Wiener v. Zweib

141 S.W. 771, 105 Tex. 262, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 192
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1912
DocketNo. 2177.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 141 S.W. 771 (Wiener v. Zweib) 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
Wiener v. Zweib, 141 S.W. 771, 105 Tex. 262, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 192 (Tex. 1912).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Dibrell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Robert P. Wiener, John W. Wiener and Henry B. Wiener a minor, suing by his next friend, Robert P. Wiener, brought this suit on December 3, 1907, against Mary A. Zwieb to recover 10% acres of land, situated within the corporate limits of the City of Houston. The action was one of trespass to try title. Pending the suit the *266 original defendant, Mary A. Zwieb, died intestate and an administration was sued out on her estate. A certain deed of trust executed by Mary A. Zwieb to Mrs. E. J. Ferguson on the land in controversy was duly foreclosed and at the foreclosure sale purchased by Mrs. E. J. Ferguson, and she and her husband, John H. Ferguson, were by amended petition made the defendants in lieu of the original defendant.

The cause was tried in the District Court of Harris County with' a jury, and the trial judge, after hearing the evidence, instructed a verdict for the defendants.

Upon appeal the cause was, on April 27, 1910/ affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals of the Fourth Supreme Judicial District, and is before this court on writ of error.

All parties to the suit claimed the land through Henry Wiener as the common source, and the issue of title mainly, if not solely, depends upon the validity of a sale of the land in controversy under a deed of trust executed by Henry Wiener on said land during the lifetime of his wife and while the property was their homestead, and without the signature of the wife. We make this summary of the issue involved in the case in deference to the chief complaint made by the plaintiffs below and the findings of fact by the Court of Civil Appeals.

The complaint of plaintiffs below is to the action of the trial court in instructing a verdict for defendants, the contention being that there was conflicting evidence upon a number of material issues and that these issues should have been determined by the jury. The Court of Civil Appeals found as matter of fact that there were a number of issuable questions which ordinarily should have been presented to the jury, but held as a matter of law that the refusal to submit such issues to the jury did not constitute reversible error for the reason that such issues of fact might be conceded to be in favor of plaintiffs and yet they furnish no reason why the plaintiffs should recover, or why the defendants should not recover.

One of the material issues of fact was as to whether Henry Wiener, the mortgagor, died before or after the deed of trust was foreclosed by the trustee or his substitute under the terms of the instrument. It was shown without controversion that on January 1, 1868, Henry Wiener, the father of plaintiffs, executed a deed of trust on the land in controversy to M. F. De Bajligethy, trustee, for the purpose of securing Mary Zwieb, the original defendant, in the payment of about seven hundred dollars, which was a community debt of Henry and Hannah Wiener, plaintiffs’ ancestors. That at the time of the execution of this deed of trust the property in controversy was the homestead of Henry Wiener and his wife, who refused to join him in the execution of said deed of trust, but at the time the deed of trust was executed they did not live on the property. They had moved to the City of Houston, proper, for the purpose of educating their children, and had lived there since the latter part of 1866. Soon after Wiener and his family moved from the land in controversy the dwelling house was burned and was never rebuilt, and Wiener and his family never' thereafter occupied the property. Mrs. Hannah Wiener died on *267 January 23, 1869, leaving her husband, Henry Wiener, and several minor children surviving her. It was shown that these children, or some of them, lived with their uncle, Isaac Levy, on a portion of the property in controversy, in a house built there by Isaac Levy with the consent of Henry Wiener, for a number of years after the death of their mother, Hannah Wiener. It was found by the Court of Civil Appeals that there was no administration on the estate of either Henry or Hannah Wiener, and that while there was no evidence of any probative force that Henry Wiener died before the deed of trust was foreclosed by sale by the substituted trustee, yet for the purpose of determining the question of law involved it was admitted that he died before the sale under the deed of trust, but it was also found that Henry Wiener never occupied or claimed the property as his homestead after the death of his wife, and when requested by the attorney of Mary Zwieb to pay the note, stated that he was not able to do so and that Mrs. Zwieb should proceed to foreclose the deed of trust he had given her.

On January 3, 1874, Judge E. P. Hamblin, the substituted trustee, proceeded to sell the land in controversy under the trust deed executed by Henry Wiener on January 1, 1868, and eoncededly after the death of the constituent.

This brings us to one of the main questions of law to be determined, as presented by plaintiffs’ first proposition under their first assignment of error, as follows: “A sale made by a trustee, under a power of sale contained in a deed in trust after the death of the grantor, and less than four years after such death, is void, and passes no title.”

The Court of Civil Appeals, speaking through Justice Fly, in an elaborate and well considered opinion, holds the view that where there was no administration on the estate of the grantor and after the lapse of four years, the time within which an administration could be sued out, that a sale under the deed of trust after the death of the grantor and before the lapse of four years, was valid and passed title to the land conveyed, and we approve that holding.

This particular question will be considered first without reference to the questions of homestead and the validity of the deed of trust under the circumstances of its execution, as raised by plaintiffs’ assignments of error.

As an independent and original proposition, we do not think it has ever been held in this State that the power to sell and convey property given in a mortgage or deed of trust was revoked by the death of the mortgagor or grantor, but on the contrary it seems to have been fully recognized by our court as an established principle of law that the power of sale given in such instruments was a power coupled with an interest and continued in force and survived the death of the constituent. We are aware that in the case of Reeves v. Petty, 44 Texas, 252, this language was there used: “Nor is it doubted that the doctrine laid down in Robertson v. Paul, 16 Texas, as to the revocation of the power to sell by the death of the constituent, has been questioned by some of our ablest lawyers. This rule, however, was adopted by the same judges that decided the other cases referred to, and it has been approved by this court in subsequent eases, and has *268 become a rule of property, like the other, to an extent that it would be a great shock to society to disturb it.”

There was no issue involved in that case that called for a discussion of the subject of the revocation of the power of the trustee to sell after the death of the mortgagor or grantor. The statement of the ease shows that Petty instituted the suit against the heirs of J. J. Reeves and wife, to subject the property in controversy in that suit to a

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Bluebook (online)
141 S.W. 771, 105 Tex. 262, 1912 Tex. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wiener-v-zweib-tex-1912.