Brown v. Federal Land Bank of Houston

180 S.W.2d 647, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 739
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 21, 1944
DocketNo. 14623.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 180 S.W.2d 647 (Brown v. Federal Land Bank of Houston) 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
Brown v. Federal Land Bank of Houston, 180 S.W.2d 647, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 739 (Tex. Ct. App. 1944).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

Appellants George Wesley Brown and wife, Alice Brown, instituted this suit in March, 1941, against appellee Federal Land Bank of Houston for injunction to prevent the sale under a deed of trust on a described 258 acres of land in Montague County, and for an accounting of the status of an indebtedness claimed by it to be owing by appellants.

Federal Land Bank answered and filed a cross action against appellants for a forer closure of its asserted lien on the land and impleaded appellee Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation, another federal loaning agency, whose immediate predecessor was Land Bank Commissioner. See Act of Congress, 12 U.S.C.A § 1020b.

Appellee Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation cross-actioned against appellants, the Browns, seeking a foreclosure of an asserted indebtedness and second lien on the land.

By appellants’ amended pleadings, upon which trial was had, the asserted rights of Federal Land Bank of a debt for approximately $1650 and a lien on the land, is, in effect, confessed.

The controversy presented by this appeal is between appellants G. W. Brown and wife Alice Brown, and appellee Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation, arising from the latter’s asserted debt and lien on the land. Appellants claim the land was their homestead for many years before the transactions here involved, was such at that time and continued to be so to the date of trial; that any asserted lien thereon held by Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation was void and grew out of a simulated transaction pretending to place a lien on their homestead in violation of the Constitution and laws of this State for an indebtedness and purpose not falling within those allowed by law or the Constitution to be created against the homestead.

Appellee Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation relies upon the contention that the Browns are estopped as a matter of law to assert the invalidity of the debt and lien on the land, sought to be foreclosed.

At the conclusion of a jury trial, the court instructed a verdict against appellants (Browns) and in favor of each of the appellees, Federal Land Bank of Houston, Texas, and Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation. As above indicated, appellants do not complain of the judgment in favor of the former named appellee, and in this respect nothing more need be said. Appeal was perfected as against the latter corporation, and for convenience in this discussion we will refer to the Browns as appellants and to Federal Farm Mortgage Corporation as appellee, except when necessary to mention them or some of them by name.

The record reflects without dispute many of the things contended for by parties on both sides. The land in controversy has been owned, used and occupied as a homestead by appellants for many years prior to the matters affecting this law suit, subject to an indebtedness for purchase money held by Federal Land Bank. They have not been out of physical possession and occupancy of it at any time since they purchased it in 1903 or 1904. There was a conflict in the testimony as to whether iney held it as tenants, between the time they conveyed it to Roach in October, 1923, and when Roach conveyed it back to them in August of 1924. It is also undisputed that the wife did not join in the extension of maturity agreements executed by her husband with the owners of the note represented by the note sued on in the cross action. There is a conflict in the evidence as to whether or not Mrs. Brown acknowledged the purported deed of conveyance by her and her husband to S. C. Roach in 1923.

It was indisputably shown that in 1923, G. W. Brown was indebted to the Citizens National Bank of Saint Jo, Texas; that S. C. Roach was the cashier and operated the bank subject to the orders of its board of directors. Roach and G. W. Brown had negotiations with reference to the latter’s debt to the bank, and it culminated in a conveyance of the land by Brown and wife to Roach on October 31, 1923. The conveyance was in form of a general warranty deed reciting a consideration of $1262.00 in cash and the assumption of payment by Roach of the balance unpaid on an indebtedness of $1650 held by Federal Land Bank of Houston. This instrument was filed for record. There is some difference of opinion by Roach and Brown as to the disbursement of the cash consideration, whether it was paid directly to Brown or enough of it applied to liquidate Brown’s debt at the bank and the remainder to taxes and delinquencies on the Federal Land Bank’s debt; but Brown said he supposed his debt *649 to the bank was paid out of that money because it did not again ask him to pay. We have above pointed out that Roach and Brown differed in their versions of the nature of Brown’s possession and payment of rentals thereafter. The conveyance to Roach in 1923 is the instrument which Mrs. Brown said she did not acknowledge. Both appellants testified they knew they had made a deed to Roach and identified it, but in their own way of expressing it said it was made because they owed the bank and they did not ever expect to move off the premises and that Roach told them' they would not be required to move.

On August 12, 1924, Roach and wife executed and delivered to G. W. Brown a warranty deed conveying the land, and Brown caused the deed to be recorded. The consideration recited in this conveyance was the assumption of payment by Brown of a balance of $1556.11 unpaid to Federal Land Bank and the execution by Brown and wife of two notes, one for $700, due on or before November 1, 1924, and another note for $807.50, due on or before November 1, 1925, payable to the order of S. C. Roach.

The record indicates that the $700 note was paid and certain payments on the $807.-50 note were made, prior to the time ap-pellee claims to have purchased it. Subsequent to the execution of said notes, G. W. Brown (not joined by his wife) executed written agreements with respective owners of the $807.50 note for extension of maturity dates. The last instrument extended maturity to January 1, 1934. These agreements were recorded.

Subsequent to 1924, the Browns appear to have made oil and gas leases on parts of the land; holders of these claims were made parties but were disposed of in, a way not necessary to relate.

There is an affidavit made by G. W. Brown on May 3, 1927, duly recorded, brought forward in the statement of facts. Among other things therein it recites: "That he (Brown) sold the said land in the year 1923 to S. C. Roach and bought it back in the year 1924, but at the time he sold to Roach he did not move off of the premises * *

On January 24, 1934, G. W. Brown made written application to the Land Bank Commissioner for a loan on the land for $1300; in the application he stated he acquired the land from S. C. Roach on August 12, 1924, for a consideration of $3000, of which $1500 was cash and the remainder in “mortgage or contract”. That the farm had changed hands one time during the last ten years. The application contained a list of the debts, and encumbrances on the land, among which was one listed as $750 incurred in 1924, and that S. C. Roach was the lien holder. Another item was $64.96 in taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W.2d 647, 1944 Tex. App. LEXIS 739, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-federal-land-bank-of-houston-texapp-1944.