213 S.W. 925 | Tex. | 1919
Plaintiffs in error brought this suit to recover a judgment against Ben Polk and G.E. Cobern upon their note, and to subject to its payment 335 acres of land, attached by plaintiffs in error and alleged to have been conveyed by G.E. Cobern to his mother, Mrs. M.S. Rollo, in fraud of his creditors.
The trial court rendered judgment, awarding to plaintiffs in error *576 all the relief sought by them, which was reversed on appeal of G.E. Cobern and Mrs. M.S. Rollo.
The judgment of the trial court was based upon a special verdict by the jury, to the effect that $7404 was the reasonable cash market value of the 335 acres of land and personal property, conveyed by Cobern to Mrs. Rollo; that $2625 was the amount in which Cobern was then justly indebted to Mrs. Rollo; that some time between 1905 and 1910 Cobern had delivered to Mrs. Rollo his note for $5800, on a consideration of $2625; that it was not Cobern's purpose in conveying the 335 acres and other property, in good faith to prefer her as a creditor, but his purpose and intent was to hinder, delay, and defraud his creditors, of which purpose and intent Mrs. Rollo did not know; and that at the time the attachment was levied Cobern, being a married man, was using the 335 acres of land as his home.
In addition to these special verdicts, the trial court expressly found that Cobern had no homestead claim to the 335 acres of land at the time he conveyed same to Mrs. Rollo, not being the head of a family at that time, and that the conveyance to Mrs. Rollo for $7404 worth of property was fraudulent, in that it was made in satisfaction of an indebtedness from Cobern to Mrs. Rollo for only $2625.
We are unable to approve the contention of counsel for Mrs. Rollo that the conveyance to her must be held valid on the jury's finding that Cobern had previously delivered to her a note, promising payment of an amount equal to the value of the property conveyed, which was discharged by the conveyance. For, though Cobern had the right to execute a voluntary note to his mother, which would not be subject to attack by subsequent creditors, because voluntary, yet a note made with no real intention of payment or for the purpose of defrauding creditors would be void as against existing or future creditors. Rives v. Stephens,
Black v. Vaughan,
The same doctrine, with its foundation in reason, is succinctly stated in Coughran v. Edmondson,
The Court of Civil Appeals announced that it did not hold that the 335 acres was Cobern's homestead at the date of the conveyance to Mrs. Rollo, noting that the jury had made no such finding. We can not say that the trial judge was not warranted in making his specific finding that the 335 acres was not used for the purpose of a home by a family of which Cobern was head at the date he conveyed same to his mother. Hence, the determining question in the case is, what was the legal effect, as against a creditor of Cobern, of his fraudulent conveyance of property, which was not exempt at the date of his conveyance, but which he later occupied, after having become the head of a family?
The view of the Court of Civil Appeals was that since plaintiffs in error sought to subject the property to the payment of their debt, as the property of Cobern, they were estopped to deny that he had such title, subsequent to his conveyance, as would support his claim of homestead.
In our opinion, the law is well settled that after Cobern conveyed the land to Mrs. Rollo he could assert no right, title, or interest therein.
In discussing the effect of a fraudulent conveyance, in Fowler v. Stoneum,
The case of Willis Bro. v. Smith,
The principle is reaffirmed in Rilling v. Schultze,
Cobern had no title or interest in the 335 acres of land, to which a homestead exemption could attach, subsequent to his conveyance to Mrs. Rollo. Smith v. Uzzell,
Notwithstanding Cobern's fraudulent conveyance, the 335 acres remained, however, subject to the payment of plaintiff in error's debt. To the extent necessary to accomplish satisfaction of the debt, the conveyance was as though it had never been made. Having the right to have the property sold to satisfy the debt, as though the conveyance had not been made, plaintiffs in error availed themselves of an appropriate means of enforcing their right, in suing out the attachment against Cobern. Execution is the ordinary process by which property is subjected to the payment of a debt. Attachment is in a sense "an execution in advance." Rempe v. Ravens,
It is ordered that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals be reversed and that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed.
Reversed and judgment of District Court affirmed.
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