136 S.W. 519 | Tex. App. | 1911
Appellant by purchase became the owner of the two notes executed by appellee, and brought suit, averring that they were given as a part of the purchase money for certain land. Appellee, answering, admitted his personal liability on the notes, but denied that they were a part of the purchase money of the land, and specially pleaded, if in fact they were given as a part of the purchase money for the land, that the vendor, at the time the notes were given and delivered, waived and relinquished the vendor's lien as security, and accepted in lieu thereof security on a margin in 14 bales of cotton. In a jury trial, verdict was for appellee on the issue of waiver of lien.
The testimony is conclusive that the notes were a part of the purchase money for the land, but is conflicting as to whether there was a waiver of the vendor's lien on the land at the time by the vendor and appellee. The notes, nor deed, did not recite a lien on the land for these notes. The notes on their face recited: "It is agreed that this note is secured by a margin on 14 b. c. in warehouse owned by the indorser [maker] hereof." The testimony of the vendor was that this security was merely additional, and that the lien on the land was not waived, or intended to be waived, by the parties. The appellee's testimony was that it was agreed that this security was to be instead of any lien on the land.
By the second assignment error is predicated upon the following portion of the court's charge: "The burden is on the plaintiff, Noblett, to show by a preponderance of the evidence that there was an implied lien on the land described in plaintiff's petition, and that in taking the lien on the margin in said cotton that it was not intended and understood by the parties to be a waiver of the vendor's lien, or implied lien, for the unpaid purchase money on the land." It is the settled law that in every case of sale of real estate, where the purchase money is not paid, a lien exists by operation of law in favor of the vendor to secure the payment, unless it be otherwise agreed by the parties, either expressly or by acts showing that the lien was not intended to be retained.
And it is the established rule that the taking of security on chattels or other things, if unexplained, by the vendor, is evidence of an implied waiver of a vendor's lien. But the presumption of abandonment or waiver of the vendor's lien from the taking of other security is only an inference of fact, and is open to rebuttal by evidence that such was not the intention of the parties. Ellis v. Singletary,
But upon proof of the taking of other security there then exists prima facie evidence of the waiver of the vendor's lien. And unless the prima facie evidence of waiver is rebutted by the vendor by satisfactory evidence that it ought not to have that effect, the vendor cannot enforce the lien on the land. This is a rule of evidence casting the burden of proof on the whole case on the plaintiff in the case, and on the defendant in the first instance the onus of proving that the vendor agreed to waive the lien. It is the rule of evidence that, upon proof that the purchase money was not paid, prima facie the lien exists; and it lies on the vendee, in order to escape judgment of foreclosure of the lien, to show that the vendor agreed to waive it. Briscoe v. Bronaugh,
The objection to the charge is that it erroneously cast the burden on appellant as to the waiver of the lien on the land. Doubtless the court intended by the instruction to merely cast the burden of proof upon appellant on the whole case. It is doubted that the verbiage was apt to support that intention, and not subject to the objection offered. And in the light of the testimony the charge, it must be said, was especially prejudicial error. It operated as a charge on the weight of evidence, by requiring the jury to presume that it was the apparent intention of the parties to release the lien and rely only on the cotton margin as security. And in effect, in singling out the mere act of taking security on the cotton margin, that particular part of the evidence was stressed before the jury, and they were required to attach weight and value to that single act, against appellant. As said in the case of Flanagan v. Cushman, supra, in respect to taking other security: "If the purchase money is unpaid, it will not be presumed that the lien is waived or abandoned, if, in view of the entire transaction, it appears that it was not the intention to release the land and to rely upon other security." When sufficiency of circumstances to establish a fact is an issue, an instruction which tells or operates to tell the jury what might be presumed is on the weight of evidence, and an unwarranted invasion of the province of the jury.
As said in the case of Heldt v. Webster,
The judgment is ordered reversed, and the case remanded for another trial.