Weaver v. Nugent

10 S.W. 458, 72 Tex. 272, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1279
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1888
DocketNo. 2532
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 10 S.W. 458 (Weaver v. Nugent) 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
Weaver v. Nugent, 10 S.W. 458, 72 Tex. 272, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1279 (Tex. 1888).

Opinion

Walker, Associate Justice.

September 21, 1886, appellant brought an action of trespass to try title against Emmett Nugent, Eliza Griffith (married, ivhile suit was pending, to Higgins), and Miss Comma Nugent (married to Garen), for certain lands described in the petition.

Defendants pleaded not guilty, and as to the land which had been levied on and sold to the plaintiff as the property of Comma Nugent, that it was exempt from execution as the homestead of herself and the defendant Emmett, they owning an undivided interest in a tract of land which had been allotted to their mother during her life and to certain of her children at her death; that the mother was dead, and the land had been occupied subsequently by them as their home, neither being married.

The defendant Eliza Griffith alleged that the lots 14 and 15 of 34.53 each was part of her homestead, she residing on a two-acre lot near, she being a widow with a minor son. The sale was made August 3, 1886.

The defendants further alleged that no demand had been made upon [276]*276the said Mrs. Griffith or Miss Comma Nugent for money or for a levy; that the levy was made for the purpose of breaking them up; that the property levied on was reasonably worth $6450 and the judgment $350; that the lands were sold at execution sale and bought by the plaintiff at ten dollars, a grossly inadequate price, being about one-fifth of one per cent of its value; tender was made March 31, 1887, and the money was brought into court; that the knowledge of the sale was designedly kept from the defendants, who did not know of the levy or sale when made, etc.

In supplemental answer defendants alleged that they, the said Mrs. Griffith and Miss Comma Nugent, had not sold the land to their brother, the codefendant in this suit, in fraud, etc.

Other allegations were made which will be noticed hereafter.

The testimony showed that a judgment upon a forfeited bail bond had been rendered in a Justice’s Court against the defendants, Mrs. Griffith and Miss Comma Nugent, as sureties for their brother; that execution issued thereon and came to the hands of the deputy sheriff July 9, 1886; that the deputy sheriff never called upon the defendants for the money or for a levy, nor was any levy pointed out by the county attorney, but he obtained the description of the lands from the county records; that defendants did not know of the issuance of the execution, levy, or sale until after the sale, which was made August 3; that they had some $50 or $60 of personal property liable to execution. It further appeared that the defendants had executed warranty deeds for the lands levied upon to the defendant Emmett Nugent, a minor, then wanting a few weeks of majority; that his negotiable promissory notes had been executed in payment, and that Emmett Nugent, after his majority, retained the land, renting it and receiving rents. These deeds were on record before the levy was made. At the sale notice of his claim was made by an attorney representing him. No one was present representing the county or State. It was shown that the lands were worth from three thousand to six thousand dollars, and that plaintiff bought them for ten dollars. The attorney who bought for plaintiff made out the sheriff’s return at the sheriff’s dictation, as testified to by him.

The court charged upon the issues made in the pleadings and testimony. Many instructions were asked by the defendants. A verdict was. rendered for the defendants for the land and for the plaintiff for the ten dollars deposited. Judgment was accordingly, and for plaintiff for costs of suit. The plaintiff appeals and asks revision of the rulings of the court upon the pleadings of defendants and the charge of the court and the refusal of instructions asked by the plaintiff, as well also of the verdict, as not supported by the testimony.

The first assignment is not well taken. The purpose of the pleadings of the defendants attacked was to avoid the sheriff’s sale. The sale was. made August 3d, deed made August 31st, suit filed September 21, 1886, [277]*277by the purchaser at the sale for the land. The judgment under -which the execution ivas issued and under which the sale was made was rendered in a Justice’s Court. That court does not have jurisdiction where the title to the land is put in litigation to hear and determine the questions. The tender of the purchase money obviates the necessity of the presence of the State as a party nominal plaintiff in execution. This is in accordance with the decision in Miller v. Koertge, 70 Texas, 162.

The ruling of the court upon the exceptions to so much of the answer as pleaded the homestead exemption was not important, taken in connection with the subsequent proceedings. The court in its charge informed the jury that to the extent of the interest of one-fourth of the tract No. 1 sold as the property of defendant Mrs. Garen (nee Miss Comma Nugent) such claim was not sufficient to exempt it from the sale. The allegations as to the lots 14 and 15 claimed by Mrs. Griffith were sufficient, and to that extent the exceptions were not well taken. The actual residence upon the lot No. 2 and the cultivation of lots 14 and 15 by tenants in connection with the residence lot and claim of it as homestead, she being a widow with a minor child, were sufficient facts to constitute a homestead exempt from execution.

The ruling upon the alleged acts of the county attorney was immaterial, but the charge eliminated all the testimony on that subject from the case submitted to the jury.

That specific acts of fraud are necessary when a transaction is attacked as fraudulent is well recognized. The verdict was based upon another branch of the case, and on that account the ruling of the court questioned in the fourth assignment was not important.

The tender of the purchase money made in the pleadings of defendants, followed by the payment into court of the money bid at the sale and paid by the plaintiff, was sufficient as a tender. Spann v. Sterns, 18 Texas, 562.

The proposition in the first charge asked by the plaintiff and refused, “if Emmett Nugent, knowing of the judgment against his sisters, his vendors, and that it was unsatisfied, and that the purchase left his sisters insolvent, such sale would be fraud as matter of law,” is not correct as applied to the testimony. If the sale was made as testified by both his vendors for the purpose of paying their debts it was not fraudulent. The defendants had the right to have the jury pass upon the testimony upon that issue as in the others.

The second and third instructions asked by the plaintiff did not distinguish the acts of the defendants in the execution from those of Emmett Nugent and Stephens. These latter were present or represented at the sheriff sale, and the acts referred to in these instructions might have applied to them, but not to the two sisters, who were neither present nor represented at the sale. Besides the substance of the two charges had [278]*278already been given in the general instructions given by the court. The jury were told that if the “inadequacy was caused by any act done by '-defendants, or by their direction or authority, the same would not be ground for setting aside the sale,” and that the irregularities must be shown and that they tended to cause the inadequacy and were not caused by the defendants.

The refused charge No. 4, to effect that Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
10 S.W. 458, 72 Tex. 272, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 1279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weaver-v-nugent-tex-1888.