Benavides v. Benavides

218 S.W. 566, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 78
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 21, 1920
DocketNo. 6319.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 566 (Benavides v. Benavides) 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
Benavides v. Benavides, 218 S.W. 566, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 78 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

FLY, C. J.

This is an action in trespass to try title, instituted by appellee, as the executrix of the estate of S. M. Benavides, dei-ceased, against appellant individually and as executrix of the estate of Cristobal Bena-vides, to recover 3,920 acres of land consisting of seven tracts in Webb county. The cause was tried by the court, without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of appellee for the land for which she sued.

The evidence showed that appellee is the widow and sole devisee of her husband, Santos Benavides, who died in May, 1913. He was a son of appellant and Cristobal Bena-vides, who died in September, 1904. The latter left all his property, including the land in controversy, to appellant unincumbered by debts. In 1902, Santos Benavides became the treasurer of the city of Laredo, and before his father died in 1904 had a shortage in his accounts with the city. His father promised to protect him as against the shortage, but died before he had done so, and Santos then urged his mother from time to time to assist him. In May, .1905, appellant was in bad health, and Santos urged her to help him. He had been educated in the law and wrote a deed and urged his mother to sign it, which was to convey to him 3,920 acres of land of the value of $75,000, being the most valuable land appellant owned in her estate of about $250,000 in value. The consideration named in the deed was one-dollar and love and affection. The deed was presented by Santos Benavides to appellant at his home in Laredo, and he requested her to sign and acknowledge it. She signed the instrument after adding thereto the words, “After my death should I not make a will,” but refused to acknowledge it. The uncon-tradicted evidence shows that Santos Bena-vides, when he saw the words written by Ms mother, said:

“ ‘This is no good, Mother: You need not sign it; it is no good without a notary, and without witnesses it is not good. * * * ’ Then he took it and threw it across the room and said: ‘You have done nothing for me; I do not want it.’ He took it and threw it on the floor.”

That was the testimony of appellant and was the only evidence on the subject, no one being present at the time of the transaction except Santos Benavides and appellant. The court, however, found from that evidence that Santos informed his mother that the same was of no present value and conveyed no present title, and that said Lamar B. Benavides then left the room, leaving the paper lying on the floor, but that said Santos M. Benavides kept said instrument carefully -in hig possession until his death.

The first assignment of error assails the finding that Santos Benavides said that the instrument was “of no present value and conveyed no present title.” Undoubtedly there was no testimony to support any such conclusion, but the only evidence on the subject showed that he considered the deed ab: solutely invalid and said that his mother had done nothing for him and that he did not want it and threw it on the floor. The difference is material as bearing on the ques-, tions of delivery and acceptance, for if the deed would be good, in the opinion of Santos Benavides, in the future, then it might indicate an acceptance, though in anger and disappointment he had made a statement of- his belief that the deed was invalid and that he did not want it would tend to show a rejection of the deed. The whole case must turn on the question of the delivery and acceptance of the deed, and every little circumstance must be given its full,weight in order to arrive at the proper- conclusion. Evidently the trial judge concluded that Santos Benavides accepted the deed because he thought it might be of value in the future. It is true that the court had full authority to reject the evidence of appellant, but not to change it so as to support .a theory that might be entertained of the ease. The court might have rejected the testimony of appellant in toto and have based his decision on the grounds found in the record, or he might have rejected parts of the evidence and accepted the other; but the evidence could not be accepted in a changed and distorted condition.

The second, third, fourth, and fifth assignments of error complain of a conclusion of the trial judge that—

“Ever since the probating of the will of Cristo-bal Benavides and the qualification of the said Lamar B. Benavides as executrix thereof in 1904, the said Lamar B. Benavides has claimed and had possession of all of said property, subject to the legal effect of said instrument, has rendered the same for taxation each -year and paid the taxes thereon each year as they accrued, and has leased said lands and received and enjoyed the rents, revenues, and profits therefrom, and still now has the same so leased.”

According to that finding, appellant held possession of the property “subject to the legal effect of said instrument” for several months before it was in existence, and it is probably true that the evidence would justify such a finding as fully as that it was so held after the execution of the instrument. The testimony showed that Santos Benavides was never in possession of the land; that his *568 mother did not hold it for him; that he at no time asserted any claim to it; that he paid no taxes and collected no rents from the land. The uncontroverted evidence clearly showed that appellant was in exclusive possession of the land and exercised all the rights of ownership over it; that she paid all taxes and mortgaged and leased the property, and collected and appropriated all the rents, revenues, and profits. Santos Benavides at all times stated to his mother that the deed was of no validity, and claimed that he had lost it. He claimed to desire the deed to protect him from his defalcation as a public officer, and yet after the mother paid off the amount of his shortage, and , after his death, a claim was set up to the land of appellant. After the death of her husband, appellee did not inventory the land as a part of his estate, nor did she claim any right to it for years after his death, although she was trying to get money from appellant. She stated that'her husband told her to claim the lands if appellant did not do her justice. This indicated that he desired appellee to use the deed to extract money from his mother. There is not a word of testimony tending to support the conclusion that appellant held possession of the lands subject to the legal effect of the deed. There was no evidence indicating a real claim to the lands by Santos Benavides; but, on the other hand, all of the facts and circumstances tend to show that Santos Benavides did not claim the land, but admitted the invalidity of. the instrument executed by his mother. It was always stated by him to appellant that the deed had been lost or destroyed and was invalid anyway, and it appears that he held the deed merely as a weapon with which to enforce demands made upon appellant for money. He did this while living and instructed the wife to use it for the same purposes after his death.

The only evidence in this case as to the signing and delivery of the instrument consists of the statements of appellant which, were credited by the trial court because he found that after the instrument was altered and signed by appellant he “threw said instrument on the floor and informed his mother that the same was of no present value and conveyed no present title, and that the said llamar B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 566, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benavides-v-benavides-texapp-1920.