16 S.W. 19 | Tex. | 1891
The following, in quotation marks, is adopted from appellant's brief:
"Suit by appellees against appellant in the District Court upon a note executed by appellant to the order of Mrs. Maggie Dennis, wife of I.N. Dennis, for $400, purchase money of a lot in the town of Wharton conveyed to appellant by Mrs. Dennis and husband, the note and deed retaining an express vendor's lien. The note was indorsed by Mrs. Dennis and delivered to her husband, and was by her husband then delivered before maturity to appellees, and afterward before maturity, but after the wife's death, the husband also indorsed it. Before the note fell due Mrs. Dennis died intestate, leaving surviving her the husband and four minor children, there being no guardian administrator. The lot was the separate property of Mrs. Dennis, and her deed to appellant was duly recorded, and was a deed with general warranty. Appellant, who was defendant below, answered that the transfer of the note by Mrs. Dennis did not pass her title in the lot, which remained in her by reason of the vendor's lien being expresssly retained, and there being no separate acknowledgment of the wife and the husband not joining in the assignment; that the defendant was ready and willing to pay the note whenever she could safely do so; that the superior title which remained in Mrs. Dennis upon the sale to appellant had descended *342 at her death to her minor children and husband, and that they ought to be made parties to the suit in order that their title might be vested in defendant and a perfect title received by her upon paying the purchase money note, contending that under her deed and the tenor and effect of the note she was entitled to a release from the heirs of Mrs. Dennis of the superior title, and that appellees not having received any title, could not make a valid release of it. The same point was specially raised by plea in abatement, asking that the heirs of Mrs. Dennis be made parties and that they be divested of their title in favor of defendant upon her paying the purchase money note."
Colonel Dennis testified that he sold and delivered the notes to the appellees for a valuable consideration, with the knowledge and consent of his wife, and that subsequently at the request of plaintiff after her death he also indorsed the note by writing his name under hers. The note was a negotiable promissory note. The deed from Mrs. Dennis and her husband to the land, and conveying it to appellant, was duly executed and acknowledged and contained a full covenant of general warranty, and was to all intents and purposes an absolute conveyance of the land in fee simple, except that it expressly retained a lien on the land to secure the payment of the balance of the purchase money. The appellant took and now holds possession of the land under the deed and does not offer to abandon and reconvey. The plaintiffs demanded payment of the note and tendered (one day before maturity of the note, allowing grace), and again tendered in the court below a full written release of the vendor's lien and the land, but defendant refused to pay the note and accept the release. She through her attorney tendered to an unauthorized agent of the plaintiffs the amount of the note, but only on condition that plaintiffs should first procure for her a release or conveyance of the supposed interest of the heirs and children of Mrs. Dennis in the land. The court below held that they had none and were not necessary parties.
The mere statement of the case, it appears to us, amply vindicates the correctness of the rulings on these particulars of the learned special judge who presided at the trial in the District Court, and this appeal might be disposed of by reference to the opinion of the Supreme Clourt at the present term, delivered in the case of Ogburn v. Whitlow,supra 239, and the authorities there cited. We are not called upon in this case to determine whether the rule of decision, for so many years recognized by numerous adjudications in this State, that where upon sale of land the vendor expressly retains a lien for the payment of the purchase money in the deed and note that the superior title remains in him, and that in case of default in payment it is optional with him to rescind the contract as being executory merely and reclaim the land, or enforce the lien and recover the purchase money, though we may observe that recent decisions seem to point to the ultimate abandonment of this rule *343
in its full rigor, or at least to a modification thereof. Stitzle v. Evans,
Having disposed of all the questions raised by appellant, we conclude that the judgment ought to be affirmed.
Affirmed.
Adopted March 24, 1891. *344