75 Tex. 24 | Tex. App. | 1889
On the 5th day of December, 1884, G.
Following the directions of the trust deed the lands were sold by the trustee to himself, and he made a deed conveying them to himself.
He paid part of the proceeds of the sale to the creditors whose claims were secured by the deed of trust, and for the balance he executed to each ■creditor his note for so much of the balance as was due to him.
The creditors accepted without objection the notes in lieu of cash, and do not now complain.
Appellants, who were unsecured creditors of G. W. Davis, recovered judgment against him and purchased the lands sold under the trust deed at the sale made by virtue of an execution issued from said judgment.
This suit is brought by them against G. W. Davis and the purchasers ■of the land through the trustee’s sale, for the recovery of the lands. The petition is in the usual form of an action of trespass to try title, and de-fendants, among other things, pleaded not guilty.
Ho issue of fraud was tendered by the pleadings. Judgment was rendered on the verdict of a jury in favor of defendants.
The deed to L. G. Davis was from himself as trustee to himself as an individual. It was not witnessed, and at the trial he was permitted, over plaintiffs’ objection, to testify to the fact of its execution.
The following are the only errors assigned:
“1. The court erred in permitting L. G. Davis to testify to the execution of the deed.
“2. The court erred in refusing to charge the jury, at plaintiffs’ request, that in order to enable a trustee to convey any title by virtue of a .sale made by him under a deed of trust, the proof should show that all material directions as to the mode and manner of executing the trust were complied with by him.
“ 3. The court erred in failing to charge, as requested by plaintiffs, that a deed made by a trustee to himself individually is null and void/’
We find no error in any of these proceedings. It was held by this court in the case of Howards v. Davis, 6 Texas, 183 (and the doctrine has been approved in subsequent cases), that a mortgagee with power to sell may purchase at his own sale, made at public auction. In that case it was said:
“ A mortgagee is a trustee, but in a qualified sense.- He does not hold ior the benefit of others, but for himself. He is a cestui que trust as well as trustee. He has an interest in the property. It is pledged ex*26 pressly to secure his claim, and were he deprived of the power to purchase he might suffer great loss by its sale at a low price. He has an interest that the bid shall amount to his encumbrance, and that the property be not sacrificed, to the injury as well of the mortgagor as the defeat of his own claim, as this may be the only fund for the discharge of his debt. Sales at foreclosures, whether under a power or by decree, are open and public and are made after long notice; and it is to the interest of the mortgagor that the mortgagee should enter into the competition at the sale.”
The only distinction between this case and others on the same subject is, that while in the others only a debt to the mortgagee making the sale was secured, in this other creditors are also secured and interested in the property. We see no substantial reason why the rule should not embrace such cases as this.
If by any means the trust is abused as to the other beneficiaries by the trustee, they have their remedy. In this case they make no complaint. The same may be said about the execution to the other beneficiaries by the trustee and purchaser of his_ notes for their shares of the proceeds of the sale instead of paying them in money. They do not complain, and other creditors can not.
There is no reason why the grantor in a deed may not testify to its execution, in any case, when it is offered in evidence.
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Delivered November 5, 1889.