Bunnell v. Bunnell

217 S.W.2d 78, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1513
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 13, 1949
DocketNo. 2809.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 217 S.W.2d 78 (Bunnell v. Bunnell) 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
Bunnell v. Bunnell, 217 S.W.2d 78, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1513 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

LESTER, Chief Justice.

This is a suit brought by Miss Emma Bunnell against her brother, Sam Bunnell, and his wife to recover a three-fourths undivided interest in and for partition of a 164 acre farm in Hamilton county, plaintiff sought to establish (1) an express trust, and (2) a resulting trust. The plaintiff pleaded and the evidence shows that for several years prior to 1942 plaintiff and defendant and their mother, Mrs. Mary B. Bunnell, lived on a farm of 175 acres in Coryell county; that they owned an undivided interest in said farm in the following proportions: the plaintiff one-fourth; the defendant one-fourth, and Mrs. Mary Bunnell one-half, with rights of homestead. On or'about October 1, 1942, the United States Government condemned the farm for government purposes and agreed to pay approximately the sum of $3696.00, but the'money was not paid until November 27, 1943. On or about November 20, 1942, the defendant purchased from R. G. Limmer the 164 acre farm in Hamilton county and took the deed in his name only. The latter part of December, 1942, the defendant moved to said farm, taking his family, the plaintiff and his mother with him, and they all resided there together until his mother’s death in February, 1946. The deed provides for a consideration of $6187.50 as follows: the assumption by defendant of $4251.40, representing two loans held by the Federal Land Bank, and the execution of a note by him for the sum of $1936.00, due and payable to said R. G. Limmer on or before October 1, 1943. Said note bore five per cent interest from date and also provided for the usual ten per cent additional as attorney’s fees. The deed contained the following clause: “And it is understood that the said Sam Bunnell has sold his farm in Coryell county, Texas, to the Federal Government for Army purposes, and it might be some time before he gets the money on said farm, and if the said Sam Bunnell does his part to hurry the completion of the purchase by the Government of his farm, and it is not completed by the time the said $1936.00 note has matured, that the grantors herein will give said Sam 'Bunnell a reasonable time in which to complete the transaction with the Government so that the said Sam Bunnell can get the cash to pay said note off.”

Plaintiff alleged that at the time the deed was executed to the defendant that it was the mutual agreement between the plaintiff, the defendant and their mother that each would own the Flamilton county farm in the same proportion as they owned the Coryell county farm, and that the de *80 fendant holds three-fourths of said land in trust for her; which represents the proceeds of her one-fourth interest in the Coryell county farm that she had received under the will of her father and the one-half interest of her mother, now -deceased, that she was entitled to as devisee under the terms of her mother’s will. The defendant pleaded a denial of the agreement to purchase the farm for the -benefit of anyone except -himself. He also pleaded that after the death of his father he paid $1529.-30 that his father -owed át the time of his death; that he had incurred expenses in the sum -of $1422.84 in the payment of his debts and support of hi-s -mother and for the support of the plaintiff; that he had -paid out the -sum of $1000.00 for improvements on the Coryell county farm, for all of which he was entitled to be reimbursed. He further -pleaded that when the money was received from the Government that his mother -endorsed the -check and gave him her -part of the proceeds.

Relating to the -issue of trust, the court submitted -the following issue:

- “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Mr-s. Mary B. Bunnell, Sam Bunnell and Emma Bunnell on or about the 20th of November, 1942, had an agreement -that the proceeds received by them from the -sale of the Coryell County farm should be invested in the R. G. Lim-mer farm in Hamilton County, Texas, -and owned by them in the same proportions as the Cory.ell County place was owned; -that is, one-half to Mary B. Bunnell, and one-fourth each to Sam Bunnell and Emma Bunnell?”

to which the jury answered “No.”

As to -the -allegation of gift of the proceeds to the defendant, the court submitted the following issue:

“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Mrs. Mary Bunnell, after receiving the check from the Federal Government in payment for the Coryell County land, endorsed the same and gave it to the defendant, Sam Bunnell, with the intention that her portion thereof or any other part of the proceeds belonging to her was a gift to the -said Sam Bunnell?”

to which the jury answered “Yes”.

Plaintiff filed no written objections -to the court’s charge and requested no additional issue. After the verdict of the jury was returned the plaintiff filed her motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, which was -by the -court overruled.

Plaintiff first contends that the answer of -the jury to- Sjpecial Issue No. 1 was contrary to the undisputed evidence and that the court should disregard such answer and find as a matter of law that such an agreement did in fact exi-st. No witness testified that any agreement was made -between the parties that the defendant should buy -the Hamilton county farm and that each would own it in the same proportion to their interest in the Coryell county farm, or that anything was said by them to that effect at or prior to the time the farm was deeded to the defendant. Mrs. Freeman, the defendant’s sister, testified that in the summer of 1943, several months after Lim-mer had deeded -the farm to Sam, that she asked him, “When you bought thi-s farm did you put my Mother and Emma’s name in it, -and he said, I h-ave not, simply because have not put anything on it yet, I did not want to bother them with -it, I never beat any of my people -out of anything and don’t aim to now.” This witness further testified that she had another conversation with the defendant after he had bought and moved on the fanm in which -she a-sked him “if he had Mamma and Emma’s name on the deed. He said no, -he d-id not, because this is an independent deal, don’t have -anything -to pay down on -it -and he did not want to risk them in a law-suit. I said, well, if you do get the Government money, are you going to p-ut it on the place, and he replied, of course, I would not think of anything-else.” Another sister, Mrs. Lula Harris, -concerning a conversation she had with him after he -bought and moved on the farm, testified: “I said, Sam, they tell me you bought this in your name and did not put Emma and Mamma in the deed. He sa-id, yes, I did, -but it is 1-ike this, the Federal Government has not paid for it and naturally slow, and if I had bought it in Mamma’s and Emma’s name ■and they sued me on it, all of -us, that would get Emma and Mamma. They can’t get their part and I am trying to keep from *81 losing it.” The plaintiff testified that when the defendant bought the farm she asked him about the deed -being in all of their names and he said “if all of the names were included in the deed he would not get a loan.” She was then asked: “Did' Sam tell you anything about what interest you had in the place?” and she answered: “No, he did not. Q. Did he tell you that he did not put your name on it then? A. I knew it.”

All of these statements -on- the -part of defendant, as testified to by the witnesses, were made after he purchased the Hamilton county farm.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 S.W.2d 78, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bunnell-v-bunnell-texapp-1949.