105 S.W. 37 | Tex. | 1907
This suit was brought by Ider N. Brooks joined by her husband, J.A. Brooks, to cancel certain conveyances and promissory notes held by defendants which created a purported vendor's lien upon her homestead and to remove them as clouds upon her title. The defendants answered by a general denial, and also pleaded that the tract of land described in plaintiff's petition was sold and conveyed by one Odom to J.A. Brooks, and that the notes were executed by Brooks for the purchase money thereof and expressly retained a lien on the land; and that they had purchased the notes for value and without notice of any claim or defense against them or the lien retained by them. They prayed in reconvention for a judgment on the notes and an enforcement of their lien.
The facts established by the evidence are that one Odom sold to J.A. Brooks a stock of goods, who in part payment therefor executed the notes in controversy. In the first place, however, he had Brooks and wife to execute to him a deed to their homestead, and thereupon he conveyed the property back to Brooks — retaining in the conveyance and notes a purported vendor's lien for their payment. The two conveyances were contemporaneous and the transactions were simulated for the purpose of affixing a lien upon the homestead.
That there was no sale of the land to Odom and no sale of it had to Brooks there is no question. It was merely an attempt to *117 encumber the land by the pretence of fixing a vendor's lien upon it. The attempted lien is clearly void; and the sole question for determination is can Sanger Brothers uphold it by showing that when the notes were transferred to them, they bought without notice of infirmity in the transaction?
Persons may by their conduct estop themselves from asserting homestead rights in property upon which they have given a lien. They may simulate a sale, intending the deed to operate only as a mortgage and the grantee may subsequently sell to another who has no notice of the fact that it was not a real sale. In such case the latter grantee will hold the title. Such was the case of Eylar v. Eylar (
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is accordingly reversed and that of the District Court affirmed.
Reversed and judgment of District Court affirmed.