Eor the sake of brevity, the plaintiff in error and the defendants in error will be termed plaintiff and defendants.
On the 9th day of September, 1909, plaintiff conveyed to defendant Jim Robinson, Jr., 40 acres of land in Lubbock county, Tex., receiving as a part consideration for said conveyance two notes- of that date, each for the sum of $3,500, payable to the plaintiff on or before one and two years after date, respectively, and signed by said defendant, to secure the payment of which note an express vendor’s lien was retained in the conveyance. On tbe same day there was executed by plaintiff a power of attorney appointing one Posey his attorney in fact to execute releases of the vendor’s lien upon lots as they were sold and the money deposited in the Lubbock State Bank.
There were payments upon the two notes, but, when they were not paid as a whole, suit was instituted in the district court of Lubbock county, cause No. 834. Upon the trial of that case judgment was rendered for plaintiff in part and for defendants in part, and appeal was taken to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Seventh Supreme Judicial District. Under agreement of counsel the only question which the Court .of Civil Appeals was to adjudicate was whether or not the district court had properly construed the power of attorney to Posey. The Court of Civil Appeals held that the district court had not properly construed that instrument, and reversed and remanded the case. Stone v. Robinson et al.,
The case being again tried before the district court, judgment was rendered by that court refusing relief to plaintiff, and ordering that the plaintiff take nothing by his suit as against all of the defendants. The case was again appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals of the Seventh Supreme Judicial District, and upon hearing was affirmed.
The plaintiff, abandoning any further effort to insist upon his foreclosure, having
The district court instructed the jury to •return a verdict against the plaintiff, and on that verdict rendered judgment that plaintiff take nothing by his suit. On appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals at Amarillo, the case was affirmed.
“If the trial had ended with the introduction of mesne conveyances, showing title in him from the state, this contention would be correct. His former suit was an effort to collect the amount of the notes and to foreclose his vendor’s lien. * * * Having been defeated in this effort by appellee’s plea and proof, showing an illegal contract, this action was filed to recover the land, upon the theory that the contract of September 9, 1909, was an executory contract, under which the superior title remained in him. While it is true that under the contract appellant retained the superior title, this fact does not preclude appellee from interposing in this suit as a defense the illegality of the contract which conveyed to him the equitable title. While we think the proof of the illegality in the contract of September 9, 1909, is a defense to appellant’s suit, we do not find it necessary to base the disposition of this appeal upon that issue. In Hall v. Edwards,194 S. W. 674 , this court considered the question of the right of a vendee to set up the illegality of a contract, and held that such a defense was available against the vendor’s effort to recover the land. While the Supreme Court has granted a writ of error, we are not prepared to recede from our holding in that case.”
We believe that this holding was erroneous. Plaintiff and defendants signed and filed in this ease,* and tendered in evidence, . the following agreement in writing:
“It is agreed by and between the plaintiff and the defendants, Jim Robinson, Jr., James Scott, and Mrs. James Scott, that the plaintiff, J. B. Stone, acquired title, from and under the sovereignty of the soil, to the 40 acres of land in controversy, by the following deeds: Deed to 37% acres from R. B. Wood, dated October 22, 1907, as shown by the record thereof on page 479, Volume 17, Deed Records of said county. Deed to 2% acres from W. E. Hinshaw and wife, Ruth S. Hinshaw, dated November 2, 1907, as shown by the record thereof on page 302, Volume 17, Deed Records of said county.”
This test being applied to the case before the court we feel bound to hold that, plaintiff’s title not being in the least dependent upon the lottery scheme, to permit them to use it as a defense would be to permit them to do the very thing the plaintiff could not do. The sale contract and deed are not necessary to establish his title. It makes its appearance before the court as a defensive matter urged by the defendants. They seek to use an illegal transaction not connected with plaintiff’s title to destroy that title. To permit them- to do so would be to permit them to recover by reason of the illegal transaction.
The case of Hall v. Edwards,
In passing upon this question Judge Son-field holds the rule to be that, when plaintiff cannot maintain his cause of action without relying upon the illegal transaction, he cannot recover, citing Read v. Smith,
“Plaintiff in error not seeking the enforcement of the contract, and not invoking it to sustain a remedy, its illegality is no defense. To permit this defense, under the facts herein, would be to create a right or title in defendant in error dependent entirely upon such contract. It would, in effect, be to enforce the contract on her behalf, enabling her to reap a benefit thereunder. The same principles which govern courts in declining to enforce an illegal contract in aid of a plaintiff’s title inhibit its use to create a title in a defendant. Wooden v. Shotwell, 24 N. J. Law, 789.”
We therefore conclude that the Court of Civil Appeals was in error in its. holding upon this question.
We therefore recommend that the judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and the district court in this case be reversed and rendered.
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