Bennett v. McKrell

125 S.W.2d 701
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 1939
DocketNo. 3782.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 125 S.W.2d 701 (Bennett v. McKrell) 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
Bennett v. McKrell, 125 S.W.2d 701 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

WALTHALL, Justice.

The material facts in this case are substantially as follows, but stated more fully than we state them here:

On the first day of January, 1921, the appellant, Frank Bennett and his wife, Mary Bennett, resided upon a twenty-acre farm near Premont in Jim Wells County, Texas. The appellee was a farm hand, seeking labor and was employed by the appellant to assist on this small farm where a dairy was conducted, for a monthly salary of twenty-five dollars. Under this arrangement appellee worked for appellant for two months and then was advised by appellant that he could not continue to employ him as a farm hand at this wage.

The appellant and his wife, Mary Bennett, had no children. After appellee worked for them for two months they made him the proposition that if he would continue upon their farm they would jointly accumulate additional property, increase their herd of dairy cattle, and that all property so accumulated would be owned by them jointly (presumably one-third each). They further stated to appellee that they had no children and that if he would continue with them during the remainder of their lives they would cause him to receive all of the property they then owned, as well as their part of any additional property that they jointly might accumulate.

With this arrangement, the appellee continued on the farm of the appellant for a *703 period of sixteen years. Subsequent to January 1, 1921, a number of small tracts of land were sold for taxes in the Premont community, and the appellant, Frank Bennett, purchased six five-acre tracts at tax sale, and ten other tracts from other people in the community. The appellee, Clifton McKrell, alleged that these sixteen tracts of land were purchased pursuant to his oral agreement with Frank Bennett and his wife, Mary Bennett, and further alleged that the consideration therefor was the proceeds of the sale of cream produced on the farm where appellee worked with appellant. The testimony of appellee with reference to the paying for this property with the proceeds of cream checks was not disputed by the appellant, Frank Bennett. These purchases aggregated sixteen five-acre tracts or a total of eighty acres of land. The herd of cattle at the time of this trial had increased to twenty cows and sixteen calves.

Mary Bennett, the wife of Frank Bennett, departed this life on October 1, 1934, testate, leaving all of her property to the appellant, Frank Bennett. Appellee, Clifton McKrell, alleged and testified that this will was made without his knowledge and that the first information that he received with reference to it was sometime prior to the institution of this suit.

After the death of Mary Bennett, the appellee, Clifton McKrell, continued performing his contract with the appellant, Frank Bennett, until December 15, 1937, when the appellant, Frank Bennett, forced him to leave the premises.

Appellee alleged that on the 19th day of May, 1937, while he was performing his contract, the appellant, Frank Bennett, made and executed a deed to Robert I. Cauble, Winnie A. Cauble and George E. Bennett, conveying them all of the lands and premises owned by the said appellant at the time appellee entered into his contract with him and all of the other lands acquired by the appellant and appellee.

Appellee alleged this deed was made for the purpose of defrauding him. In the deed the appellant either reserved a life estate or obtained a lease for life from the grantee therein named. In other words, appellee alleged, and was uncontradicted by the evidence offered, that the appellant conveyed all of the property acquired pursuant to his agreement with appellee to Robert I. Cauble, Winnie A. Cauble and George E. Bennett to take effect upon his death.

After this suit was filed the said defendants, Robert I. Cauble, Winnie A. Cauble and George E. Bennett, executed a deed to Frank Bennett, conveying back to him the property acquired through the deed above referred to. That was after appel-lee filed this suit asking for an injunction restraining them from disposing of the property.

By this suit appellee seeks to enforce his oral contract against appellant, Frank Bennett, individually and as sole devisee under the will of his deceased wife, Mary Bennett; for damages by reason of the breach of this contract to will him his interest in this property or to otherwise cause it to pass to appellee at his death. In addition to this, appellee seeks by this suit to establish his right in one-half of the property acquired pursuant to the oral agreement in January, 1921. Pleading in the alternative, if he cannot recover upon his oral contract for damages by reason of the breach thereof against appellant individually and as devisee as afpresaid, he asks for judgment in quantum meruit for $10,000 being the reasonable value of his services rendered to and accepted by appellant, Frank Bennett, together with interest at the rate of six percent per annum. The defendants Robert I. Cauble, Winnie A. Cauble and George E. Bennett filed an answer through the same attorneys who represented the appellant, Frank Bennett, setting up that they had conveyed the property back to the defendant Frank Bennett. The defendant Frank Bennett answered by plea in abatement, general demurrer and many special exceptions, in substance, that no contract was made, and if so, it was without consideration; that if there was a consideration it failed; that appellee’s services were worthless; several statutes of limitation; and that appellee stood by on the premises and permitted the property to become valuable and permitted a contract to^ be made thereon; and the statute of frauds. Also he pleaded a cross-action to clear the title of the claims asserted by appellee.

The court overruled the dilatory pleas, general demurrer and special exceptions of the appellant to the appellee’s petition, and heard the evidence as offered by both sides. After both sides rested their case the appellant filed a motion with the court for an instructed verdict, and the court sus *704 tained the same as to the cause of action wherein plaintiff sought to enforce a parol contract with the appellant, Frank Bennett, and wife, Mary Bennett, to will him their property upon their death or for damages in lieu thereof, and overruled the same as to that portion of the cause of action wherein appellee sought to recover the alleged equitable interest in property acquired under said parol agreement, and submitted said cause to the jury upon special issues. The court also submitted to the jury such issues as were necessary to obtain a verdict upon the alternative plea of quantum meruit.

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Related

Dickens v. Dickens
241 S.W.2d 658 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1951)
Bennett v. McKrell
144 S.W.2d 242 (Texas Supreme Court, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.W.2d 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-mckrell-texapp-1939.