Anderson v. Hutto

126 S.W.2d 709
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 26, 1939
DocketNo. 3794.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 126 S.W.2d 709 (Anderson v. Hutto) 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
Anderson v. Hutto, 126 S.W.2d 709 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

This was a suit to recover title to and possession of real estate, and to cancel deeds of conveyance, and for damages. Defendant appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiffs for title and possession of the land and $1,800 damages on account of defendant's use and occupancy of the land.

Prior to the year 1933, the appellees A. Y. Hutto, R. G. Hutto, Walter Hutto, W. C. Hutto, Myrtle H. Grimes, and Annie H. Grimes, were the owners of certain described land in the town of Aransas Pass, Texas, each owning an undivided one-sixth interest therein. Myrtle H. Grimes is the wife of A. J. Grimes, and Annie H. Grimes is the wife of J. W. Grimes. The above named parties appellees, were plaintiffs in the court below. Appellees, except A. J. and J. W. Grimes, will be referred to as "Hutto Heirs."

In 1933 P. D. Anderson (a defendant below and appellant here) was approached for a trade or exchange of properties, said Anderson claiming an interest or equity in a large tract of land in Maverick County, Texas, which he was selling under an executory contract of sale from G. Bedell Moore, of San Antonio, Texas, the owner, said Moore holding a first claim or lien against the lands amounting to $65 per acre. In the spring or early summer of 1933, Anderson and the Hutto heirs met and agreed upon the terms and details of an exchange of their said respective properties and interests, whereby the Hutto heirs were to convey their respective undivided one-sixth interests in the Aransas Pass property to Anderson, by the execution of six separate deeds. The deeds were dated June 15, 1933, except the one from Walter Hutto, which was dated and acknowledged by him September 1, 1933.

Each of said heirs signed and acknowledged a separate contract or agreement with P. D. Anderson, whereby Anderson was bound to sell and have conveyed to each of the appellees a separate parcel of land out of the G. Bedell Moore Subdivision in Maverick County, Texas. In these contracts Anderson is designated as the seller, and each Hutto heir, vendee therein, is designated as the buyer. In each contract the appellant, seller, binds himself to pay $65 per acre owing to G. Bedell Moore, on or before ten years after March 3, 1933, and cause deeds to the respective tracts in Maverick County to be executed to each buyer, by G. Bedell Moore, the owner of the *Page 711 property. Each contract contains stipulations as to the furnishing of abstracts of title showing marketable titles to the respective properties.

The six deeds from the Hutto heirs were signed and acknowledged and left with Judge John J. Foster, of Del Rio, Texas, who prepared the deeds and the contracts which were to be executed by appellant. Appellant went into possession of the property in Aransas Pass, upon which there was a two-story building, and the Hutto heirs went into possession of the Maverick County lands.

Subsequently, in 1934, Anderson received from Judge Foster all of the various documents deposited with him, including the six contracts of sale from Anderson to the Hutto heirs, which had been prepared in duplicate. He testified that all of the papers connected with the transaction were delivered to him at that time.

On July 20, 1935, Anderson wrote and mailed a letter to A. Y. Hutto, one of appellees, in which he said, "I am ready to complete contract as made. I turned this land over to you folks and you turned building over to me and retained mtg. on same until I clear or pay Mr. Moore for the land. I have never received deed, nor have you folks paid any of difference to Mr. Moore, etc. I am ready to carry out my agreement whenever you are ready."

Thereafter, on or about August 24, 1935, A. Y. Hutto, J. W. Grimes and A. J. Grimes called upon Anderson at his home in Maverick County. At that time Anderson acknowledged the contracts before a notary. The evidence is conflicting as to whether they had ever been signed by him before that time or not. He handed the contracts as executed to A. Y. Hutto and the Messrs. Grimes, who retained possession of the same until the trial of the cause when they offered them for surrender and cancellation.

On July 29, 1936, some of the Hutto heirs wired Tabbitt, the tenant in possession of the Aransas Pass property, instructing him to pay no further rent to Anderson. About August 1, 1936, appellees brought this suit. The character of the suit has been stated. As grounds for cancellation of the deeds to Anderson appellees alleged that though these instruments had come into the possession of Anderson, no delivery of them had been authorized by appellees, and no delivery valid in law or equity had been made. As to Myrtle H. Grimes and Annie H. Grimes it was further pleaded that as the contracts were executory in nature and said parties plaintiff were married women at all the times involved, the contracts were not binding upon them, and they elected to rescind and disaffirm them. As to Walter Hutto it was further pleaded and proved that he was less than twenty-one years of age when he executed his contract and deed. He likewise elected to disaffirm. Plaintiffs below offered to surrender said contracts for cancellation and delivery to Anderson.

We summarize the findings of the jury which were made upon special issues and indicate the number of the issue applicable to each finding. The jury found that (1) the deeds to the Aransas Pass property were not placed in the control of defendant with the intention on the part of plaintiffs that they should pass title to the property to defendant; (2) at the time said deeds were placed in defendant's possession he had not executed the sales contracts of June 15, 1933; (3) the defendant did not furnish plaintiffs a complete abstract of title reflecting the marketable title in him subject to the lien of G. Bedell Moore for $65 per acre; (4) plaintiffs did not waive the furnishing of such abstract; (5) the consideration which was to move from defendant to plaintiffs for said land by virtue of the contract of sale dated June 15, 1933, never passed from defendant to plaintiffs; (6) Walter Hutto, the minor, disaffirmed his contract and deed within a reasonable time after he reached the age of twenty-one years; (7) the damages sustained by plaintiffs by reason of defendant's use and occupancy of the Aransas Pass property from August 1, 1934, to the time of trial amounted to $1,800. In answer to a special issue submitted at the request of defendant, the jury found that upon the occasion of the meeting between the Grimes brothers and A. Y. Hutto on the one hand and P. D. Anderson on the other on or about August 24, 1935, said plaintiffs did not acquiesce in the delivery of the respective deeds from plaintiffs to said defendant conveying the undivided interests in the property in Aransas Pass.

Opinion
Appellant states the issue on appeal in this language: "The main issue and practically the only issue in the case, was whether the several deeds from the appellees were ever delivered to the appellant Anderson, conveying the respective undivided *Page 712 interests in the Aransas Pass property. The issue was one of delivery of their several deeds, pure and simple."

Appellant contends that there was a valid and legal delivery of the deeds conveying the Aransas Pass property, and that the stipulation regarding the abstract of title to the Maverick County property was substantially, if not literally, complied with, and that if it was not complied with, appellees proceeded to close the deal and waive compliance.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jones v. Young
539 S.W.2d 901 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1976)
English v. Ramo, Inc.
474 S.W.2d 600 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1971)
Chasteen v. Miller
349 S.W.2d 772 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W.2d 709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-hutto-texapp-1939.