Dixon v. McNeese
Dixon v. McNeese
Opinion of the Court
This suit was instituted by J. H. Dixon, S. H. Holloway, and C. C. Johnston against Hugh McNeese and A. G. McNeese, in which it was alleged that on July 12, 1909, a judgment had been recovered against Hugh McNeese and others for $4,973.56, and against C. C. Johnston for one-half that amount; that Dixon was an intervener, who recovered against Hugh McNeese and others, as did Holloway and Johnston; that the judgment had not been paid-and an abstract of the same had been recorded and indexed in 1-Iill county at a time when Hugh McNeese was the legal and equitable holder and owner of a certain tract of land in said county; that by reason of the record and index of the judgment a lien had been obtained upon the land; that, after such record and indexing, Hugh McNeese had executed a deed purporting to convey the land to A. G. McNeese, who was in possession of the land. They prayed for a foreclosure of the judgment lien. Hugh McNeese disclaimed all right, title, and interest in the land, and A. G. McNeese filed an answer, claiming that Hugh McNeese had made a parol sale of the land to him prior to the record and index of the judgment, *676 the payment of $4,000 on the land and his possession of the same, and the making of permanent improvements thereon. He alleged that he had entered into possession of the land in June, 1909, and paid $4,000 on the land, and made his improvements prior to August 31, 1909, when the judgment was recorded and indexed,' that the sale had been made to him in good faith, and that a deed was made to him in September, 1909, and the balance of the purchase money paid or secured. The cause was submitted to the jury on special issues, and upon the answers thereto the judgment was rendered in favor of A. G. McNeese. We find that the answers to the special issues were fully sustained by the evidence. The conclusions of this court as to the facts are more fully set out in the ■opinion herein.
It is provided in article 3289, Rev. Stats, of 1895, that, when any judgment has been recorded and indexed as required in preceding articles, it shall from date of such record and index operate as a lien on all the real estate of the defendant in the county of the record and index. It follows that if the judgment was properly recorded and indexed in Hill county, and the land in question was the property of Hugh McNeese at the time of such record and indexing, it operated as a lien on the property in controversy. The question to be decided then is: Did the property on August 31, 1909, belong to Hugh Mc-Neese, or was it the property of A. G. Mc-Neese? The uncontroverted testimony showed that at the time the judgment was recorded and indexed A. G. McNeese had made a parol purchase of it, had placed valuable improvements on it, had paid half the purchase money, and was in possession of the land. As between him and Hugh McNeese, he was the equitable owner of the land, as much so as though he had obtained a deed at the time of the sale to him, and, if the sale was valid as between them, it must have been valid as to every one. His possession of the land put every one upon notice of his rights in the land as fully as though he had obtained a deed and placed it on record. Wells v. Davis, 77 Tex. 638, 14 S. W. 237; Harold v. Sumner, 78 Tex. 581, 14 S. W. 995; Milmo Bank v. Convery, 49 S. W. 926. In a case in which the facts were similar to some extent to the one under consideration, this court, through Justice Neill, made the following ruling: “Assuming that the allegations in his petition are true, the appellant was the equitable owner of the land when the abstract of the judgment was recorded; for Severio H. Pena had sold it to him. And he had paid over half the purchase money, had executed his note for the balance, was in possession of, and had made permanent and valuable improvements upon the premises. His possession was notice to Rafael Arredondo and all others of his title. As Pena did not own the property when the abstract was recorded, it did not operate as a lien upon it. Nor would a purchaser at execution sale under the judgment acquire any title.” Rodriguez v. Buckley, 30 S. W. 1123. That was said in a case where the party in possession was relying on a parol sale and the making of valuable improvements. We believe what was said in that case is the law of this case. The land at the time that the abstract of judgment was filed was not the property of Hugh McNeese, and its record and the judgment lien could not affect the property of A. G. McNeese.
The authorities presented by appellant are not antagonistic to the views herein expressed, and, on the other hand, some of them sustain and uphold them.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- DIXON Et Al. v. McNEESE Et Al.
- Cited By
- 13 cases
- Status
- Published