee for Black, another defendant, purporting to secure the payment of a note jointly given by the defendants Howell, Garland Smith, and Lanier. The answer set up that the defendants were innocent purchasers of the lands, and, more specifically, that in good faith and for a valuable consideration, and without knowledge or notice of plaintiffs’ title or claim, they had acquired conveyance of and title to the property covered by the deeds.

The court decreed that plaintiffs, the receivers, should have and recover of and from the defendants, Garland Smith, La-nier, Howell, Black, and W. P. Smith, the title-and right of possession in the lands *927 conveyed to Howell by Johnson by the deed of January 11, 1922, and under which the defendants asserted title, and also that the title and right of possession in and to the other land claimed hy the defendants, and misdescribed in the Carroll deed of March 7, 1905, under which the plaintiffs derive title, be divested out of the defendants and vested in the plaintiffs; and it was decreed specifically that the deed from Johnson to Howell, and that from Howell to Smith, trustee, be canceled. This appeal is from the decree.

Without the consent of the parties, and without motion therefor, the court appointed a special master to take and report to the court the testimony in the cause, with Ms conclusions of law and fact. Appellants, defendants below, assign sneh action of the court as error, as being in violation of equity rule 59. In considering the ease as it is now before ns, it is unnecessary to interpret this rule, as it was done in Flanders v. Coleman (D. C.) 249 F. 757, and in Holt Mfg. Co. v. Best Gas Tr. Co. (D. C.) 245 F. 354, although it appears that the conclusions in those cases were correct; for here the special master was appointed to take and report to the court the testimony, and no objection was interposed at the time the order was made. It must be said that the defendants a.equiesced in the order of reference, or, in the absence of objection, the court had the right to assume that the reference was agreeable to the parties. Not until the master was proceeding to take the testimony was there any objection to such course, and even then it was presented to the master and not to the court. That was neither the time nor' the place to initiate or to interpose the objection. The record also shows that not until the testimony had been taken, and at the time the cause was submitted upon the pleadings and testimony for final decree, was any objection over made to the court itself to the order authorizing the special master to take and report the testimony. It was then urged before the court that such order was in violation of rule 59, and therefore void.

The contention is without merit. The order was not void. There being no objection at the time of its entry, the order was within the discretion of the court, and having been so entered, and no motion for its revocation having been offered, the order was effective, and in pursuance thereof the master did what he should have done; that is, heard and reported the testimony to the court. The order provided for the taking and presentation of the testimony to the court, and all testimony bearing on the issues was, as a matter of fact, reported to the court; and upon this testimony, not upon the conclusions of the master, the rights of the parties were finally adjudged by the court itself, after having given two days’ consideration to the pleadings and the testimony. Moreover, the conclusions in the decree are supported by the established facts, and therefore the decree was in no sense a mere acquiescence in or formal confirmation of the reported findings of the master. The court ascertained the facts and applied the law independently of the master’s conclusions; that is to say, in this case the master was required to take and report, and did take and report, the testimony in sneh manner that intelligent action thereon might bo had by the court, and upon the pleadings and the testimony the court finally determined the rights involved in the controversy.

It is urged by appellants, defendants, that appellees, plaintiffs, could not maintain this suit, for the reason that, subsequent to the bringing of it and pending the adjudication of the rights of the parties, they, appellees, had made a sale of the land and in the instrument of such sale retained the vendor’s lien to secure the payment of the purchase price. The fact that the plaintiffs, appellees, had made such sale, did not deprive them of the right to maintain and prosecute their suit, for under the law of Texas the vendor of land who retains lien to secure the unpaid purchase money has the superior title to the land. Such conveyance did not annul the right of the plaintiffs to prosecute the suit; but it operated only to render the rights of the plaintiffs subservient to the rights of their vendee. Dunlap v. Wright, 11 Tex. 597, 598, 62 Am. Dec. 506; Smith v. Olsen, 92 Tex. 181, 183, 46 S. W. 631; Hearne v. Erhard, 33 Tex. 61, 67. Such being the rule of property in Texas, the duty was incumbent upon the receivers to prosecute the suit for the benefit of their vendee, for they were bound to make good their sale to their purchaser.

Appellants complain of the admission on the trial of parol evidence to correct the error in description of the lands conveyed in the deed to appellees. They urge that, where the description in the deed is plain, clear, and unambiguous, parol evidence is inadmissible to show that it was intended by the parties to convey land not described (Scheller v. Groesbeck [Tex. Com. App.] 231 S. W. 1092), and, in elaboration of the rule, that parol evidence, whether brought *928 in by parties or strangers, cannot make a deed convey land which it does not purport to convey, or prevent it from conveying that which it clearly purports to convey; it being settled that such a deed cannot be collaterally attacked by the parties to it, or their privies, by evidence tending to show an intention different from that which its language unmistakably expresses (Davis v. George, 104 Tex. 108, 134 S. W. 326). But this rule is not applicable to the instant ease, however appropriately it may have • been invoked in the two eases just cited, relied on by appellants. Certainly the court of equity on the facts here was compelled to hold that such rule could not be applied, for that would have defeated manifest truth and justice.

It is a well-established principle that pa-rol evidence is admissible to show the circumstances under which the contract was made and the subject-matter to which the parties refer. Peisch v. Dickson, Fed. Cas. No. 10911, 1 Mason, 11, cited with approval in the opinion of the court by Justice Barbour in Bradley v. Steam Packet Co., 38 U. S. (13 Pet.) 89, 99, 10 L. Ed.

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Bluebook (online)
3 F.2d 926, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-brown-ca5-1925.