Beard v. Beard

113 S.W.2d 678, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 850
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 1938
DocketNo. 4634.
StatusPublished

This text of 113 S.W.2d 678 (Beard v. Beard) 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
Beard v. Beard, 113 S.W.2d 678, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 850 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

This suit was filed by appellant, Lizzie I. Beard, who is a widow, against the ap-pellees, Annie Lee Beard, and Lorene Young and her husband, Tom Young, Annie Lee Beard, and Lorene Young being the daughters of appellant. The suit was in the ordinary form of trespass to try title to eight tracts of land in Hall county.

Appellees answered, disclaiming any present interest in the land, but alleged they each was vested with an undivided one-half interest in remainder, and that appellant, their mother, was vested with a life estate therein and entitled to the possession, use, and enjoyment thereof during her lifetime, after which they asserted in themselves title in fee simple.

Appellant filed a supplemental petition in which she denied the asserted estate in remainder and alleged that appellees’ claim thereto was based upon two deeds purporting to have been executed by the father of appellant, Lizzie I. Beard, and grandfather of appellees Annie Lee Beard and Lorene Young, dated May 9, 1910, and June 10, 1915, respectively. She alleged that such deeds were ineffective and void for the reason they were not delivered during the lifetime of the grantor, Jackson Collier, and that they had been placed of record in the deed records of Hall county without his authority or consent, and that the filing and recording of the deeds was through error and mistake.

*679 The facts are that the land involved, together with other lands, were owned by Jackson Collier and his wife, Laura V. Collier, who were the father and mother of appellant, Lizzie I. Beard, and two other children, not parties to this suit, and whosfi names are L. May Parks, a daughter, and Z. C. Collier, a son. On the 9th of May, 1910, Jackson Collier and his wife executed three deeds of general warranty, conveying to appellant the first seven tracts of the land here involved for a consideration of $1 and love and affection. On the same day they executed like deeds to their other two children, conveying to them certain other lands not involved in this suit. On June 10, 1915, for a like consideration, they executed three other deeds, one of which conveyed to appellant the eighth tract involved in this controversy and other tracts to the other two children that are not here involved. These deeds were written in their entirety by Jackson Collier and conveyed to the grantees life estates in the respective tracts, with remainder in fee simple to their children. The record shows that after the deeds were executed they were placed in an iron safe in the home where Jackson Collier kept his valuable papers. The deeds were not acknowledged as required by the statute, but were witnessed by J. N. Collier and O. L. Tucker, who merely signed their names as witnesses, but did not acknowledge or certify to them in the usual manner.

On August 1, 1927, Jackson Collier and his wife executed a joint will and testament in which they bequeathed to the survivor in fee simple all ..property, real and personal, of which either may die seized and possessed, with power to manage or sell, and dispose of as the survivor may wish or see proper. Jackson Collier died on the 5th of August, 1931, and the will was duly probated on the 24th of that month. On the 21st of January, 1935, Laura V. Collier, the surviving wife of Jackson Collier, and her son, Z. C. Collier, and her daughter, L. May Parks, joined by her husband, J. P. Parks, by general warranty deed, conveyed to appellant, Lizzie I. Beard, the eight tracts involved in this suit, the mother, Laura V. Collier, presumably acting under the power and authority given her in the will of her .deceased husband, Jackson Collier.

In support of her claim to the land involved, appellant introduced the chain of title down to her father, Jackson Collier, the last will and testament of Jackson Collier, together with the proceedings in the county court in which it was admitted to probate, and the deed from her mother and her brother and sister conveying to her the land in controversy, after which she rested her case. To substantiate their claim to the land, ap-pellees introduced the two deeds of May 9, 1910, and June 10, 1915, under which they claimed the remainder in fee simple after the death of appellant.

The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues, in answer to which the jury found substantially that it was the intention of Jackson Collier at the' time he executed the deeds of May 9, 1910, and June 10, 1915, to vest the title to the land in appellant as a life estate, with remainder to appellees; that at the time of the execution of the deeds it was his purpose and intention to deliver them to the grantees or have them delivered for the purpose of passing such title; that it was his desire and intention at the time such deeds were executed or at some time before his death that they should be delivered to appellant. Special issue No. 4 was as follows: “Do you find from the evidence that the plaintiff, Lizzie I. Beard, never accepted said two deeds mentioned in the preceding special issue No. 3,” to which the jury answered “No.” Other findings were to the effect that appellees accepted the two deeds as conveyance to them of the remainder of the estate after the death of their mother, the appellant, and that Jackson Collier did not execute any other deed purporting to convey the land in question to appellant as her sole property.

Based upon the verdict, the court on the 27th of September, 1935, entered judgment denying appellant any relief save and except an estate for the term of her natural life in the property in controversy.

The case is presented here upon fifty-five assignments and propositions, but we think the material issues involved may be reduced to three, viz., first, whether the deeds under which appellees claim as remainder-men were delivered in such manner as to make them effective as conveyances; second, whether, after executing the deeds under which appellees claim, the grantor, Jackson Collier, abandoned or repudiated them as conveyances; and, third, whether such *680 two deeds were filed for record through error or mistake.

The evidence shows that on May 9, 1931, Jackson Collier suffered a stroke of paralysis from which he never recovered, and that he died August 5, 1931. A few days before his death he became unable to talk, and in attempting to express himself he could only mumble in an inaudible way. He was apparently possessed of his mental faculties, however, until the hour of his death and, while he was unable to express himself in an audible manner, in answer to questions propounded to him concerning his wishes, he would either nod his head in approval or shake his head in disapproval of suggestions made or questions asked him. It was shown that on the night of August 3d he made an effort to talk and, being unable to do so, his wife furnished him with paper and pencil but he was also unable to write. He was then lifted up so that he sat on the side of the bed and his wife, Laura V. Collier, went to the iron safe and procured a bundle of papers, and with these in her hands she sat down on the bed by his side and went over the various papers, naming them, and at times he would shake his' head. He continued an effort to talk and finally he was asked by Mrs. Collier if he wanted the deeds to the children put on record.

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Bluebook (online)
113 S.W.2d 678, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beard-v-beard-texapp-1938.