Austin v. Austin

182 S.W.2d 355, 143 Tex. 29, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 220
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1944
DocketNo. 8200.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 355 (Austin v. Austin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Austin, 182 S.W.2d 355, 143 Tex. 29, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 220 (Tex. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Folley,

of the Commission of Appeals, delivered the opinion for the Court.

*31 This is a partition suit, originating between the four surviving children and heirs of Yancy Austin, Sr., and wife, Georgia Austin, both deceased, in which three of the children, Obelia Tarver, Yancy Austin, Jr. and Iona Jenkins, joined by her husband, sued their brother, the, petitioner LeGory Austin, to partition and divide four tracts of land in Houston County in equal shares between the four children. The widow and children of R. C. Spinks, deceased, intervened in the cause. They claimed that LeGory Austin had sold R. C. Spinks an undivided l/8th interest in one of the four tracts consisting of 101.5 acres and asked that such interest be set aside to them. Petitioner claimed title to 7/8th of the later tract by virtue of a deed from his parents. The original plaintiffs recovered judgment in the trial court for their respective l/4th interests in each of the four tracts of land, and the intervenors recovered their l/8th interest in the 101.5 acre tract, thus allowing petitioner a l/4th interest in the three tracts and a l/8th interest in the 101.5 acre tract. There was no controversy in the courts below relative to the first three tracts, hence there is none in this court. The complaint concerns only the interest of the four children in the 101.5 acre tract involved in the deed. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment of the trial court. 174 S. W. (2d) 1010.

In their original petition the three plaintiff children merely alleged that they and their brother, LeGory Austin, were the surviving heirs of their deceased parents and sought partition, qf the four tracts of land described in their petition in equal shares between the four children. By supplemental petition such original plaintiffs alleged that petitioner was claiming full title to the 101.5 acre tract under a purported deed from his parents of the date of November 1, 1921, duly recorded in the Deed Records of Houston county, but which they asserted was not a conveyance but merely a mortgage for the purpose of securing a debt owed by their deceased father, Yancy Austin, Sr., to one J. S. Shivers. They further alleged that such purported deed was not intended to operate as a conveyance; that neither the deed nor the possession of the land was ever delivered to LeGory Austin; ‘that petitioner had never asserted full title to the land until long after the death of his parents; and that he had only recently entered into possession of such land and for the first time asserted any ownership therein by virtue of the deed.

After the filing of the plea of intervention the original plaintiffs and intervenors, respondents in this court, joined together in a second supplemental petition in which they alleged that if such deed was intended as a conveyance, the grantors therein *32 had rescinded such sale under the authority vested in them in the vendor’s lien therein retained.

The substance of the' pleadings of petitioner was a general denial and a plea of limitation of four years based upon the as-: sumption that respondents were attempting to rescind the deed of November 1, 1921, although no such equitable relief was. sought by them.

As a factual background for the verdict of the jury and the judgment of the trial court, the evidence, as hereinafter stated, is practically undisputed.

For several years prior to the date of the purported deed, Yancy Austin, Sr., had been purchasing supplies from J. S. Shivers, a merchant of Crockett, Texas. Austin fell behind in, his account and Shivers demanded security of him for the exist-, ing debt and for further supplies to be furnished. Shivers suggested to Austin that he sell a tract of his land to one of his' children in order to create some vendor’s lien notes which might be transferred to Shivers as security for Austin’s debt. On. November 1, 1921, Yancy Austin, Sr., and wife executed the deed purporting to convey the 101.5 acres of land to their son, the petitioner, and in turn petitioner executed four vendor’s lien notes each in the sum of $250.00, payable to his father in one to four years from date, respectively. The deed recited no-consideration other than the four notes. Yancy Austin, Sr., filed the deed for record on November 26, 1921, with the county-clerk of Houston county. After the same was duly recorded the' clerk redelivered the deed to him on December 10, 1921. On February 20, 1922, the four vendor lien notes and the' lien securing their payment were pledged to Shivers in a written as-signment from Yancy Austin, Sr. :

In January 1925 Yancy Austin, Sr., executed a deed of trust, covering other lands in favor of the Crockett State Bank to secure a loan. In such instrument he designated the land here involved as a part of his homestead. In April 1925 he and his-wife executed an oil lease on the land in question and "retained the full consideration therefor. In 1926 Yancy Austin, Sr., died, at which time only a part' of his debt to Shivers had been paid by him. Thereafter his widow, Georgia Austin, paid the remainder of the indebetness to Shivers and the four vendor’s lien notes were thereupon surrendered to her.

The possession of the land was never delivered to petitioner by his parents but. was retained by the father until his death *33 in 1926, and thereafter by the mother until her death in 1934. Yancy Austin, Sr., paid the taxes on the land until his death and thereafter his widow paid one-half of them and the four children the other half, each child paying l/8th thereof.

In 1933, subsequent to the death of his father and prior to the death of his mother, petitioner conveyed to R. C. Spinks his l/8th interest in the land, reciting in the deed that it was his interest which he had derived from his deceased father, and that his mother was still living. After the death of his mother petitioner paid only l/8th of the taxes on the land, the respondents paying the remainder. On August 12, 1936, petitioner joined the other three children and R. C. Spinks in the execution of an oil lease upon the land and, without objection or claim to the contrary-, allowed his brother and sisters each to receive l/4th of the proceeds of the transaction. In 1937 the parties attempted to divide the four tracts of land but were unsuccessful for some undisclosed reason. At that time petitioner made no claim that the land in controversy should not be included in the partition. It was not until March, 1942, preceding the filing of this suit in June of that year, that respondents learned petitioner was claiming the land under the deed of November 1, 1921.

The trial court did not submit to the jury the question as to whether the grantors rescinded the deed under their vendor’s lien, and no request was made therefor. Upon issues which were submitted the jury found that the deed was executed for the 'sole purpose of creating the lien; that petitioner accepted it for the sole purpose of assisting his father in thus creating the lien; and that the grantors received no part of the purchase price for the land provided for in the deed.

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 355, 143 Tex. 29, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-austin-tex-1944.