54 S.W.2d 547 | Tex. App. | 1932
Appellant, West Texas Construction Company, brought this suit against Mrs. Murrell Adams, alleging her to be the same person as Mrs. Norrell Adams, and husband, C. D. Adams, W. D. Shirey and wife, Katie Shirey, asking judgment against Mrs. Murrell Adams for the amount of its debt, interest, and attorney fees, and the foreclosure of its special assessment lien against all appellees, by reason of a levy on lots 7, 8, and 9, in block 156, South addition to the city of Midland, Tex., the indebtedness stated to be the sum of $473.94, and being for the pro rata part of the cost of paving a portion of Main street in said city of Midland, said city on June 3, 1930, having issued to appellant a certificate of said special assessment levied by said city on November 12, 1929, pursuant to and in compliance with the provisions of chapter
Appellees answered by general demurrer, and special exceptions, and further say that by reason of the facts stated the special assessment, if levied, did not constitute an obligation against any of appellees; that prior to the paving assessment levy appellees Shirey and wife had become bona fide purchasers of said property, without notice; that at the time the street in question was paved and at the time the assessment was levied said property was the homestead of appellees Shirey and wife; and that they did not authorize or agree to said improvement being made. Appellees further answered that the assessment was void and did not create a lien upon said property for the reason that the owner of said property was not properly named in the assessment, and for that reason appellees were not obligated to take notice of any assessment against said property.
At the conclusion of the evidence the court instructed the verdict for appellees, and entered judgment for appellees, from which judgment appellant duly prosecutes this appeal.
By its first proposition appellant submits that a special assessment levied by the city of Midland under said chapter 106, of the Acts of 1927, of the First Called Session of the Fortieth Legislature, shown as article
Section 6 of said chapter
The assessment was levied pursuant to the statute. The rule requiring the name of a property owner to be given in making an assessment is a rule of statutory origin, and where the Legislature does not require that the name of the owner be given, and if not correctly given by express statutory provision, it does not invalidate the assessment. We see no reason why the full effect may not be given the statute. The statute expressly makes three distinct statements: (1) The assessment levy creates a first and prior lien on the property; (2) the lien attaches from the date the improvements are ordered; (3) the assessments fix a personal liability and charge against the owner of the property at the date the improvements are ordered. The error in making the assessment in the name of Murrell Adams, when the true name of *549 the owner is Norrell Adams, is not shown to have prejudiced appellees in any way, and there is nothing shown in the record to break the prima facie assessment levy lien, or the personal liability of the owner of the date of the improvements, unless it be the homestead claim of appellees Shirey and wife, which we will consider later.
Our statute is of recent origin, and we have found no case in this state involving the question presented. Like questions, under similar statutes in other states, have been before the courts, and the view, as above, has uniformly been upheld. Kendig v. Knight,
Under the express provision of the law as above, the lien of the special assessment "attaches to the property assessed upon the date the improvements are ordered," in this instance, on the 29th day of October, 1929; that being the date of the ordinance ordering the improvements on Main street on which the property involved here abuts. Anderson et al. v. Brandon et al. (Tex.Sup.)
The question is presented whether the property in question was the homestead of Shirey and wife on the 29th day of October, 1929, the time the assessment was levied on the property.
Appellees' pleading states, in effect, and the evidence shows, that prior to the matters involved here the property was owned by appellees C. D. Adams and wife, Norrell Adams. C. D. Adams did not testify.
Mrs. Norrell Adams testified she acquired the property in 1927; took title in her name. Adams and wife some time before October, 1929, indicated to Shirey and wife, by parol, that Mrs. Adams would make a gift of the property to Mrs. Shirey; that Mrs. Shirey could have the property in October. Mr. and Mrs. Adams made no delivery of the property to Shirey and wife, but vacated the property before October. Shirey and wife accepted the property as a gift. The property remained vacant from some time before October, 1929, until Shirey and wife moved into the property in February, 1930. Adams and wife executed a deed to Shirey and wife on May 29, 1930, and which deed was filed for record on March 14, 1932. No kind of contract, memorandum of gift or sale, or anything like that, was given before the deed was actually given. Shirey and wife lived at Mineola, Tex., up to the time they moved into the property in February, 1930.
Mrs. Norrell Adams having had title to the property, the title remained in her until the title passed from her to Shirey and wife, and to sustain a claim of homestead in property one must have either a legal or equitable title to the property. As we view the facts, the transaction as to title as it stood on October 29, 1929, was merely a parol promise of the owners to give the property to Mr. and Mrs. Shirey, or to Mrs. Shirey. Shirey and wife had the right to take possession, but they did not do so, and the propety remained vacant for several months next thereafter.
To constitute a valid "gift of land inter vivos," there must be a gratuitous and absolute transfer of the property from the donor to the donee, taking effect immediately, as distinguished from a mere expression of intention to make the gift at some future time, and fully executed by a delivery of the property by the donor and an acceptance of the delivery by the donee. Martin v. Martin (Tex.Civ.App.)
We think the evidence does not show that the title had passed out of Mr. and Mrs. Adams by gift on 29th of October, 1929. As to the claim of Shirey and wife that the property was their homestead on the 29th day of October, 1929, as we view it, the only evidence in the record as to a homestead on the property at that time is the statement of Mrs. Adams to the effect that Mr. and Mrs. Shirey were not able to buy the property and had to have a home. There is no expression or remote intimation in the evidence that Shirey and wife, on the 29th of October, 1929, or at any time, intended to make the property their home; certainly there was at that time no overt act on their part, by taking possession or otherwise indicating such intention.
We have concluded that the title, both equitable and legal, remained in Mrs. Adams on the 29th day of October, 1929, and the evidence does not show a homestead right in Mr. and Mrs. Shirey at that time.
Appellant, in its oral argument before this court, expressly waived any right it had to a personal judgment against Mrs. Adams, and asked judgment establishing its debt, interest, and attorney fee and for a foreclosure of its assessment lien on said property against all appellees with order of sale, etc. *550
We have concluded that the trial court was in error in refusing appellant judgment as prayed for.
The case is reversed, and judgment is here rendered for appellant establishing the amount of its claim, as above, with foreclosure of its assessment lien on said property.