American Freehold Land Mortgage Co. of London v. Pace

56 S.W. 377, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 222, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 308
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 28, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 56 S.W. 377 (American Freehold Land Mortgage Co. of London v. Pace) 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
American Freehold Land Mortgage Co. of London v. Pace, 56 S.W. 377, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 222, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 308 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinions

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This suit was instituted by the appellant March 23, 1896, against appellees Charles Pace and wife Jessie Pace, and one W. H. Richardson, upon a note of date February 20, 1893, executed by Charles Pace and due November 1, 1896, and to foreclose a deed of trust executed at the same time by Pace and wife upon certain lands therein described, to secure said note.

The description of the land, as given in the deed of trust and as stated in appellant’s petition, is as follows:

*224 “Three hundred (300) acres, more or less, a part of the T. Bissell league, beginning at the ET. W. line of said league, at the ET. corner of said J. R Pace tract and W. corner of W. L. Staniforth tract. Thence S. 60 E. 1036 yrs., with Staniforth line, to Ziveley’s corner; thence to Ziveley’s corner; thence south 50 W. 42 yrs.; thence south 80 W. 365 yrs. up the creek; thence south 49 E. ‘585 yrs.; thence north 40 E. 570 yrs. (said six lines last mentioned being boundaries of the 56 acres forming part of our homestead); thence south 60 E. 987 yrs., with Beckett’s line, to ET. corner of Stanley’s 60-acre tract; thence south 30 W. 730 yrs.; thence S. W. 343 yrs.; thence south 60 E. 433 yrs. to the Bissell league line; thence south 30 W. to the south corner of the James R Pace tract; thence north 60 W. to the south corner of the D. 0. Pace’s 105-acre tract; thence with D. C. Pace’s line north 50 E. 430. yrs. and north 19 E. 690 yrs. to the creek, a corner of said 56-acre tract; thence westerly with the creek to D. C. Pace’s west corner; thence north 60 W. to the Bissell ET. W. line; thence ET. 30 E. 1131 yrs. to the beginning; excepting therefrom 144 acres, forming a part of our homestead, bounded on the El. E. by the dividing line 987 yrs. long, between our land and Beckett’s, on the south E. by Stanley’s 60-acre tract; on the El. W. by said 56-acre tract; and on the S. W. by a line parallel to said 987-vara line, at such a distance from it as will include 144 acres; which said deed of trust bears date 30th February, 1893, and was on the 10th day of May, A. D. 1893, duly recorded in vol. 109, page 188, etc., of the mortgage records of Travis County, State of Texas.”

On the 31st day of Elovember, 1896, Charles Pace and wife filed their first amended original answer, in which the liability of Charles Pace on the note was admitted, and in which it was also asked that the deed of trust and a certain instrument executed by Pace designating appellees’ homestead be reformed so as to correct the description of the land which was excepted from the operation of the deed of trust. This relief is based upon .allegations to the effect that by a mutual mistake of all the parties to these instruments of writing, or by reason of the fraudulent and wrongful conduct of J. Gordon Brown and B. L. Brown, the former the payee named in the note and the latter the trustee named in the deed of trust, the instruments did not correctly describe the 144 acres which the parties agreed and understood and intended should be excepted from the operation of the lien created by the deed of trust. Instead of being as described in the deed of trust, that instrument should have described a different tract of land out of the southeast end of the tract described in the deed of trust, which is as follows:

“That the said homestead tracts of land, embracing 300 acres, and which was to be designated as the homestead of these defendants, and was not to be covered by said lien, it was agreed, as aforesaid, should be described as follows, to wit: Two tracts of land out of the James B. Pace original tract in the T. Bissell league in the county of Travis and State of Texas; (1) 56 acres, the same conveyed to Chas. Pace *225 by R. E. White and wife, by deed dated July 5, 1881, recorded in the said Travis County deed records in book 51, page 112, here referred to for description, whereon the home and residence of these defendants was situated; (2) 144 acres described as follows, to wit: Bounded on the west by D. C. Pace’s 105-acre tract; on the south by the original south line of the James R. Pace survey; on the east by the Nolan tract and the 60-acre tract of Stanley; and on the north by a line running parallel with the south line of this tract at a sufficient distance north of said south line to give 144 acres, which north line of this tract is also parallel with the 987-vara line on the south of Beckett’s tract mentioned in said deed of trust.”

Defendant Richardson filed an answer disclaiming any interest in the property in controversy. ,

November 21, 1896, the appellant filed a supplemental petition interposing a general demurrer to appellees’ answer, and also specially excepted to the same because it did not, with sufficient certainty, describe the 144 acres which was intended to be reserved from the operation of the deed of trust, and the appellees were barred in their remedy by the operation of the four years statute of limitation and stale demand and loches; and pleaded a general denial, and specially, that, on or about February 26, 1887, appellee Charles Pace executed and acknowledged a homestead designation, setting apart and describing as his homestead the 56-acre tract and the 144 acres described in plaintiff’s petition; and that the same was,immediately recorded in the proper records of the county used for that purpose; and that at the same time Charles Pace and wife executed and acknowledged and delivered to the plaintiff the original deed of trust to secure the note sued on, describing the 56-acre tract and the 144 acres as his homestead,' as described in the petition; and that the deed of trust was immediately recorded in the records of the county 'used for recording such instruments; and that the deed of trust sued upon, which was executed February 20, 1893, contained the same description as stated in the two instruments above mentioned (this deed of trust was recorded May 10, 1893); that if any cause of action existed to reform the deed of trust in question on the ground of mistake or fraud, it arose when the first two described instruments were executed, to wit, February 26, 1887, and is therefore barred by the statute of four years limitation; that if any fraud was committed or mistake made concerning the description of the land, the right to reform the deed of trust has become 'stale; and that by reason of the loches and negligence of appellees they are barred in their remedy in that they could and should, before signing the instruments, have read the same, which they negligently failed to do; and as there was no confidential or fiduciary relationship existing between them and the Browns, the agents of the plaintiff who negotiated the transaction, they should not have relied upon their representations; and that the mistake or fraud, if it ever existed, could and should have been sooner *226 discovered; that the record of the instruments, as above stated, was notice to the appellees as to what lands were described in these instruments, and thereby furnished the means of discovering the error in description, and that the appellees were wanting in diligence in failing to sooner make such discovery and instituting the action to reform.

February 23,

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Bluebook (online)
56 S.W. 377, 23 Tex. Civ. App. 222, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-freehold-land-mortgage-co-of-london-v-pace-texapp-1900.