This suit involves an undertaking by appellant to assert a lien alleged to have been acquired by filing an abstract of a judgment. Judgment for the sum of $8,-938.67 was rendered in favor of appellant against C. C. Hutchison and another on October 31, 1932. C. C. Hutchison died on' January 15, 1933, and his widow was appointed administratrix of his estate on August 2, 1933. An abstract of said judgment was filed in the office of the county clerk of Montague County, the county in which the land in question lies, on June 10, 1934.
The effect of the judgment of the trial court was to deny appellant’s claim of a judgment lien on the land in question. If his judgment was correct upon any proper theory of law, it should be affirmed.
Although other questions are raised on the appeal, we consider that the judgment must be affirmed for the reasons herein shown.
The abstract of the judgment was neither issued nor filed in the office of the county clerk until after C. C. Hutchison, the judgment debtor, had died, and after his widow had been appointed administra-trix of his estate. At the time of his death the judgment was, therefore, merely an unsecured claim against his estate. Art.
In construing the above statute, our Supreme Court has said that a money judgment against a deceased defendant is a claim to be proved up and paid in due course of administration. Jenkins v. Cain,
A sale under execution issued after the death of the judgment debtor, he having been alive at the time the judgment was rendered, is void in the sense that it is inoperative to pass title, and may be attacked either directly or collaterally. Grissom v. F. W. Heitmann Co., Tex.Civ.App.,
The filing of an abstract of judgment is ineffective after receivership proceedings have been begun and the property is in custodia legis. San Antonio Loan & Trust Co. v. Davis, Tex.Civ.App.,
In Clingman v. Hopkie,
If it be true that a judgment rendered against the debtor during his lifetime ceases to have the force of a judgment upon his death, and becomes merely a claim which must be presented to the administrator and prosecuted as any other money claim against the estate, we are not able to see that th'e judgment creditor could improve the status of his claim by a procedure had outside the course of the administration, that is, by the filing of an abstract of the judgment. It seems to us that the status of the claim, whether secured or unsecured, becomes fixed at the time of the death of the judgment debtor. The application of any other rule would impair the jurisdiction of the probate court over the property of the deceased and would interrupt the orderly administration of the estate.
We hold that the filing of the abstract of judgment after the death of the judgment debtor was ineffective to create a lien on the land belonging to his estate.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
