68 Tex. 379 | Tex. | 1887
Appellee as administrator of the estate of John Ivie, deceased, brought this action to recover on notes given to the latter by Compton to secure the purchase money for a tract of land, and to foreclose the lien on the land. John Ivie sold the land to Compton and executed to him a deed with general warranty, reserving in the face of the deed a lien. Compton and wife conveyed the land to May by a deed with general warranty, the latter assuming the payment of the notes sued on.
As a defense May alleged that John Ivie was a married man at the time he acquired title to the land, and that his wife died, leaving children prior to the time the land was sold to Compton. The answer further alleged that there was no administra
The court sustained a demurrer to tliis part of the answer, and this is assigned as error.
There is no clear averment that the land was community property, which would seem to be a proper averment in a case in which one in possession under a deed with general warranty seeks to avoid the payment of a note given for the purchase money of land on the ground of failure of title. The land may have been the separate estate of John Ivie, though bought during marriage, and such a defendant ought not to rely upon the presumption of a fact which he does not allege to be true. If, however, the land was community property, and this had been alleged, still the court did not err in sustaining the demurrer.
This, case is very similar in its facts to that of Brock v. South-wick, 10 Texas, 65, in which it whs held that one who purchases through a deed with general warranty of title, having knowledge of a defect in the title at the time of purchase, can not resist the payment of the purchase money on the ground of the defect in the title, of which he had knowledge. In that case, as in this, it was alleged that the vendor had contracted through another to procure for the vendee a perfect title.
The case of Cooper v. Singleton, 19 Texas, 262, was also very similar in its facts to the case before us, but in that case this court asserted the same rule as in Brock v. Smithwick, and, in considering the sufficiency of the answer, in so far as it set up title in the heirs to community property, which had been sold by the father after the death of the mother, this court said: “There has been no administration on the estate of Mrs. Crisp, as is averred, and in a limited sense it is true that her heirs are entitled to one-half of the land. But their interest may be subject to great modifications, and may be altogether excluded. They are entitled truly to the half of such portion of the common property
This rule is a reasonable one in this class of cases, and had the appellant and his immediate vendor not had notice of- the defect in the title, which he now attempts to set up, the demurrer would have been properly sustained for the want of full averments of the amount, character and condition of the community estate owned by John Ivie and his wife.
There is no error in the judgment, and it will be affirmed.
Affirmed.