Yates v. Darby

131 S.W.2d 95, 133 Tex. 593
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1939
DocketNo. 7274.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 131 S.W.2d 95 (Yates v. Darby) 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
Yates v. Darby, 131 S.W.2d 95, 133 Tex. 593 (Tex. 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Judge Smedley

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

Suit was filed in the early part of 1935 by defendant in error Darby against plaintiffs in error Yates and others, who are trustees of the Port Arthur Independent School District, for the foreclosure of a judgment lien on three lots in the City of Port Arthur, in Jefferson County. The trial court’s judgment in favor of defendant in error was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. 103 S. W. (2d) 1007.

The case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, the substance of which is as follows: The three lots were conveyed by the trustees of the Port Arthur Independent School District to C. D. Jones on December 25, 1919, the deed retaining a vendor’s lien to secure a purchase money note for $2300.00 payable in 77 monthly installments, the first due January 5, 1920, and one installment being due on the 5th day of each succeeding month thereafter. On March 27, 1924, Jones conveyed the lots to Peter Smith, the deed reciting that the grantee assumed the unpaid balance of the above described note, amounting to $1640.00. Defendant in error Darby, on *596 August 17, 1932, recovered judgment against Peter Smith for $2789.10, later reduced to $1789.10 by a credit. An abstract of the judgment was duly recorded and indexed in the abstract of judgment records of Jefferson County on August 17, 1932. Plaintiffs in error, the school trustees, on January 31, 1933, advanced for the account of Peter Smith the sum of $219.01 for the payment of taxes assessed against the lots, Smith agreeing to repay the sum so advanced and that plaintiffs in error would be subrogated to the rights of the tax collecting authorities.'

On February 1, 1933, Peter Smith conveyed the lots to plaintiffs in error, the actual consideration for the conveyance being the unpaid balance of $950.00 principal on the original purchase money note executed by Jones. On February 2, 1933, a conditional sales contract was executed whereby plaintiffs in error agreed to reconvey the lots to Peter Smith upon the full payment of a new note executed on the same day by him, payable in 260 monthly installments, this note in amount equaling the unpaid balance of the original note given by Jones, together with interest thereon and the sum advanced by plaintiffs in error in payment of taxes. Peter Smith defaulted in payment of the new note, breached the provisions of the conditional sales contract, and voluntarily abandoned the property to plaintiffs in error, who took possession of it under the terms of the sales contract. The record does not show when possession was taken by plaintiffs in error.

The position taken by defendant in error, and which was sustained by the Court of Civil Appeals, is that, inasmuch as the last of the installments to be paid on the vendor’s lien note held by plaintiffs in error was more than four years past due at the time when defendant in error’s judgment lien attached to the property, each installment thereof was then and is now, under the provisions of Articles 5520 to 5522, Revised Civil Statutes of 1925, conclusively presumed to have been paid, and that plaintiffs in error could not, after defendant in error’s lien had been acquired under such circumstances, obtain, by subsequent rescission, or by dealings with Smith touching the property, a right superior to the judgment lien.

On the other hand, the assignment of error, upon which the writ was granted to plaintiffs in error, presents the contention that the statute above referred to does not affect the superior title retained by the vendor and that, when plaintiffs in error, as unsatisfied vendors and by virtue of their superior title, obtained possession of the property under the *597 deed from Smith and by Smith’s voluntary abandonment thereof to them, “they thereby concluded any right that the judgment lien holder of their vendee might have in said land.”

A careful examination of the applicable articles of the statute and the decisions construing them leads us to the conclusion that the Court of Civil Appeals correctly sustained the position taken by defendant in error.

The applicable articles of the statute are Articles 5520 to 5523 of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925, as amended in 1931 by Chapter 136 of the Acts of the Regular Session of the Forty-second Legislature, which, in so far as they relate to the superior title retained by a vendor to secure the payment of purchase money, apply both to deeds executed before and to deeds executed after the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925 and the amendatory act of 1931 went into effect. The deed in which plaintiffs in error retained the vendor’s lien was executed in 1919, and the last installment of the purchase money note payable to them became due May 5, 1926, and according to the terms of the statute was barred May 6, 1930. Defendant in error’s judgment lien" was acquired August 17, 1932. The conveyance from Smith to plaintiffs in error, by which they undertook to rescind the sale made in 1919 and under which conveyance they repossessed the property, was made on February 1, 1933. Such being the facts, neither the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925 nor the amendment of 1931 deprived plaintiffs in error of a reasonable time for the enforcement of their remedies as vendors and owners of the note secured by vendor’s lien. Cathey v. Weaver, 111 Texas 515, 522, 242 S. W. 447.

The present statute, Articles 5520 to 5523, as amended in 1931, had its beginning in Chapter 138, Acts of the Regular Session of the Twenty-ninth Legislature (1905) and is the product of a number of subsequent reenactments and amendments of the original act. Acts Regular Session 33rd Legislature (1913) Ch. 123, p. 250; Acts First Called Session, 33rd Legislature (1913) Ch. 27, p. 39; Acts Regular Session 39th Legislature (1925), Ch. 64, p. 215; Acts Regular Session 42nd Legislature (1931) Ch. 136, p. 230.

The purpose of the original act of 1905, as stated in its caption and as emphasized by Chief Justice Cureton in the opinion in Cathey v. Weaver, supra, was to fix a time within which the power of sale conferred in mortgages and deeds of trust mught be exercised, and after which vendor’s liens should be presumed to be- released and satisfied. The several amenda *598 tory acts, as is apparent from their language, had the same •general purpose.

In the instant case we are concerned with the provisions of Articles 5520 to 5522 of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925 and the amendment of 1931 which relate to the vendor’s superior title and to the purchase money notes which the superior title is retained to secure. Article 5520 provides in substance that actions to recover real estate by virtue of a superior title retained by the vendor in a deed of conveyance or purchase money note, and actions for the foreclosure of the vendor’s lien on real estate, shall be commenced within four years after the cause of action has accrued and not afterward. This article of the statutes bars not only the vendor’s right to foreclose his lien but also his right to recover the real estate by virtue of the superior title. The question under consideration, however, is not determined by the provisions of Article 5520 prior to its amendment in 1931, since plaintiffs in error have not sued to recover the property but are asserting the superior title defensively against defendant in error’s suit to foreclose his lien.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W.2d 95, 133 Tex. 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yates-v-darby-tex-1939.