56 S.W. 584 | Tex. App. | 1900
S.C. Read, widow, a resident of Hill County, died on November 28, 1898, seized in her separate right of a tract of 216 acres of land, a part of the A.S. Lipscomb survey in Hill County, Texas, which at the time of her death she occupied as a homestead, leaving as her sole heirs the appellee Susie Read, an unmarried daughter 17 years of age, and besides her, a married daughter and five sons, all of whom were adults. At the time of her mother's death, the appellee and a brother, John G. Read, who sues herein as next friend of the appellee, lived with their mother on the homestead. S.C. Read was insolvent when she died, and no administration has ever been taken out on her estate. Appellee has continued to occupy the land as a homestead since the death of her mother, her brother John *96 G. Read, residing thereon with her, but no letters of guardianship have ever been applied for or taken out either upon her person or estate.
On November 17, 1896, the appellant, Matilda Mulberger, obtained a judgment in the District Court of Johnson County against L.M. Read, A.W. Read, J.A. Read, and R.M. Read, four of the sons of S.C. Read, and on December 13, 1898, caused an execution to be regularly issued out of the District Court of said county and levied by the appellant Tom Bell, as sheriff of Hill County, upon the interest of said defendants in execution in the 216 acres of land, and the same was duly advertised to be sold on January 3, 1899.
On January 2, 1899, the appellee, by her brother, John G. Read, as next friend, filed a petition in the District Court of Hill County in which she set out the facts as above stated, and defined by metes and bounds the 200 acres of the land which she claimed as her homestead, and prayed that the sale thereof should be enjoined. A temporary restraining order was made by the court, and on final hearing the cause was submitted without a jury. The court held that the premises were the homestead of the appellee at the time of the levy of the execution, and at the time of the trial; that she was entitled to have and to use the same, free and unincumbered by any lien that would cause a cloud upon her title or interfere with her free use and enjoyment thereof; and that the appellants should be perpetually enjoined from selling the premises by virtue of the execution; and rendered judgment that the "defendant Mattie Mulberger be perpetually enjoined from levying upon said land, or from asserting adversely to plaintiff any lien, right, or claim under and by virtue of the judgment, execution and levy thereon described in the plaintiff's petition," and for costs.
Upon the death of S.C. Reed the land described in the petition descended to and vested in her seven children, without being subject, however, to partition so long as the guardian of the appellee might be "permitted, under the order of the proper court having the jurisdiction, to use and occupy the same." Const., art. 16, sec. 52. And the defendants in execution became seized and vested of an undivided interest therein of one-seventh each, making an undivided interest of four-sevenths of the land owned by them in fee simple, subject only to the use and occupation thereof as a homestead by the appellee, through her guardian, so long as he might be permitted so to do under the order of the proper court.
The interest of the defendants in execution was such as could be levied on and sold under the judgment against them. Smith v. Crosby,
There can be no reason why the sale should be enjoined. It is not proposed to sell the exempt property of the appellee for a debt against her. She is in possession of the land, and the purchaser at the sale would buy with full notice of whatever right she had. No guardianship has ever been taken out upon estate, and she has inherited no homestead right from her mother. Such right is continued to her to be enjoyed only in the manner provided by law. The sale can not operate to dispossess the appellee, deprive her of the enjoyment of the homestead, or embarrass her in any manner. It is only of the interest of the defendants in execution in the land, and an injunction will not lie to restrain it. Whitman v. Willis,
Reversed and rendered. *98