50 S.W.2d 786 | Tex. | 1932
The material facts set out in the certificate are substantially as follows:
On November 21, 1918, one C. B. Granbury deeded to one Ed Cochran a tract of about 1,500 acres of land in San Jacinto County. For part of the consideration for the conveyance, *582 Cochran executed to Granbury three notes for $4,865.44 each. The notes were numbered 1, 2 and 3, respectively, and were payable one, two and three years from date. The vendor's lien on said land, to secure the payment of the notes, was expressly retained in the deed. The deed was duly recorded. On April 1, 1920, Cochran deeded to Ralph and Elmer Gardner a tract of 160 acres of the 1,500 acres covered by the deed from Granbury to Cochran. This deed to the Gardners was duly recorded June 3, 1920. After notes numbers two and three fell due, Granbury assigned them, together with the vendor's lien securing same, to the Cleveland State Bank. The bank afterwards brought suit against Ed Cochran on said two notes; and for foreclosure of the vendor's lien on the 1,500 acres of land. Neither Granbury nor the Gardners were parties to that suit. Judgment was rendered in said suit on April 6, 1922, in favor of the bank against Cochran, for the sum due on the two notes, and the vendor's lien on the 1,500 acres of land was foreclosed. At the foreclosure sale, under said judgment, the bank became the purchaser of all the land, including the 160 acres in the possession of the Gardners, which they held under their deed from Cochran. In the purchase, the bank bid the sum due on the judgment; the amount bid being credited on the judgment. The sheriff executed to the bank a deed to all said land. The question which has been certified is, in effect, whether or not, by its purchase at said sale, the bank became vested with the superior legal title to all said land, including said 160 acres, and thus became entitled to maintain a suit in trespass to try title against the Gardners, for said 160 acres.
1 It is well settled that where a subvendee holding the land under the original vendee, in an executory sale of land, is not a party to a foreclosure suit on unpaid purchase money notes executed by the original vendee, the foreclosure judgment and sale do not affect the rights of said subvendee. But the purchaser at such sale, if he holds the superior legal title which remained in the original vendor when the executory sale was made, may, by virtue of such legal title, maintain a suit of trespass to try title against the subvendee, and recover the land held by him, unless the latter pay the purchase money chargeable against said land. Pierce v. Moreman,
2, 3 The assignment, by Granbury to the bank, of two of the purchase money notes which Cochran had executed did not effect a transfer to the bank of the superior legal title to the land covered by the deed from Granbury to Cochran. Said superior legal title remained in Granbury. Nothing passed to the bank, under said assignment, except the two notes and the vendor's lien by which they were secured. When the bank brought its suit against Cochran, the bank was a mere lienholder, and held no title, either legal or equitable, to the land involved in that suit. Farmers Loan Trust Company v. Beckley,
What we have said indicates our answer to the question certified, and we recommend that it be so answered.
The opinion of the Commission of Appeals answering the certified questions is adopted and ordered certified.
C. M. CURETON, Chief Justice.