American National Bank v. Cruger

71 S.W. 784, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 17, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 407
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 71 S.W. 784 (American National Bank v. Cruger) 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 National Bank v. Cruger, 71 S.W. 784, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 17, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 407 (Tex. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

KEY, Associate Justice.

Appellant’s brief correctly states the nature and result of this suit, as follows:

“This action was brought June 14, 1895, against P. B..Cruger and Miss Fannie M. Cruger, to recover an indebtedness due by them to the American National Bank,.appellant, upon a note of date December 10, 1894, due six months after date. An attachment was levied upon a lot 150x175 feet, known in the record as the Helen Cruger tract. P. B. Cruger was the principal on the note, Miss Fannie being surety. The case was first tried and appealed to this court from a judgment in favor of the bank against P. B. Cruger, and in favor of Miss Fannie, declaring the note as to her fraudulent. Upon the appeal, the issues were so far elucidated as that upon the second trial, from which this appeal is taken, judgment was rendered in favor of the bank against P. B. Cruger and Miss Fannie on the note for $6347.50, with 10 per cent interest from January 29, 1902, the date of the judgment, leaving open, however, a question of homestead, upon which appellant’s assignments of error are based in this appeal.

“The pleadings show that Miss Fannie died after the first appeal was taken, and her executor, C. A. Boynton, and Miss Helen Cruger, a grantee of Miss Fannie, were made parties in her stead, the latter claim *18 ing that on June 14, 1895, she was the real owner of the Helen Cruger tract, and should be protected in such ownership by the fact that this property was the homestead of Miss Fannie. Miss Helen’s deed bore date March 15, 1895, and the testimony showed it was delivered about that date, several months prior to the attachment, June 14, 1895, but that it was not recorded until June 17, 1895, three days after the attachment.

“The court charged the jury to find for appellant as to its debt against P. B. Cruger and the estate of Miss Fannie, and to find for Miss Helen, and that the Helen Cruger tract ‘was the homestead of Fannie M. Cruger at the time of the levy of attachment in this case, and that plaintiff acquired no lien thereon by such levy.’

‘Upon this issue the defendants pleaded that Miss Fannie was in her lifetime an unmarried woman, having under her care an afflicted nephew and several youthful nieces; that she gave them support, and was thus constituted the head, of the family, so as to give her a homestead in the said tract, and that when she conveyed it to Miss Helen, March 15, 1895, she had a right so to do, and that by reason of Miss Fannie’s homestead right, the levy of June 14, 1895, was void as to Miss Helen.”

The action of the court in withdrawing from and not submitting to the jury the question of homestead is assigned as error. The testimony bearing on that question is correctly set forth in appellees’ brief, as follows:

The following agreements were introduced: “It is agreed between plaintiffs and defendants, that at the time of the levy of the attachment all of the property except the three lots on the corner of Speight and Ninth, on which were located the house and barn, was mortgaged property, and that the mortgage has been foreclosed and the property sold under it, and nothing is involved in this suit, except the three lots on which the house and barn, etc., are located.”

The following agreement was introduced by defendants: “It is agreed by and between the parties hereto, in order to save expense, that on July 16, 1892, Miss Fannie Cruger executed a deed of trust to L. H. Hole, to secure J. W. Campbell in a note of $3000 of that date, due August, 1897, bearing 6 per cent interest, and a second deed of trust to the same trustee to secure the payment of ten notes, aggregating $1500, bearing 10 per cent interest, due from time to time, between July 16, 1892, and August 1, 1897, the property described in said deed of trust being as follows: ‘Beginning at a point on the southeast line of Speight street where said southeast line crosses the southwest line of two acres of land conveyed by J. H. Bagby and wife to D. T. Chamberlain, said conveyance being shown in book M., page 450, of McLennan County deed records, which point is 30 feet south, 45 feet east from the original northwest corner; thence north 45 east 85 feet to the northwest corner of two lots sold by Fannie Cruger to Long; thence south 45 east 165 feet to Long’s southwest corner; thence north 45 east 100 feet to Long’s southeast corner; thence north 45 west 165 feet to southeast line of Speight street *19 and Long’s northeast corner; thence north 45 east 265 feet; thence south 45 east 165 feet; thence north 45 east 150 feet to the southwest line of Ninth street (said point being also 12 feet southwest from original northeast line of Noriss’ three-acre tract); thence south 45 east 185 feet to the northwest line of James street; thence south 45 west 600 feet along the northwest line of James street to the southwest line of the aforesaid two-acre tract; thence north 45 west'350 feet to beginning.’

“And it is further agreed that this stipulation may be read in evidence by either side.”

Said agreement being dated November 14, 1895, and signed by Eugene Williams, attorney for plaintiff, and Boynton & Boynton, attorneys for Fannie Cruger.

Miss Fannie Cruger’s testimony as given on the former trial (she having died since that time) was introduced by agreement; on the homestead issue, it is as follows:

“The property and land upon which the attachment in this suit was levied on the 14th day of June, 1895, is my homestead, with the exception of two places not owned by me, but belonging to Mr. Leslie and Mr. Long. This real estate was purchased by me as my home, and for which I paid $1100, some time about 1872, and has all been included in and lived upon and used as my homestead by myself and family. The house in which we live is on the corner of this property, which is all inclosed and cut off from the rest of the property by a yard fence, in which there are gates opening into the rest of the property, which I use as a garden, and at times to turn in and pasture upon my horses. This is all the real estate I own. I have been living with two daughters and a son of my brother Charles Cruger. The father and mother of said children are dead, and they have no other home or property, and are entirely dependent upon me for a home. I took these children, with the exception of the younger one, together with three others, their brothers and sisters, and children of my brother Charles, to raise and support, some twenty years ago, and the younger one several years ago. At the time I took them to raise and care for their mother was insane, and had been sent to the insane asylum a time or two, and finally became violently insane. I have raised, maintained and supported them entirely from the use of my own funds, and provided them a home with me. Of those now living with me, one is an unmarried female of about 22 years .of age, and one a girl about 13 or 14 years old, and the other a man who was once in the insane asylum and is now a confirmed invalid, and has been so for many years, unable' to support and maintain himself, and requiring constant care and attention. And they are wholly dependent upon me and my property for support and their home.”

J. T. Anderson testified as follmvs: “I have resided in Waco for about thirty-five years, and for about thirty-three years I resided in the neighborhood of Speight street. I knew Miss Fannie Cruger well in her lifetime, and lived just across the street from her.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.W. 784, 31 Tex. Civ. App. 17, 1902 Tex. App. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-national-bank-v-cruger-texapp-1902.