Bramlett v. Jenkins

231 S.W.2d 539, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2191
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 2, 1950
Docket15139
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 231 S.W.2d 539 (Bramlett v. Jenkins) 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
Bramlett v. Jenkins, 231 S.W.2d 539, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2191 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

Appellees, Mrs. Tillie Jenkins, Ethel Huckaby, both widows; C. M. Rust; N-. M. Rust, Jr.; and Jimmie Kilde (formerly Jimmie Gassady), joined by her husband, sued appellant Carrie Bramlett along with her husband and E. A. Rust tó Recover 5/6ths interest in an undivided one-eighth interest in three described tracts of land in Rusk County, Texas, and for certain moneys alleged to have been collected by Mrs. Bramlett for oil runs from the land.

The parties, aside from the husbands of Mrs. Kilde and Mrs. 'Bramlett/ are' the adult children of N. M. Rust and his wife, both deceased. Defendant E. A.' Rust filed a disclaimer and went out of the case. At a trial to the court each of the appellees other than C. M. Rust recovered a one-sixth interest in the land and a two-sixths interest was awarded to defendant below, Mrs. Carrie Bramlett.' Dissatisfied with the award, Mrs. Bramlett has appealed.

No findings of fact or conclusions of law were requested or filed. The judgment is in short form and recited no specific fact findings upon the contentions of the respective parties. The effect of the judgment. was ' that the court resolved the controverted fact issues in favor of appel-lees’ contention. ■

Much of the testimony is documentary, consisting in part of deeds, pleadings, judgments and executions in three or four former suits between some of the parties 'here; assignments of judgments, checks and payments for assignments of judgments and a written memorandum made simultaneously with one of the deeds. The oral testimony of the respective parties, which apparently controls this- appeal; 'was very conflicting as is too often the -case where families fall out and fight in the courts..

Matters necessary to be discussed in this appeal will be confusing enough to the reader’s mind without bringing in secondary issues. ■ We shall refrain.- as far as possible from losing sight of the factors ' which will control the result to be reached.

. Prior to 1934, N. M. Rust, father of most of these, parties and deceased at the time of trial, owned the one-eighth undivided interest in .controversy. N. M. Rust executed a deed to his son, C. M. Rust, covering the interest here involved, dated and acknowledged on February 7, 1934. ■ There is inferable testimony that the deed was in fact executed in 1936 and dated back to 1934; the testimony is conflicting in this respect. All parties admit- . ted, however, that when the deed was made grantor was having trouble with his son E. A. Rust,- who was claiming that his father was indebted to him and had sued the, father for several thousand dollars. Pending that suit the father executed the deed to another son, C. M. Rust, definitely to prevent E. A. Rust from getting the land if he should eventually recover judgment against the father. Appellants and appellees all knew that conveyance was not a bona fide, one- and that the land remained the property of the father.

In September, 1941, E. A. Rust did obtain judgment against the father for $992.50, and C, M. Rust (who then held legal title to the land in trust), with the consent of the father, purchased the judgment from E. A. Rust, paying him $1100 for it and took an assignment' of the judgment on January 23, 1942.

Early in 1942, appellant Mrs. Bramlett, a daughter of N. M. Rust, proposed to C. M. Rust and the father that she would buy the judgment so as to get interest on her money. The judgment was sold to her by C. M. Rust and she was to have a deed to the land from her father and ■ C. M. ■ Rust and would collect the oil runs, give -her father stipulated parts of it, retain the remainder until she got her $1100 and interest back, and would then reconvey the land to the father or his estate if he was ■ not ■living. The controversy here • revolves , around her agreement to reconvey; Some *542 ■witnesses said she did so agree, while Mrs. Bramlett contends that she only agreed to ■do so on certain conditions, which conditions she claims never happened.

In consummating the deal by which .appellant purchased the judgment, three instruments in writing were executed to ■carry the deal into effect, and while there is a discrepancy of one day in the dates, .all parties treat them as constituting a ■single transaction. Appellant wanted the ■deed to be signed by both her brother and father for she said she knew the latter :really owned the land. On March 9, 1942, N. M. and C. M. Rust executed the deed -to appellant; on March 10, 1942, C. M., Rust, in consideration of $1100 cash paid to him by Mrs. Bramlett, assigned the judgment to her, and on the same day appellant wrote the following document:

“March 10, 1942.
“Mr. N. M. Rust.
“Dear Dad:
This Is My Agreement To You
'“I will give- you $25 per month as long as you live and as long as the oil check is ■$40 per month and over. And if the oil check gets larger from month to month I will give you more money if you need it. In other words our last oil check was .$54.90. Will say, if the oil check gets to $60 per month and you need more money I’ll give you $30 per month, and if it gets to $70 per month I’ll give you $35 per •month, and so on. And at your death .after I get my $1,100 back and all other •money that I have advanced you from time to time, I will turn it back to your •estate if you want me to, but I would . want you to give it to me in writing prior to your death, as to how you want me to distribute it to your estate. In other words you might want me to deed it to one certain party, or you might want me to give so much money to this one and so -much money to that one. That, is why I would want you to give it to me in writing prior to your death, because you may ■change your mind several times as to what you might want done. Now I don’t think I will have to, but in case I have to pay the John A. Kee judgment I am not going to deed it back to your estate because I think I have done my .part toward you. In other words, I am doing more for you than any other child you’ve got would do, and under those conditions I don’t think you would want me to.
“(s) Mrs. Carrie Bramlett
“ N. M. Rust.”

Although the above document was written to the father, apparently he signed it also and it is because the father never gave appellant the requested written instruction in the foregoing document that appellant contends that the deed passed to her fee simple title. She also testified that her father told her he wanted her to have the land. The date of such statement by the father is not shown; there is evidence of contradictory statements by the father.

N. M. Rust, the father, died testate February 19, 1944; his will dated December 30, 1935, was duly probated, naming N. M. Rust, Jr., independent executor. It is sufficient to say that by the will the father bequeathed this property to his six named children in equal parts. These legatees are the appellant Mrs. Bramlett and ap-pellees. Testator specifically omitted his son, E. A. Rust, from the bequest for reasons mentioned in the will.

John A. Kee recovered a judgment against N. M. Rust on September 9, 1936; the judgment recites that it was based upon two promissory notes executed in 1931.

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Bluebook (online)
231 S.W.2d 539, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 2191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bramlett-v-jenkins-texapp-1950.