Summerville v. King

83 S.W. 680, 98 Tex. 332, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 261
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1904
DocketNo. 1366.
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 83 S.W. 680 (Summerville v. King) 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
Summerville v. King, 83 S.W. 680, 98 Tex. 332, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 261 (Tex. 1904).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

Johnson Rice, as next friend of the minors, Robert, Augusta and Bessie Summerville, instituted this suit *337 in the District Court of Harris County against Jesse‘King, William H. Olschewski and the Houston Land and Trust Compaq, to recover an undivided half of the south half .of lots 4 and 5, block 21, Castine addition to the city of Houston, and to establish a homestead right in the entire south half of the said lots. During the pendency of the suit Lillie Moran, the mother of the minors and who was the wife of Sidney B. Summerville, intervened, setting up that she had been appointed guardian of the estate and of the minor plaintiffs, and adopted the pleadings of the next friend. The defendant appeared and filed various pleas, but, as there is no question upon the pleadings of either party, it Is unnecessary for us to- say more than that they were sufficient to admit the evidence.

We copy from the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals as follows:

“The following facts which we deem essential to a proper understanding of this opinion are deduced from the statement of facts. In 1889 Angelina Bice, the mother of Lillian Y. Moran, conveyed to her and her then husband, Sidney B. Summerville, the land in controversy. In 1895 the grantees in that deed entered into a contract with L. B. Jones for the erection of a residence on the land and to secure him gave sixty notes and mechanic’s lien on the premises for $850. A number of the notes were paid by Summerville. He died in 1897, leaving a considerable portion of the debt unpaid. In 1901 Mrs. Summerville married one Hanks, from whom she procured a divorce in a few months after marriage. While a feme sole Mrs. Hanks being unable to pay the debt on the premises, H. House, who owned the notes and lien, brought suit to foreclose, when at the instance of Mrs. Hanks, W. B. Wasliam took up the notes and they were transferred to him. By an agreement between Mrs. Hanks and Washam and Olschewski the latter paid off the debt, amounting to $475, and paid taxes and other sums amounting to $75, and Mrs. Hanks conveyed the property to him. Olschewski gave her another parcel of ground as a part of the consideration. The deed was made by her for herself and as survivor of Sidney B. Summerville. Olschewski sold the land to Jesse King, reserving a vendor’s lien on the same to secure the purchase money. He indorsed the notes given by King to him to the Houston Land and Trust Company, but has since again become the owner of them. The minors who instituted the suit are the heirs of Sidney B. Summerville. Mrs. Hanks after her divorce from Hanks was married to one Moran, from whom she was divorced during the pendency of this suit. After the suit was instituted Mrs. Moran was appointed guardian of the estate of her minor children, herein named, and the County Court made an order setting apart to the minors the property in controversy as a homestead. Mrs. Moran intervened in the suit only as the representative of her children and asked for no relief in her own -behalf.”

The case was tried by the court without a jury and judgment was entered in favor of the minors, Bobert, Augusta and Bessie Summerville, *338 that they recover of the defendants an undivided one-half of the south half of the lot described in the petition, and also that they have the exclusive possession and use of the entire property so long as the County Court of Harris County shall permit them to occupy it as a homestead. Judgment was also entered in favor of the defendant, Jesse King, for $190.78 against the minors with a lien upon the half of the property decreed to them. The judgment contained other provisions not necessary to mention here. The case having been removed by a writ of error to the Court of Civil Appeals in the names of the defendants, King, 01-sehewski and the Houston Land and Trust Company, the defendants in error moved in the Court of Civil Appeals to dismiss the writ of error as to King and the Houston Land and Trust Company, which motion was overruled and the Court of Civil Appeals reversed the judgment and remanded the case.

The plaintiffs in error claim that they were entitled to a homestead right in the entire property. The mechanic’s lien, which was regular, was prior and superior to the homestead claim of the minor children, and the District Court erred in decreeing to the minors the right to use the entire property as a homestead. State Const., art. 14, secs. 37, 50.

The deed from Mrs, Hanks did not convey to Olschewski the undivided one-half interest which her children inherited from their father, and they are entitled to recover half of the land, subject to the directions hereafter given.

It is objected that the deed from Mrs. Hanks to Olschewski was void as to one-half of the improvements as well as one-half of the land, because it is claimed that when the house was built upon the land it ceased to be community property, although paid for with community funds, but became a part of the real estate and not liable to be sold separately from the land. It has been held that when- one of the parties owns the entire land, upon which improvements were made with community funds, the land could not he taken to compensate for the improvements. Rice v. Rice, 21 Texas, 58. But when improvements are made upon lands in which the husband and wife each have separate interests, the improvements retain their character as community property, and, in division, the survivor may be compensated for his or her interest in such improvements by setting apart land equal to the value of the improvements, or less land'with the improvements, so as to make them equal. Furrh v. Winston, 66 Texas, 521; Clift v. Clift, 72 Texas, 144.

Article 3294 of the Revised Statutes prescribes the effect of a mechanic’s lien and the property upon which it shall hold a lien as follows: “Any person or firm, lumber dealer or corporation, artisan, laborer, mechanic or subcontractor who may labor or furnish material, machinery, fixtures or tools to erect any house or improvement or to repair any building or improvement whatever, * * * upon complying with the provisions of this chapter shall have a lien on such house, building, fix7 *339 tures, improvements, * * * and shall also have a lien on the lot or lots of land necessarily connected therewith, to secure payment for the labor done, lumber, material, machinery or fixtures and tools furnished for construction or repair.” The enforcement of the mechanic’s lien is provided for by the following articles of the Revised Statutes: "Art. 3301'. The lien herein provided for shall attach to the house, building, improvements, * * * for which they were furnished, or the work was done, * * * and the person enforcing the same may have such house, building or improvements * * * sold separately.” "Art. -3302. When the house, building, improvement, * * * are sold separately, the officers making the sale shall place the purchaser in possession thereof, and such purchaser shall have the right to remove the same within a reasonable time from the date of the purchase.” It will be seen from these provisions that as against the rights of the lienholder.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.W. 680, 98 Tex. 332, 1904 Tex. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summerville-v-king-tex-1904.