delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section A.
Defendants in error, J. C. Haralson and others, werе plaintiffs in the trial court, and will be so designated here. Plaintiffs in error, Mrs. Bona Wheeler and husband, were defendants and will bе designated as such here. Plaintiffs sued defendants to recover a 4/5 interest in certain lands in Mills County, Texas. Judgment of the district court was in favor of the defendants, but this judgment was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals and the cause remanded.
We find it wholly unnecessary to set out an extended state
After the execution and delivery of this deed to Mrs. Wheeler she, as administratix of the estate of D. I. Haralson, sold the lands in question to San Saba National Bank in satisfaction of the indebtednеss against said lands. The bank in turn reconveyed the lands to Mrs. Wheeler, reserving a vend- or’s lien. The amount for which this lien was retained was practically the same amount as the indebtedness which the bank previously held. While it appeаrs that this method of handling the matter was probably adopted for the purpose of fixing a vendor’s lien to securе the bank, yet the validity of the deeds mentioned is not attacked.
The basis of plaintiffs’ suit is that plaintiffs conveyed their intеrests in these lands to Mrs. Wheeler to enable her to “refinance the ancestral indebtedness against the said lаnds, with the full and explicit understanding that when the same was done she was to reconvey to plaintiffs their respectivé intеrests in said lands,” subject to said lien indebtedness. Plaintiffs claimed that because of the alleged agreement on the part of Mrs. Wheeler to reconvey to them their interests, after the indebtedness was refinanced and secured, created a trust, and by virtue of this trust they were entitled to recover their interests in the lands. In the brief filed in the Court of Civil Apрeals plaintiffs say that they do not ask that they have title to said property clear of the indebtedness therеon secured by lien, but the only purpose of the litigation is to require Mrs. Wheeler to convey to them their undivided interests in said property encumbered with the liens which she has placed there
Mr. Pomeroy in his Equity Jurisprudence points out with much clearness that fundamentally there can be no trust in rеal property without a separation of the legal title from the beneficial interest, or equitable title. This rulе is stated in numerous cases cited in 65 Corpus Juris, pages 618, section 7 under Note 97. In the case of McCamey v. Hollister Oil Co.,
We do not have here a case where property was conveyed without consideration to be held for a specified purpose, the equitable title remaining in the vendor, but do have an absolute conveyance, for a valuable consideration, with no reservation of the equitable title. If this were not true the рurpose to create a valid lien upon the entire estate, including the interests of plaintiffs, would have beеn defeated. It follows that no trust was created or resulted, and plaintiffs were left with only an oral promise to reconvey. This promise being within the statute of frauds could not be enforced.
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is reversed and the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court January 6, 1937.
