Biggs v. Hinds

177 S.W.2d 288
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 20, 1943
DocketNo. 5584.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 177 S.W.2d 288 (Biggs v. Hinds) 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
Biggs v. Hinds, 177 S.W.2d 288 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

PITTS, Chief Justice.

This suit was filed on February 9, 1943 by appellants, Lillian B. Biggs, joined by her husband, E. R. Biggs, against appellees, Clem Hinds and G. H. Kyle, Sheriff of Gray County, Texas, to restrain appellees from selling under execution certain property hereinafter described, claimed by Lillian B. Biggs as her separate property, to satisfy a judgment previously recovered by Clem Hinds against E. R. Biggs and for a final judgment decreeing said property to be the separate property of Lillian B. Biggs and to decree same free from such incumbrances as appellees are claiming.

The case was heard without a jury by the trial court who had previously granted a temporary injunction but who on this final hearing dissolved and set same aside and rendered judgment on August 17, 1943 for appellees, denying the relief prayed for by appellants and authorizing appellees to sell the property in question but continued the injunction in force upon the execution of a satisfactory supersedeas bond by appellants during the appeal which was perfected by appellants to this court.

Appellants alleged that Lillian B. Biggs was the owner in fee simple title of an undivided 1/80 interest in and to all of the oil, gas and other minerals under 160 acres of land located in Gray County, Texas, known as Morse “A” Lease and being SE ¼ of Section 3 in Block 26, H. & G. N. Ry. Co. Survey; the same interest under 160 acres located in the same county and state know as Morse “B” Lease and being SWJ4 of Section 2 in Block 26, H. & G. N. Ry. Co. Survey; an undivided 1/32 interest in all of the oil, gas and other minerals under 80 acres of land located in the same county and state known as Gething “A” Lease and being N% of the NE^, of Section 14 in Block A-9, H. & G. N. Ry. Co. Survey; and an undivided 1/8 interest in all of the oil, gas and other minerals under 320 acres of land located in the same county and state, being the E½. of Section 177 in Block B-2, H. & G. N. Ry. Co. Survey; and an undivided 1/8 interest in all of the oil, gas and other minerals under 320 acres of land located in the same county and state being E% of Section 176 in Block B-2, H. & G. N. Ry. Co. Survey; that she has been the owner of said property since 1926; that said property has been levied upon by G. H. Kyle, Sheriff of Gray County, by virtue of an execution issued out of the District Court of Hutchinson County in Cause No. 3846 wherein Clem Hinds recovered a judgment against E. R. Biggs on the 25th day of March, 1942 for $4,814.94, together with costs in the sum of $100.06, with interest thereon, and caused the same to be recorded, abstracted and indexed as a lien on said property located in Gray County, Texas; that the properties in question were shown upon the records of Gray County to be in the name of E. R. Biggs, who actually had no equitable title to any of same but who held all of same in trust for his wife, Lillian B. Biggs; that prior to her marriage to E. R. Biggs, her half brother, Theodore W. Barhydt, Jr., held all of her property for her under a trust agreement and contract; that after her marriage to E. R. Biggs she granted a power of attorney to her said husband on or about March 31, 1921 and turned over to him to manage for her certain separate property of her own that consisted of money and stocks and bonds of the total value of more than $100,000; that E. R. Biggs purchased the said property involved in this case for her with a part of her said money; that in 1932 or 1933 E. R. Biggs became financially involved and Lillian B. Biggs requested him to transfer said property to her; that in 1941 E. R. Biggs advised her that said property had been conveyed to her by him and the deed recorded; that she relied upon his statements but found in November, 1942 that he had failed to place such deed of record; that the abstract of judgment lien and execution heretofore mentioned constituted a cloud upon her title to said property; that an execution has been levied upon said property and same would be sold unless enjoined and she prayed for the relief hereinabove mentioned.

On July 10, 1943 appellants filed a trial amendment alleging that on September 21, 1942 E. R. Biggs was served with a citation in Cause No. 7167 styled Clem Hinds vs. E. R. Biggs, pending in the District Court of Gray County, Texas, in which suit Clem Hinds sought to foreclose a judgment lien on the same property involved in this suit; that on November 2, 1943 E. R. Biggs filed his answer in said cause alleging that he was not the owner of said property; that although the record title to said property was in his name he was the trustee and agent for his wife, Lillian B. *290 Biggs; that Clem Hinds took a non-suit in said suit on or about January 25, 1943 and that Clem Hinds has had actual notice of the claim of Lillian B. Biggs since November 2, 1942 and had such notice at the time he levied the execution mentioned in this cause.

Appellees levelled a number of exceptions at appellants’ pleadings and answered further with a sworn general denial and alleged further that if E. R. Biggs deeded the property involved in this case to his wife, Lillian B. Biggs, in the year 1940 he did so without any consideration passing and that same was done for the purpose of hindering, Relaying and defrauding the creditors of E. R. Biggs, and especially appellant, Clem Hinds; that if said deed were executed it was secretly held and never recorded, during which time Lillian B. Biggs exercised no control over the property in question but E. R. Biggs continued to manage and treat said property as his own; that E. R. Biggs has no other property out of which the aforesaid judgment and execution can be satisfied; that Lillian B. Biggs had actual notice of all the facts alleged by appellees and that the relief prayed for by appellants be denied and that the deed of conveyance of the property in question be decreed fraudulent, void and of no force and effect.

At the request of appellants the trial court filed his findings of fact, which in effect are as follows: that E. R. Biggs came into possession in 1921 and 1922 of money and other property of the total value of more than $100,000 belonging to and being the separate property of his wife, Lillian B. Biggs, immediately after their marriage; that at said time E. R. Biggs was possessed of a separate estate in excess of the value of $50,000, most of which was invested in the Biggs Investment Company, a corporation; that the Biggs Investment Company was a corporation with E. R. Biggs president and Lillian B. Biggs secretary and treasurer, and they were the principal stockholders and investors; that the separate property of Lillian B. Biggs was deposited with the funds of the said Biggs Investment Company, a corporation, and that all of her said separate estate not otherwise disposed of was mixed and mingled with the separate property of E. R. Biggs, the community property of E. R. Biggs and wife, Lilian B. Biggs, and the funds of the Biggs Investment Company prior to the time of the purchase of the

royalty interest and property involved in this suit and that said separate property of the said Lillian B. Biggs had become so mixed and mingled with the other said funds at said time that same could not be identified as the separate property of the said Lillian B. Biggs; that E. R. Biggs purchased all the property in question with funds belonging to the account of Biggs Investment Company, a corporation, and the title of said property was taken in the name of E. R. Biggs; that on January 25, 1943 Clem Hinds placed in the hands of G. H.

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Bluebook (online)
177 S.W.2d 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biggs-v-hinds-texapp-1943.