David v. State Bank of Groom
David v. State Bank of Groom
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal by David and wife from a judgment in favor of the appellee bank, establishing a judgment lien and to foreclose the same against an undivided interest in and to 320 acres of land in Armstrong county, save and except a homestead of 200 acres to be thereafter *981 designated by David and wife, within 10 days after notice to them by the officer to whom an order of sale should, be delivered for execution, and dissolving an injunction issued at the instance of David and wife, restraining the levy and sale of the land under a former judgment against Thomas j. David, and in favor of the appellee bank.
The above judgment was obtained in a consolidated suit. The bank first brought suit against David and wife in trespass to try title and by second count to foreclose a judgment lien in its 'favor. The appellants answered this action not guilty, general denial, and specially that the entire 320 acres was the separate property of the wife, paid for by her separate funds. Thereafter Mrs. David brought suit against the bank, joined by her husband, seeking an injunction restraining the levy and sale of the land under the judgment lien against her husband. It seems the cases were thereafter tried as if consolidated, but we find no order to that effect or for repleader in the consolidated cause, but the case seems to have been prosecuted under the numbers of the two first suits. The pleadings of each party partake both of an original petition and an original answer and so with reference to the supplemental pleadings.
From an examination of the various pleadings we gather the issues were substantially as follows: The appellee bank alleged that on the 2d day of July, 1920, it recovered a judgment against Thomas J. David for the sum of $3,469.34, with interest from the 10th of August, 1920, the date of the rendition of the judgment, at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum. That the appellee caused an abstract of judgment to be recorded in the county clerk’s office of Armstrong county, where the land in question is situated, on the 16th day of August, 1920, and duly indexed, fixing a valid and subsisting lien on all real estate owned by Thos. J. David. That the judgment was unsatisfied except $15.75, credited thereon. That the community estate of Thomas J. David and Nora R. David owned the 320 acres of land at the time of the re-cordation of the judgment lien. That on or about August 6, 1920, Thomas J. David made a pretended conveyance of the land to his wife, Nora R. David, to prevent the ap-pellee from collecting its debt, which was then in suit and just four days before judgment was entered. That thereafter Thomas J. David was not left with sufficient property to pay his debts. That the deed was as to appellee fraudulent and void and should be canceled. That at the time appellant bought the property in 1908 a deed was executed to the community and so recorded in Armstrong county, where it rested until the attempted conveyance aforesaid. It is also alleged in a separate pleading that the original deed in 1908 was made to Thomas J. and Nora R. David, jointly, and so recorded, with no recital therein rebutting the presumption of title in the community, and that the deed to Mrs. David above set out was given to hinder and defraud creditors, and especially appellees, in the collection of their just debts, and kept secret until after the indebtedness accrued on which the aforesaid judgment was obtained against Thomas J. David. That when the deed to Mrs. David was executed by her husband, he was insolvent and unable to pay his debts, and the deed is therefore void as to appellee. That they bought the land wholly, or at least in part, with community funds, and the land is therefore subject to execution against T. J. David.
The appellants, David and wife, plead that the 320 acres of land is and was the separate property of Mrs. David, bought with funds that she received from the estate of her deceased father and mother. They deny that the conveyance of August 6, 1920, from T. J. David to his wife, was made for the purpose of hindering or defrauding the ap-pellee, but allege that, when the property was purchased in 1908, the scrivener was instructed to write the deed vesting the title in Mrs. David as her separate property, but in the absence of. the appellants at that time from the state, instead of so drafting the deed, through error, a conveyance was made to Mr. and .Mrs. David jointly. That the land was bought and paid for by the separate property of the wife, as aforesaid. Thereafter, on or about 1915, Thomas J. David, in order to make the deed and records speak the truth, executed, acknowledged, and delivered to Nora R. David a deed conveying the land to her, thereby vesting in her all title which might be shown of record that he had in the land. That'deed was, after delivery to the wife, lost or destroyed. As soon as appellants learned of this on July 28, 1920, Thomas J. David executed another deed conveying the title to his wife, Nora R. David, which was executed in lieu of the deed before mentioned, which had been lost or destroyed. It is alleged in the original answer to appellee’s suit that the land had been paid for out of Mrs. David’s separate funds, and all the payments which had been made thereon had been paid out of her separate funds received from the estate of her father and mother. They also plead their homestead was situated on the land and that they were entitled to 200 acres therein as such.
The record shows on the 10th day of August, 1920, the appellee bank obtained a judgment against Thomas J. David for the sum of $3,469.36, principal, interest, and attorney’s fees, with 10 per cent, interest from the date of the judgment, foreclosing a chattel mortgage on certain personal property, stock, and farming implements, and which had also covered growing crops on the land *982 in question; the judgment reciting that the mortgage liens be foreclosed on the personal property therein described as they existed March 29, 1919, December 13, 1918, and May 2, 1918. Order of sale on the above judgment and return thereon showing a levy on one horse, a disc and harrow, and a sale thereof, which brought $50, and after paying costs left $15.75 to be credited on the judgment.
Abstract of the above judgment in the cause of appellee bank against Thomas J. David, No. 379, recorded August 16, 1920, at 9 a. m., giving date of judgment August 10, 1920, for the amount of $3,469.36. The judgment is properly indexed.
Deed from C. H. Harris and wife to Thomas J. David and Nora R. David, conveying the land in question for a recited consideration of $9,200. Cash paid $4,000, and deferred payments $1,000 due June 10, 1909, $2,100 due June 10, 1910, $2,100 due June 10, 1911, with interest at 6 per cent. The deed retains a vendor’s lien to secure payment of the notes and is dated June 10, 1908, duly recorded in the deed records of Armstrong county, June 23, 1908.
Deed from Thomas J. David to Nora R. David, dated July 28, 1920, to the land in question, filed and recorded August 6, 1920, in the deed records of Armstrong county. The recitation in the deed is as follows:
“Eor and in consideration of the sum of one dollar to me in hand paid by Mrs. Nora R. David, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and for the purpose of vesting the title to the said property in the proper party, the said Mrs. Nora R. David having bought and fully paid for the land hereinafter described with her own separate funds and having my name inserted in said deed as grantee therein, in order to show the title vested in the proper party, have granted, sold and conveyed and by these presents do grant, sell and convey unto the said Mrs. Nora R. David (as her own separate estate) of Armstrong county, Texas, the following described real estate, etc.”
The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues. The jury found that the cash payment of $4,000 made in the purchase of the land was made with the separate funds of Mrs. Nora R. David; that since then of the consideration paid thereon has been paid $2,989.25, all of which was paid out of the community estate and with none of the wife’s separate funds; that Thomas J. David did not have sufficient additional property to pay the bank’s debt after making the conveyance to his wife July 28, 1920; that such conveyance was made for the purpose of hindering and delaying his creditors, especially the ap-pellee; that Thomas J. David did, in the year 1915, execute, acknowledge, and deliver to Mrs. Nora R. David a deed conveying to her the land in controversy; that appellants did not intend that the deed from Harris should convey the land to Nora R. David; that appellee did not have notice of the deed executed in 1915 at the time it recorded its abstract of judgment on the 16th day of August, 1920; that it was not the intention of Thomas David, in paying the consideration out of the community fund, that it should be applied on the indebtedness due by him to his wife.
We believe this appeal may properly be disposed of under the tenth assignment of error, which is to the effect that the finding by the jury that Thomas J. David in the year 1915 executed and delivered to his wife a conveyance to the land "in question, and also propositions 3 to 6, inclusive, asserting that the possession and occupancy of the land by the wife and the deed of date July 28, 1920, and the record thereof, were sufficient to charge appellee with notice of her right.
The evidence is to the effect that in 1902 the father of Mrs. David died, leaving to her from his estate about $1,400 cash and 100 acres of land situated in the state of Indiana. In 1906 the land was sold for $9,000’ cash and that same, or at least part of it, was held in the bank until 1908, when the land in question was purchased. The finding of the jury that the cash consideration, $4,000, paid on the land at the time it was purchased from Harris, was paid by Mrs. David out of her separate estate, is amply sustained by the evidence. The evidence also sustains the finding that, in 1915 Thomas J. David did execute and deliver a deed to his wife, conveying to her the land in question. There is no evidence in this record: showing at that time appellee was a creditor of Thomas J. David or that he had any creditors or was then insolvent and unable to meet his obligations, if he had any, out of other property than the land.
*983 1920, the land was the separate property of Mrs. David, when it was executed, and there was then no evidence of that fact upon the record, it was no fraud upon appellee or any other creditor of Thomas J. David to make the record speak the truth. The last deed, therefore, would not be void as to ap-pellee for the reason that it took from the creditor no property upon which it had a right to rely for the payment of its debt. Barnett v. Vincent, 69 Tex. 685, 7 S. W. 525, 5 Am. St. Rep. 98; Peck v. Jones, 10 Tex. Civ. App. 335, 30 S. W. 382; De Berry v. Wheeler, 128 Mo. 84, 30 S. W. 338, 49 Am. St. Rep. 538; Fidelity Trust Co. v. Rector (Tex. Civ. App.) 190 S. W. 842 (2). Whether the deed executed in 1915 was upon a valid consideration or a voluntary conveyance, it would not be fraudulent and void as to appellee under either article 3966 or 3967, R. C. S., unless at that time appellee was a creditor of the husband. This fact the burden was upon appellee to establish. De Garca v. Galvan, 55 Tex. 53; Reynolds v. Lansford, 16 Tex. 287; Gonzales v. Adoue, 94 Tex. 120-124, 58 S. W. 951; Dosche v. Natte, 81 Tex. 265, 16 S. W. 1013; Bank v. Hall (Tex. Civ. App.) 30 S. W. 73.
We believe the judgment of the trial court should be revelled and the case remanded.
<j&wkey;For other eases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
ÉnmFor other cases see same topic and KEY-NUMBER, in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
Reference
- Full Case Name
- David Et Ux. v. State Bank of Groom.
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published