140 S.W. 846 | Tex. App. | 1911
The evidence conclusively showed that appellees had perfected a title by five and ten years limitation, but it is claimed by appellant that there was no final judgment in the case of Crawford, administrator, against Milner, and that the possession of appellees did not form a basis for limitations, but that the pending action would prevent the running of the statute in favor of the Crawford estate or its privies. The rule as to a purchaser pendente lite is held to be based on notice to him by the pending suit of the adverse claim of the party litigating the title as against his vendor, and in this instance, during the pendency of the suit, a purchaser would be put upon notice that Milner was claiming the land under a bond for title from John F. Crawford, deceased, and was demanding a deed from his administrator, who set up a failure to pay the purchase money, and demanded a foreclosure of the vendor's lien against Milner and a sale of the land to satisfy the claim. He was also notified that a jury had returned a verdict, vesting the title to the land in Milner, subject to a lien to secure the purchase money, that a sale was had under and by virtue of the judgment, and that Milner had in no way shown any dissatisfaction with the judgment, and had made no effort to have it set aside. The facts further *847 showed that Milner had fully acquiesced in the disposition of the case, and by his acts recognized its validity and vitality for more than 30 years. Even if it be admitted that there was no final judgment in the cause, the acts of Milner showed an abandonment of his suit, and full acquiescence in the disposition made as to him. Neither of the parties treated the matter as pending, but acted as though there had been a full adjudication of all matters of controversy, and we think that the doctrine of lis pendens would have no application, and that appellees had acquired a title to the land under five and ten years limitation.
As before stated, it is held in opinions of courts, and by text-writers, that the effect of lis pendens is wholly referable to the general doctrine of constructive notice; but a different theory has been adopted by some courts, which hold that lis pendens affects a purchaser, not because it amounts to notice, but because the law does not allow litigant parties to give to others, pending the litigation, rights to the property in dispute which would prejudice the opposite party, and from both lines of decisions Mr. Pomeroy has formulated this general rule: "During the pendency of an equitable suit, neither party to the litigation can alienate the property in dispute, so as to affect the rights of his opponent." Pomeroy, Eq. Jur. § 633. However, under either view of the doctrine of lis pendens, the result is the same, and the same essentials must exist to create a case in which the doctrine can apply; and the rule always is that the effect of the suit as notice continues through the time of its pendency, and ends when the suit terminates in a final judgment. However, a purchaser pendente lite will not be affected, unless the suit is prosecuted in good faith, with all reasonable diligence, and without unnecessary delay. This is an old, well-established doctrine of the English courts, and is followed by American courts and text-writers. Hays v. Nourse,
It follows that it becomes unnecessary, perhaps, to decide as to the finality of the judgment, although it is the rule that every reasonable presumption is indulged to sustain a judgment, and it would take no violent presumption to sustain the judgment in question, and to uphold the validity of the sale thereunder. The record is silent as to the disposition made of certain parties to the suit, and the rule is that where the record is silent as to what was done it will be presumed, after a long lapse of time especially, that what ought to have been done was done, and properly done. Hunton v. Nichols,
The judgment is affirmed.