Hart v. McDade

61 Tex. 208 | Tex. | 1884

Stayton, Associate Justice.

— Both parties claim title to the land in controversy through John H. Herndon, to whom it was patented on the 24th of June, 1875, prior to which time he is not shown to have owned the land or certificate on which the patent issued.

Herndon conveyed to Cole, June 18, 1877, and Cole to the appellee, January 10, 1878, and those deeds were not recorded until October 20 and 27, 1883.

On the 12th of April, 1867, Gass and others recovered a judgment. in the district court for Brazoria county against John H. Herndon and F. J. Calvit, under which it does not appear that any execution ever issued against John II. Herndon or Calvit.

On the 8th of July, 1881, an execution issued under the Gass judgment, or a judgment of same date, against S. C. and B. M. Herndon, as executors of the will of John H. Herndon, deceased, and under this the land was sold and bought by E. A. Shapard, under whom the" appellants claim through deed executed September 15, 1881, which was recorded October 29, 1881.

*211It does nob appear that the judgment in favor of Gass and others, and against John H. Herndon and Galvit, was ever revived against his executors or himself; nor does it appear from the statement of facts that Herndon is not yet alive.

The execution commands the sheriff, that of the goods and chattels, lands and tenements of the said S. 0. and B. IVI. Herndon, executors of the will of J. H. Herndon, deceased, you causé to be made,” etc.

The statement of facts shows that John H. Herndon was adjudicated a bankrupt, and that he received his discharge on November 23, 1869.

It further shows that the Gass judgment, which seems to have been for negro hire, was embraced in Herndon’s schedule of indebtedness.

The appellee showed a regular chain of title from the sovereignty of the soil tO] himself, and was entitled to recover unless the defendants showed a better title. They did not show an older title even in form, and if the proceedings under which they claim were regular, and in any event would pass title as against Herndon, there surely was no lien on the land though the Gass judgment, which would attach and relate to the time Herndon acquired the land, for no execution ever issued on that judgment, so far as the record shows. Snow v. Nash, 50 Tex., 216; Bassett v. Proetzel, 53 Tex., 569.

The appellants, however, claim that the proceedings under which their vendor bought were sufficient to pass title, and that they are innocent purchasers.

We are of the opinion that the proceedings through which the appellants claim title were insufficient to pass title to any one, even if the land had not been sold by Herndon prior to the time the execution under the Gass judgment was levied upon it. Newsom v. Newsom, 4 Iredell (Law), 381; Douglas v. Whiting, 28 Ill., 366; Freeman on Executions, 421. It is well settled that a person who claims title through an execution sale must show a judgment on which the execution is founded. Freeman on Judgments, 43; Criswell v. Ragsdale, 18 Tex., 445.

In this case a judgment against Herndon and Calvit was shown to have been rendered April 12,1867, and no other judgment was shown.

The execution under which the sale was made recites the rendition of a judgment on the 12th of April, 1867, in favor of Gass et al. against S. C. and B. M. Herndon, executors of the will of J. H. Herndon, deceased, and it commanded the sheriff to make the money out of the property of the persons who were styled executors.

*212The judgment against Herndon and Oalvit would not support this execution, for it does not refer to that judgment as the authority for its issuance, nor in any way connect itself with it.

If it be true that John H. Herndon was dead, and that the judgment against him had been revived against the executors of his will, then such judgment should have been shown, and even then the production of such a judgment would not have been sufficient to authorize the issuance of an execution against the property of Herndon’s estate in the hands of executors, unless it was further shown that this was authorized by the judgment of revivor, or that, under the terms of Herndon’s will, the executors were authorized to administer his estate independent of and freed from the control of the probate court. R. S., 2275; Kendrick v. Rice, 16 Tex., 260.

If, however, all these things had been shown, the execution would not have authorized the sale in form and manner drawn, for it uses no language indicating that it is to be satisfied out of property belonging to the estate of Herndon, or empowering the officer to seize and sell any property of that estate for that purpose.

This view of the case renders it unnecessary to inquire whether the discharge of the judgment against Herndon, by his discharge in bankruptcy, withdrew all power to issue an execution on that judgment; as does it to consider whether an execution, if that offered in evidence could be considered an execution against Herndon or his estate, after the lapse of about fourteen years from the rendition of the judgment, no act of diligence being shown, would not be void.

However this may be, if the question whether the purchasers under the execution were innocent purchasers was a real and vital question in the case, it would seem that, if the execution on so old a judgment appeared, as did the one in question, to be an original, and on its face based on a barred judgment, that such irregularity, if we call it nothing more, would be such as to put a purchaser on inquiry, which, if properly directed, would have resulted in notice that the judgment had been fully discharged in bankruptcy, and to such a person a purchaser under the execution would give no title which he could urge against a person holding by prior purchase from John H. Herndon.

The judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

[Opinion delivered February 27, 1884.]

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