149 S.W. 286 | Tex. App. | 1912
It appeared from written instruments forming a part of the testimony that Smith purchased the sawmill of appellant December 31, 1909, agreeing thereafterwards to pay appellant $4,000 for same, and that, having failed to pay the $4,000, he on April 25, 1910, conveyed the mill and the lumber in controversy to appellant in satisfaction of the debt. There was no testimony to the contrary of that furnished by the written instruments as stated. Obviously, therefore, it appeared that at the time the writ of attachment was levied the lumber belonged to appellant. Appellees seem to have been of the opinion that the conveyance from Smith to appellant was void as to them, because it appeared that at the time it was made Smith was insolvent and that appellant knew him to be so. If the value of the property reasonably was not more than sufficient for the purpose (and there was no testimony showing it to have been more than sufficient). Smith, though insolvent, had a right to convey it to appellant in satisfaction of the debt, and the mere fact that appellant at the time he accepted the conveyance knew Smith was insolvent would not affect the validity of the transaction. Ellis v. Valentine,
The burden was on appellees to show the lumber to have been subject to their writ. Sayles' Statutes, art. 5302; Lewy v. Fischl,
Appellees having failed to discharge that burden, the judgment should have been in favor of appellant, even though it had appeared that appellees had acquired a laborer's lien on the property; for, never having had and not being entitled to the possession of the property, they were not entitled in such a proceeding to enforce their lien.
But it did not appear that they had acquired a laborer's lien on the property. The testimony was that appellees hauled the logs under a contract with Smith, who was to pay them therefor at the rate of from $1.50 to $4.50 per 1,000 feet, according to the distance they might have to haul the logs. In Sparks v. Lumber Co.,
The judgment will be reversed, and a judgment will be here rendered in favor of appellant.