Breneman v. Mayer

58 S.W. 725, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 164, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 133
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 6, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 58 S.W. 725 (Breneman v. Mayer) 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
Breneman v. Mayer, 58 S.W. 725, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 164, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 133 (Tex. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

HEILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by the appellee, Charles Mayer, against Henry B. Burks and C. K. Breneman and his wife, Susan A. Breneman, upon a promissory note for $2500, more fully described in our conclusions of fact, and to foreclose an alleged vendor’s lien upon a certain lot which is also described in our conclusions. C. W. Freeman, the other appellee, as executor of the estate of T. W. Freeman, deceased, intervened in the ■ suit and asked judgment against the defendants upon a note for $1000, which is described in our conclusions of fact, which he claims was made at the same time the note sued on by Mayer was executed, and that a vendor’s lien to secure its paj’ment exists 'upon the same property upon which the lien is claimed by Mayer to secure the amount due on the note sued upon by him, which lien he asked to be foreclosed.

Burkes by a sworn answer denied that he ever had any right, title,. or interest whatever in the property upon which the liens are asserted by appellees; that he never purchased, intended, or attempted to purchase the property or any part thereof described in the note sued on; that he never received, accepted, had possession or control of, any deed therefor, and that he had no knowledge or information that a deed to the property had been executed until this suit was instituted.

The defendant, Susan A. Breneman, answered by general demurrer, general denial, and by special sworn answer, in which she averred that the property described in the notes set up by plaintiff and intervener, and described in the alleged deed of March 4, 1897, was purchased by her and her husband in 1883 for a homestead; that at the time they purchased the lot it was vacant; that they at once built a dwelling house and other necessary buildings thereon, and upon completion thereof in 1884, she, with her husband and their children, moved upon said lot *166 and into said buildings and began to use, occupy, and enjoy the same as and for their homestead, and that from that time forth, continuously to the present time, she and her husband, with their children, have been in open, visible, notorious, distinct, exclusive, and unequivocal possession of the said lot and improvements thereon, occupying and enjoying the same as their homestead and for no other purpose, and that she had never at any time waived or abandoned her homestead rights in and to the said property.

That on the 4th day of March, 1897, whilst the said premises were her homestead, her husband, by imposition, concealment, undue influence, abuse of confidence, circumvention, and misrepresentation, induced her to sign what she has since been informed was an absolute deed to said lot and improvements to Henry E. Burks, for a pretended consideration of $17,500, of which sum $12,500 was alleged in said pretended ■deed to be paid in cash, and $5000 was alleged therein to be paid in one and two years, the pretended deferred payments being evidenced by three negotiable promissory notes made payable to the order of her husband, the said defendant, C. K. Breneman, alone, of which said notes one for $2500 is alleged to belong to the plaintiff; one for $1000 is alleged to belong to the intervener, and one for $1500 is alleged to belong to her husband; that in said pretended' deed a vendor’s lien upon the property therein described, her homestead, is expressly reserved to secure the payment of the alleged unpaid purchase money.

She denied that either of the said notes constituted or evidenced any part of the purchase money for said property; or that either of them was a lien in any manner upon said property, for the reason that at the time she signed the pretended deed her husband requested her to sign with him what he told her was and what she, relying upon his statements, as she had a right to do, believed to be, but what her husband well knew was not, a promissory note, which he told her he wanted to use to pay some debts. She averred that relying upon the said false representations of her husband and believing them to be true, she did not read the instrument which her husband falsely represented to her was a promissory note; nor did she know its contents, but relied upon the false and deceitful representations of her husband in reference thereto, and she, at the same time and immediately after her husband had signed the same and at her husband’s request, signed the said pretended deed, believing it to be a promissory note; tho t her husband further told her it would be necessary to have her signature to the said note witnessed, which further statement of her said husband she, being uninformed and ignorant in such matters, believed; that her husband told her he would bring a Mr. Charles C. Smith, whose office was near by, to witness her signature; that her husband then left her house, and in about twenty minutes returned to the house with the said Mr. Smith, and that in the presence of both the said Smith and her husband, at her husband’s request, she signed what she believed to be a promissory note, which her husband had falsely told her it was; and that the said Burks, the grantee in the said pretended deed, knew of the imposition, concealment, and de *167 celt practiced upon her by her husband as aforesaid in order to procure her signature to the said pretended deed; and that the said Burks participated in the imposition practiced upon her as aforesaid, by remaining silent and not apprising her thereof.

That she believed the said Smith was present at the time it is claimed she signed the pretended deed, on the 4th day of March, 1897, for the sole purpose of Avitnessing her signature to a promissory note, because her husband had told her he would bring him to her house for that purpose ; that the said Smith did not read the said pretended deed to her, nor did anyone else, and she had no knowledge of the contents of the same at the time it is claimed she signed it; that she did not know that the said Smith was present for the purpose of taking her acknowledgment to the said pretended deed; that he did not tell her that she was about to sign a deed; that he did not explain the said pretended deed to her; that the said deed was not shown to her and explained by the said Smith upon an examination privily and apart from her husband or otherwise; and she further averred that by reason of his failure to perform his duty as a notary public in the premises, the said Smith intentionally aided and enabled her husband to practice the imposition upon her as alleged; and that by reason of the said combination between her husband and the said notary public she was tricked into signing the said conveyance; that she did not intend to sign the said pretended deed; that she did not consent to the said pretended sale nor join her husband in executing the said pretended deed; that she did not willingly sign the same; that she did not acknowledge before the said officer that the same was her act and deed for the purposes and consideration therein expressed ; and that she had willingly signed the same, nor that she did not wish to retract it; that she did not appear before the said notary public for the purpose of acknowledging the said pretended deed, or for any other purpose; that she had not in any way invoked the exercise of the said notary’s authority in that or any respect; that she did not acknowledge the said deed before the said notary public; and that his certificate to the said pretended deed in so far as it purports to affect her is wholly false, and not binding upon her.

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Bluebook (online)
58 S.W. 725, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 164, 1900 Tex. App. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breneman-v-mayer-texapp-1900.