Malone v. Kaufman

38 Tex. 454 | Tex. | 1873

McAdoo, J.

The contract on which this suit is based is a new one, entered into by a third party, and one óf the parties to an old one.

Hughes sold lot 1, block 314, in the city of Galveston,1 to Malone, taking two notes of Malone as part of the purchase price of the lot. Malone and wife also executed a deed of trust for Hughes’ benefit, the property being made a homestead.

In 1866, $2000 being still due on the two notes, at the request of Malone, Kaufman, the appellee, advanced the money to Malone to take up these two notes.

They were taken up and canceled, together with the deed of trust.

In consideration of this advancement of the money to Malone to relieve the homestead from the burden of these two purchase money notes, Malone executed two, new notes to Kaufman, and he and his wife executed a deed of trust to secure Kaufman in this advancement made to *457take up the two notes for purchase money, to the holder of the notes to Hughes.

This was a new contract, and between different parties; not between Malone- and Hughes, but between Malone and Kaufman.

The moment the money was paid to the holder of the purchase money notes, no matter whence derived,' the purchase money was paid, the vendor’s lien on the lot was discharged, and the deed of trust for the benefit of Hughes, the vendor, became null.

Had Kaufman dealt with the holder of the purchase money notes, paid his money to him as a purchaser of the notes, the vendor’s lien would have inured to him as an incident to the notes. But he saw fit to make a new contract; to deal with Malone and not with the holder of the notes; and the new contract, not being for purchase money, but being for money loaned, the contract is not such an one as can subject the homestead to forced sale,, whatever may have been the intention of the parties to the contract at the time.

It is evident that the parties did undertake, by this new contract, to substitute the new contract for the old. They did intend to invest the new contract with the superior force of a vendor’s lien; but still it is not a contract for purchase money, which alone could give it that force, and the courts of this State cannot enforce a contract of the kind. The Constitution absolutely forbids forced sales of the homestead, except for purchase money, and the courts are thereby prohibited from making such orders of sale, though the parties, at the time of making the contract, intended it to have the force of a vendor’s lien. The vendor’s lien is not the creature of contract, but is an incident to a contract for the purchase of land, growing out of that specific kind of contract by operation of law.

The principle above stated in regard to the non-subro*458gation to the rights of the holder of the vendor’s lien, is clearly laid down in Flynn v. Flanagan, 25 Texas, 778; also in Nott’s Appeal, 45 Penn. S. E., 361; and Stancel v. Roberts et al., 13 Ohio, 156; and in Skaggs et al. v. Nelson, 25 Miss. R., 94.

The question raised in the appellee’s brief, that the property cost more than $2000 at the time of its purchase, and when dedicated as a homestead — the city homestead being limited to $2000 at the time the contract was made— we think is of no force in this case, because the form of this suit is such as not to reach the collection of the debt against the estate of Edward Malone. This suit is for the foreclosure of the vendor’s lien on the property occupied as a homestead. There is no vendor’s lien secured, in the contract, and no cause of action, therefore, exists against Mrs. Malone.

The judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.

Eevebsed aed bemaeded.