Turner v. Cochran

480 S.W. 923, 94 Tex. 480, 1901 Tex. LEXIS 174
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1901
DocketNo. 999.
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 480 S.W. 923 (Turner v. Cochran) 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
Turner v. Cochran, 480 S.W. 923, 94 Tex. 480, 1901 Tex. LEXIS 174 (Tex. 1901).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

This case comes up on the following certified statement and questions from the Court of Civil Appeals for the First District:

“On August 13, 1856, J. A. Thompson was the owner of 1476 acres of land in Montgomery County. On that date he executed and delivered to Wm. R. Baker a conveyance to the land in the form of a general warranty deed, reciting a cash consideration of $1600. This deed was not placed of record until April 6, 1858. On November 14, 1856, J. A. Thompson executed and delivered to one J. W. Henderson as trustee a deed of trust upon the land in question for the purpose of securing to one B. A. Shepherd the payment of a promissory note for $995.87.- The power of sale was conferred upon the trustee in case of default in the payment of the note. Under this deed of trust the land was regularly sold by the trustee on April 6, 1858, for the purpose of paying the note and B. A. Shepherd became the purchaser. The trustee in pursuance of such sale executed and delivered to Shepherd a deed to the land so sold. The deed of trust and trustee’s deed to Shepherd were not placed of record until 1870. On April 6, 1858, the day of the sale by the trustee, Baker placed his deed of record in Montgomery County, but the transcript does not disclose whether it was filed with the county clerk for registration before or after the consummation of the sale by the trustee. As to whether Shepherd’ took the deed of trust to secure an antecedent debt or was a purchaser for value, the record is silent except in so far as the instruments themselves may be proof of the truth of the declarations contained in them. The record is also silent as to whether B. A. Shepherd had actual notice of Baker’s senior unrecorded deed either at the date of the note and deed of trust or at the date of the sale.

*484 “So far as the record shows, the land has never been occupied by any of the claimants.

“B. A. Shepherd is dead and the appellee Mrs. M. A. Cochran is his sole heir.

“Wm. R. Baker is dead, and Wm. Baker Turner is his sole devisee.

“Mrs. Cochran brought two suits against Turner for the recovery of the land, one in Montgomery County and one in Harris County. By agreement, both suits were consolidated in Harris County and there tried.

“Hamman, the intervener, bought from Turner after the suits were instituted but before service of citation was had in either, and the testimony does not show that either the intervener or Turner had actual notice of their pendency at the date of Turner’s purchase.

“The record is silent as to whether Hamman was a purchaser for . value without actual notice of the claim of appellee Mrs. Cochran.

“First. Having shown the execution of the deed of trust, sale thereunder and deed from the trustee to her ancestor Shepherd, the death of Shepherd and her sole heirship, did it further devolve upon appellee to show affirmatively that Shepherd was a bona fide creditor and took the note and deed of trust without actual notice of Baker’s senior unrecorded deed, or was the burden of proof upon Turner to show notice to Shepherd or that he was not a bona fide creditor?

“Second. In view of articles 4985, 4986,-and 4988, Paschal’s Digest, the first mentioned article requiring deeds of trust upon lands to be recorded within ninety days of their date, did the failure to record' the deed of trust within the time prescribed render its subsequent record in 1870 ineffective as constructive notice to the intervener ?”

In a supplemental certificate it is stated that the deed from Thompson to Baker was filed for record April 5, 1858.

1. The first question seems to assume that, in determining. where the burden of proof rested, Shepherd is to be treated as a creditor and not merely as a purchaser as those terms are used in the registration laws. Pasch. Dig., art. 4988; Rev. Stats., art. 4640. The decisions of this court have settled two propositions respecting the burden of proof in such cases; first, that a junior purchaser of land, attempting to defeat the title of the holder of a prior unrecorded deed from the same grantor for the same land, has the burden to show, by evidence outside the recitals in his conveyance, that he purchased for valuable consideration and without notice of the "previous conveyance; Watkins v. Edwards, 23 Texas, 433; Hawley v. Bullock, 29 Texas, 217; Rogers v. Pettus, 80 Texas, 425; second, that, as against a creditor whose lien has been fixed upon land by legal process against his debtor, the holder of a prior unrecorded deed from such debtor has the burden of proving notice of his right to such creditor at the time of or before the attaching of the lien. Linn v. LeCompte, 47 Texas, 442; Wright v. Lassiter, 71 Texas, 644. These cases were followed in Barnett v. Squyres, 93 Texas, 193.

The contention that the burden was on those claiming under the *485 unrecorded deed now in question is based upon the latter class oí decisions, the subsequent mortgagee being treated as a creditor and not as a purchaser only.

Whether or not a junior mortgagee is to be properly so classed, under the law regulating registration of instruments affecting titles to lands (Revised Statutes, article 4640) for any purpose, is a question which admits of doubt under the decisions. In the case of McKeen v. Sultenfuss, 61 Texas, 325, the question was whether or not the holder of a junior mortgage given to secure an antecedent debt, who could not, therefore, be protected as a purchaser, was to be regarded as a lien creditor and to be protected as such, although he had parted with no consideration on faith of the security, and it was held that he was. In the subsequent case of Overstreet v. Manning, 67 Texas, 657, it was held that the term “creditor,” as used in the chattel mortgage statute, means only such creditors as have acquired liens by proceedings at law, and that mortgagees and other lienholders by contract or act of the parties are on a different footing and must show some consideration other than an antecedent debt, in order to postpone the prior unrecorded deed. This was so modified in Furniture Company v. Hotel Company, 81 Texas, 141, as to include within the statute, as creditors, landlords whose liens arise by operation of law. The holding in Overstreet v. Manning was based upon a statute which made unregistered chattel mortgages void as against creditors, and also as against “subsequent purchasers and mortgagees or lienholders in good faith,” thus expressly classifying mortgagees with purchasers and distinguishing them from creditors; and it might be said that this decision does not impair the force of that in McKeen v. Sultenfuss, which construed the statute concerning registration of instruments affecting the titles to land, in which the protected classes are mentioned merely as “creditors and subsequent purchasers for valuable consideration without notice.” But the question suggests itself, does not the term “purchasers” include mortgagees, and does not the statute so classify them?

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Bluebook (online)
480 S.W. 923, 94 Tex. 480, 1901 Tex. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-cochran-tex-1901.