Alford v. Cole

65 S.W.2d 813
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 16, 1933
DocketNo. 4375.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 65 S.W.2d 813 (Alford v. Cole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alford v. Cole, 65 S.W.2d 813 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Chief Justice.

Appellee, A. F. Cole, as plaintiff, sued appellant W. 0. Alford, as defendant, in the district court of Smith county, in trespass to try title, to recover a described tract of land located in Smith county; and to have a certain instrument declared a mortgage which was in form a deed, executed by appellee to the law firm of Bulloch, Ramey & Storey, and to have the alleged mortgage credited with the value of certain timber, gravel, and rents converted off the premises by appellant, Alford. Appellee further alleged, in effect, that appellant had at his request become the assignee of the alleged mortgage lien, by taking a special warranty deed from Bulloch, Ramey & Storey; that at the time appellant, Alford, took said special warranty deed to the land he knew and had knowledge of the facts, constituting the instrument a mortgage which appellee had executed in the form of a deed to said Bulloch, Ramey & Storey, securing the payment of $600 attorney’s fees due by appellee to said law firm; that Alford in turn had conveyed the land to appellee’s father, George Cole, and that George Cole had conveyed it back to Alford; that, it was agreed and understood between the parties that each of said purported deeds should be and operate as a mortgage lien only upon the land securing the payment of said indebtedness ; that appellee had retained possession of the land, continued to pay the taxes, and had kept the interest of 16 per cent, paid to Mr. Alford. To the merits, appellant pleaded not guilty, general and special denial, innocent purchaser, and the statutes of three, five, ten, and four years’ limitation (Rev. St. 1925, arts. 5507, 5509, 5510, art. 5520, as amended by Acts 1931, c. 136, § 2 [Vernon’s Ann. Civ. St. art. 5520], and art. 5529). The ease waS tried to a jury, and, on special issues submitted, the jury found that the deed from ap-pellee to Bulloch, Ramey & Storey was intended by the parties thereto as a mortgage or security for attorney’s fees; that at the time appellant took the special warranty deed from Bulloch, Ramey & Storey he (appellant) was in possession of such facts or information as would put him on notice that the deed to Bul-loch, Ramey & Storey was intended as a mortgage; that appellant, at the time he took the deed from George Cole November 13,1928, did not have an agreement with said George Cole to hold the land for appellee; that ap-jjellant had moved nine hundred yards of gravel from the property, and had received $600 in rents thereon within the last twelve months; and that appellee owed appellant on the alleged mortgage debt $650. The facts found by the jury are supported by the evidence and are adopted by this court The amount of money received by appellant for timber, being undisputed, was not submitted; neither was the value of the gravel submitted because appellant’s testimony fixed its value at 5 cents per yard. Judgment was entered for appellee, A. F. Cole, that he recover the title and possession of the land in question, and the sum of $77.89, the difference between the amount found to be owing appellant by appellee and the amount of rents and other moneys ■ collected off the land by appellant, and costs of suit. From an order of the court overruling his motion for new trial appellant, W. O. Alford, has perfected an appeal to this court and assigns as error: “That the trial court erred in overruling appellant’s motion for new trial setting up newly discovered evidence in the form of a written affidavit made by appellee (A. F. Cole) and filed by him in the Federal District Court with a voluntary application in bankruptcy June 17, 1929, over eight years after he had executed the deed he now claims to be a mortgage, and two years before the institution of this suit, in which affidavit appellee' swore 'he did not own any real estate and that no one held any in trust for him.”

In appellant’s said motion for new trial it is shown by affidavits and instruments attached that appellee in 1929 filed his petition and schedule in bankruptcy in the federal District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, Tyler, Tex., which petition and schedule were sworn to 'by appellee, A. F. Cole, before appellant, W. O. Alford, notary public, and in the schedule is listed, “real estate, none,” thereby, in effect, appellee swore that he did not own any real estate in his own name and that none was held in trust for him; and on trial of the present ease July 6, 1932, he testified “that he owned the land here in controversy, and that his deed of February 21, 1921, purporting to convey title out of him and into Bulloch, Ramey & Storey was intended by the parties to constitute a mortgage,” the legal effect of which was to create a lien on the land, and not to convey title; hence his affidavit and schedule in bankruptcy was in conflict with his testimony in the present trial as to his ownership of the land at the time he made said affidavit.

The appellee by sworn plea controverted appellant’s motion for new trial on the grounds that his affidavit to his petition and schedule in bankruptcy was and could be construed only as cumulative in impeachment of his testimony on the present trial, and it was not “newly discovered evidence,” in that appellant induced him to file the same and assisted in the preparation of the petition and schedule and was the notary public taking *815 Ins affidavit thereto, and that appellant’s attorney in the present suit was the referee in bankruptcy before whom said petition and schedule was presented. In this respect further controverting appellant’s motion for new trial appellee swore, in substance, that appellant together with the attorney preparing the petition and schedule in bankruptcy came to the field where appellee was at work and the papers were read over to him in the presence of appellant and the land was mentioned, whereupon appellant advised “him that it would not be necessary to mention the land, since appellant had a deed to it and it was ap-pellee’s home and not subject to the payment of his debts anyhow, arid, that appellee would have to pay appellant the amount of money due against the land before he could list it as-belonging to him, appellee.!’

A motion for new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence is a matter addressed to the sound discretion of the trial judge (San Antonio & A. P. Ry. Co. v. Moore, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 371, 72 S. W. 226); and it should be made to appear that knowledge of the evidence first came to the appellant subsequent to the trial and that it is not due to want of diligence that it was not sooner discovered (Watts v. Johnson, 4 Tex. 311), and that it is not merely cumulative or sought for the purposes of impeachment only (Pelly v. Denison & S. Ry. Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 78 S. W. 542; Angel v. Simmonds, 7 Tex. Civ. App. 331, 26 S. W. 910), and that it is so material as would probably produce a different result upon a new trial (Texas & N. O. Ry. Co. v. Scarborough, 101 Tex. 436, 108 S. W. 804). See Vol. 18, Tex. S. W. Digest, New Trial, § 99 et seq.

In First National Bank v. Jones (Tex. Civ. App.) 59 S.W.(2d) 1103, 1105, it is said; “It is sufficient to state that it [motion for new trial because of newly discovered evidence] was a matter addressed largely to the discretion of the trial court, and that it is not an abuse of that discretion to refuse a new trial where the evidence was forgotten rather than newly discovered, or where the parties failed to exercise due diligence to discover its existence before the trial.”

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W.2d 813, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alford-v-cole-texapp-1933.