140 Tex. 200 | Tex. | 1942
delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.
In this suit Mrs. Dora Votaw Hightower, survivor in community of Judge L. B. Hightower, deceased, joined by the
Under the view which we entertain of the controlling question it becomes unnecessary for us to consider the grounds upon which the Court of Civil Appeals ordered the case retried, and we shall, therefore, take no notice thereof in this opinion.
Both parties filed applications for writs of error and each was granted. Hence the case is before us for consideration upon the theories of each of the parties. We have concluded, however, that the pivotal point upon which the case should turn is that raised by assignment of error No. one in the application of Mrs. Hightower, et al, and our opinion will be limited to a discussion thereof. That assignment questions the authority of Judge Hightower, without the joinder, knowledge or consent of his wife, to execute the renewal and extension contract and deed of trust and thereby renew and extend the - original obligation and lien as against the homestead rights of his wife. If he had no such authority and his contract and deed of trust were void as to the homestead, then Uvalde Rock Asphalt Company is reduced to a reliance upon the original contract and lien which were barred by limitation before the suit was filed.
The specific question for decision is this: Where the homestead right has completely vested and thereafter a mechanic’s or materialman’s lien for improvements is created on such homestead by the husband and wife jointly, as authorized by the constitution, may the husband alone, without the knowledge and consent of the wife execute a valid contract of renewal and extension of such obligation and lien? At a former term this question was certified to us in this case, but we dismissed the certificate without considering it, 135 Texas 410, 144 S. W. (2d) 533.
Mrs. Hightower concedes that the husband alone may renew or extend a vendor’s lien or any other incumbrance which existed prior to the complete investiture of the homestead rights, and that this would also be true as to a tax lien. Since the wife does not join in the creation of such liens in the first instance, she need not join in an extension or renewal thereof. White v. Shepperd, 16 Texas 163; Clements v. Lacy, 51 Texas 150; Cooper v. Hinman et ux, 235 S. W. 564. But that rule has not been extended to include a mechanic’s or materialman’s lien, which is created by the joinder of the husband and wife after the homestead rights have completely vested.
“* * * But it is argued that after the incumbrance of the mechanic’s lien was placed upon the homestead, which was not shown to be her separate property, the husband had the power to renew the note and make any other arrangements necessary in connection with the debt; and decisions holding that the husband has the power and authority to adjust equities, and make any bona fide arrangements that he may deem proper in paying off incumbrances on the homestead, have been cited. It is well settled that the husband alone may in good faith adjust equities existing prior to the complete investiture of homestead rights, but in no case has it been held that he has such authority in regard to debts contracted after the homestead right has been perfected, and which have become a burden on the homestead through the necessary participation of the wife in the statutory mode. * * * We conclude that the husband has no power to renew a debt against the homestead, extend time of payment, or in any wise change the same, after the homestead right has been perfected; * *
The question was again presented in Sudduth v. DuBose, 98 S. W. 235 (no writ of error history) in which the facts were essentially the same as those in the case before us, and the rule announced in the case of Loan Association v. Stewart was again approved and applied. The opinion in that case drew an analogy from the field of the law of suretyship and held that the unauthorized renewal of the indebtedness and lien operated to release the wife’s homestead, which was regarded as a surety. In that case, as in this, the wife was not personally obligated to pay the indebtedness secured by the lien, because it was not such an obligation as she was authorized to incur.
The rule announced in the cases above cited is also announced in Speers Law of Marital Rights, 3rd Edition, Sec. 481, p. 588. In Nunn’s Texas Homestead and Other Exemptions the rule
“* * * It has been held, however, that if the lien be one that is placed upon the homestead after the homestead rights have attached to the property, as in the case of a lien for improvements thereon, then the wife must join in'the instrument extending or adjusting such lien, in that, such lien is one that is attached to the homestead as distinguished from one as against which no homestead rights attach; but, to the writer, the distinction is not grounded in reason, in that, a lien for improvements, when properly executed, is superior to the homestead rights, and if foreclosed, will defeat the homestead ' rights, and that in this respect, there is no difference between it and a vendor’s lien, or one placed on the property prior to its dedication to the homestead use.”
Whether or not the rule is subject to the criticism leveled at it will not be considered here. It has been the established rule in this State for many years, recognized by textwriters and courts and should not now be changed by judicial decree.
We shall not separately discuss the authorities cited in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals. In our opinion no one of them presents the exact question here decided. In some of them the lien existed prior to the acquisition of the homestead. In others the wife joined in the renewal contract, the only irregularity being that her acknowledgment was not statutory. In none to which we have been referred has it been held that a husband alone without the joiner or consent of his wife may execute a valid renewal of a lien for improvements upon the homestead which was created after the complete investiture of the homestead rights.
It results from the foregoing that, in our opinion, the trial court entered a correct judgment. It is accordingly ordered that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals be reversed and that the judgment of the trial court affirmed.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court December 2, 1942.
Rehearing overruled January 6, 1943.