Ball v. Belden

126 S.W. 20, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 29, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 300
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 26, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 126 S.W. 20 (Ball v. Belden) 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
Ball v. Belden, 126 S.W. 20, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 29, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 300 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

FLY, Associate Justice.

This is a suit instituted by appellee, as administrator of the estate of Juana F. Montes de Flores, deceased, against F. X. Ball and Mary Fest. The original suit was on a promissory note for $3000, executed by Antonio F. Cadena to Juana F. Montes de Flores for part of the purchase money of certain land, a vendor’s lien being reserved in the deed to secure the payment of the note. After appellants had filed an answer admitting the execution of the note by Antonio F. Cadena, but setting up that the interest specified in the note had been set aside and released by Mrs. Flores to Cadena, and they were ready, able and willing to pay the $3000 without interest, appellee filed an amended petition in which he sought to recover the land and in the alternative prayed for judgment on the note. J. P. Hickman and O’Farrell were made parties defendant, but were dismissed by the court. The cause was tried by jury and under instruction of the court a verdict was returned in favor of appellee for the land.

The facts are without contradiction and show Juana F. Montes de *31 Flores, a feme sole, had title to 579 5/10 acres of land, about twelve miles south of the city of San Antonio, on the San Antonio River, and on May 17, 1897, conveyed the same to Antonio F. Cadena for $895 cash and a note for $3000, due two years after date, with interest at the rate of six percent per annum and attorney’s fees and reserved a vendor’s lien to secure payment of the note. Four days after the execution of the deed and note, Mrs. Flores executed to Antonio F. Cadena an instrument in Spanish, a translation of which is as follows:

“San Antonio, Texas, May 21, 1897.
“Confiding in the loyalty of my nephew, Antonio Cadena, I declare without value the consideration named in the note signed by him concerning the six percent interest on the sum of three thousand dollars that he owes me on the purchase price of the ranch.” That some time in 1900 Antonio Cadena died without having paid off and discharged the note for $3000 which had become due on May 17, 1899, and his wife, Caroline E. Tar in de Cadena, qualified as independent executrix of his will. On February 26, 1903, the executrix sold the land in controversy to F. O’Farrell, for $1600 cash and assumption of payment of the $3000 note herein mentioned. In the deed was the following recital: “Also for the same consideration I hereby transfer and assign to the said F. O’Farrell the right which my said husband obtained from said Juana F. Montez de Flores by and through a certain document in writing signed, executed and delivered by said Juana F. Montez de Flores to my said deceased husband, Antonio F. Cadena, in regard to the release of payment of interest on said $3000 note, and which instrument is duly recorded in the general records of Bexar County in book volume 161, on pages 447-448, to which instrument in writing reference is hereby made and is made a part and parcel of this conveyance.”

On March 2, 1903, F. O’Farrell conveyed the land in question to Frank X. Ball and Mary Fest, appellants, for the recited consideration of $2000 in cash and the assumption of the payment of the $3000 note executed by Antonio F. Cadena to Mrs. Flores. It was recited in the deed that the interest on the note had been released by the instrument hereinbefore copied, and reference was made to the place of its record. The release made by Mrs. Flores was duly acknowledged by her, and recorded on August 6, 1897. Mrs. Flores died in France and appellee qualified as administrator of her estate.

Mo demand was ever made for the money due on the note until about April 1, 1908, when an attorney representing appellee wrote Mrs. Fest a letter asking for a conference with her in regard to the note. In that letter it was promised that suit would be withheld until Mrs. Fest was heard from in regard to the matter. She swore that she received the letter on Saturday, April 4, and on Monday, April 6, 1908, this suit was filed. She answered the letter on that date, without knowledge of the suit, promising to give the matter attention in a few days. Appellants had at all times been ready, willing and able to pay off and discharge the note, without the interest, upon a release of the vendor’s lien, but no demand was made, so *32 far as shown by the record, for the money, from the execution of the note until April 1, 1908. The court peremptorily instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of appellee for the land.

The suit in this case was in effect one for a rescission of the contract of sale, and it is the rule that when a vendor has received part of the purchase money, and gives indulgence after default in payment of another part of the purchase money, there must, as a general rule, be a demand of payment and notice of an intention to rescind the contract before advantage could be taken of the default and a rescission had. Equity and fair dealing furnish a sufficient reason for the existence of such a rule. (Estes v. Browning, 11 Texas, 237; Scarborough v. Arrant, 25 Texas, 129; Hild v. Linne, 45 Texas, 476; Tom v. Woellhoefer, 61 Texas, 277; Estell v. Cole, 62 Texas, 695; Milligan v. Ewing, 64 Texas, 258; Reddin v. Smith, 65 Texas, 26; Hamblen v. Folts, 70 Texas, 134; Wright v. Dunn, 73 Texas, 293; Moore v. Giesecke, 76 Texas, 543; Phillips v. Herndon, 78 Texas, 378; Pierce v. Moreman, 84 Texas, 596.)

As said in the cited case of Moore v. Gieseeke: “The remedy by rescission is not favored, and, as has been said, slight circumstances, when they may be properly treated as indicative of a purpose upon the part of the vendor not to insist on that remedy, may be treated as a waiver of the right to rescind, unless its maintenance becomes necessary to enable the vendor to enforce the payment of the consideration for which he contracted to sell the land; and when a suit for the recovery back of the land has been brought, where any portion of the purchase money has been paid or where valuable and permanent improvements have been placed upon the land by the vendee or by purchasers under him, and the defendant, when sued, brings into court and offers to pay the balance of the purchase money, with costs of suit, unless there exist strong countervailing equities, the money ought to be received and a recovery of the land denied.” The principles announced are peculiarly applicable to the facts of this case. The note was given to Mrs. Flores in 1897, became due in 1899, and from the last date to a few days before the suit was instituted, a period of nine years, no effort was made, not even a demand, to obtain payment of the note. The payee of the note was in France and no one seemed to know where the note was kept. After that long period a suit was brought to recover the amount of the note, and when appellants came into court and offered to pay the note, less the interest that had been waived, the suit was changed to one of trespass to try title,' and, although the uncontradicted evidence showed -an ability and willingness to pay the note, a peremptory instruction was given to the jury to rescind the sale and give the land to appellee. There was no attempt to take advantage of the delay in collecting the note by pleas of limitation, or in any other way; but the same plea was interposed that would have been offered had the suit been brought in 1899, and'that is that the payment of interest had been released by the payee of the note and nothing was due but the principal, which appellants tendered in payment of the note.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 S.W. 20, 59 Tex. Civ. App. 29, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ball-v-belden-texapp-1910.