Allen v. Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass'n of Missouri

58 S.W.2d 866
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 1933
DocketNo. 1331.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 58 S.W.2d 866 (Allen v. Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass'n of Missouri) 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
Allen v. Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass'n of Missouri, 58 S.W.2d 866 (Tex. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

STANFORD, Justice.

This case was filed on the 1st day of August, 1930, in the Seventy-third judicial district court of Bexar county, Tex., by Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association of Missouri against Mrs. Fannie Allen, a feme sole, as defendant, to recover from the defendant the *867 title and possession to certain real estate in Bexar county, Tex. Prior to the filing of this suit the said Fannie Allen had exectited a deed of trust in the usual form to said Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association to secure the payment of a loan in the sum of $1,200, and she having made default in the payment of said loan, said loan company foreclosed said deed of trust lien by having said real estate sold under said deed of trust. Thereafter said loan company filed proper affidavit and procured a writ of sequestration, and the sheriff, under said writ, took possession of the property covered by said deed of trust and the defendant, Fannie Allen, failed to replevy. On the 29th day of August, 1931, the Alcalde Investment Company, a corporation, having purchased said property from said Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association, intervened. in said suit, alleging that it had acquired the property in controversy by general warranty deed dated January 20, 1931, and in said plea of intervention adopted the pleadings of the Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association and prayed for judgment against defendant, Mrs. Fannie Allen, for title and possession of the property in controversy.

The cause was transferred to the district court of Bexar county, Tex., for the Thirty-seventh judicial district, and was, on the 11th day of September, 1931, tried before said court, without the intervention of a jury. Upon hearing the evidence in said court on the 11th day of September, 1931, said court rendered judgment in behalf of the Alcalde Investment Company, a corporation, for the title and possession of said property against the said Fannie Allen. This case was tried before the court, and plaintiff in error, Mrs. Fannie Allen, obtained.no findings of fact or conclusions of law from the court, and reserved no bills of exception and made no objections to any evidence that was introduced. It will also be noted that in her pleadings, Mrs. Allen did not seek to set aside the substitute trustee’s deed, nor did she attack it by objection on -the ground that it was void on its face, and the same was admitted in evidence without any objection reserved by bill of exception, or otherwise.

It appears from the testimony that Mrs. Fannie Allen signed the note and deed of trust for the purpose of borrowing $1,200 from said Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association of Missouri; that she duly acknowledged and- delivered -same, and had it recorded; that the $1,200 was paid to Mrs. Fannie Allen or to her order, except a small amount that was retained to clear up the title; that Mrs. Fannie Allen thereafter both personally and through her attorneys made arrangements to have the various clouds removed from the title to said property, by paying various amounts of money. Mrs. Allen defended this suit mainly upon the ground that said property was her homestead, and therefore the deed of trust securing said note did not create a lien against it. The facts on this issue were undisputed and the question of invalidity, therefore, presented a question of law for the court. “A feme sole, even though the head of a family, may voluntarily mortgage her homestead,” and therefore Mrs. Allen, having been an unmarried woman at the time she executed the deed of trust to secure her note for $1,200, cannot defeat said lien on the ground that she occupied as her homestead the property on which said lien was created and had occupied same from the date of the death of her husband which occurred in 1917. Exhibit No. 12 sent up with the transcript, constitutes an affidavit by Mrs. Fannie Allen and sworn to on the 2d day of March, 1929. In this affidavit Mrs. Allen testified under oath: “Thereafter, to-wit, on December 17, 1917, the said Will Allen departed this life. I have not remarried Since the date of his death and I am a widow at this time.”

No objection was made to this affidavit and Mrs. Allen at no time testified that she had remarried since the death of her husband, Will Allen. This, we think, is a correct proposition of law. The record clearly shows that Mrs, Allen, voluntarily executed the deed of trust covering her homestead; also that the $1,200 borrowed was paid to Mrs. Allen, or to her order, and that same was her separate property, -having been deeded to her by her husband some ten or twelve years before his death; also that Mrs. Allen’s children had grown up and married and had homes of their own. Spencer v. Schell, 107 Tex. 44, 173 S. W. 867; Smith v. Von Hutton, 75 Tex. 625, 13 S. W. 18; Dabney v. Schutze (Tex. Com. App.) 228 S. W. 176; Hartman v. Thomas, 37 Tex. 90, 91; Grothaus v. De Lopez, 57 Tex. 670. Since the decisions above cited, all by the Supreme Court of Texas, the right of a feme sole, although the head of a family, to execute a voluntary mortgage on a homestead, is no longer an open question. The cases have been followed and approved and we can add nothing to the sound argument and clear expression of the principles of law as stated by the several opinions of our Supreme Court.

The plaintiff in error in various parts of her argument raises the point that the Thirty-seventh district court could not try the cause because it had been theretofore pending in the Seventy-third district court and no written order was made transferring said cause: It is true: “Where a cause is pending in one district court and upon verbal agreement or acquiescence all parties appear in another court and without objection to proceeding with the trial in the same county and proceeded to try the same in full, they are estopped to raise the question that the cause had not been -properly transferred to said court.”

*868 The record shows that a nunc pro tnnc order was entered transferring this cause from the Seventy-third district court to the Thirty-seventh district court. The cause was tried in the Thirty-seventh district court without any order of transfer presented to the court. A judgment of the Thirty-seventh district court recited, “be it remembered that on this the 11th day of September, 1931, came regularly on for hearing the above entitled and numbered cause, which said cause was originally filed in the 73rd District Court in and for Bexar County, Texas, and transferred to this court, and came the plaintiff, Farm & Home Savings & Loan Association of Missouri by its attorney of record and announced ready for trial, and came also the intervener, Alcaide Investment Company, by its attorneys of record and announced ready for trial, and came also the defendant, Mrs. Fannie Allen in person and by attorney of record and announced ready for trial.” No bill of exception was taken to the action of the Thirty-seventh district court In trying same, nor was there any objection made by defendant Allen and her attorney to the action of the Thirty-seventh district court in trying said cause. Marx & Kempner v. Heidenheimer Bros., 63 Tex. 304; Harris v. Gregory (Tex. Civ. App.) 23 S.W.(2d) 748; Kruegel v. Daniels, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 215, 109 S. W. 1108 (writ refused); City of Corsicana v. Kerr, 75 Tex. 207, 12 S. W. 982.

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58 S.W.2d 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-farm-home-savings-loan-assn-of-missouri-texapp-1933.