Caldwell v. Bryan's & Ella Beauchamp

49 S.W. 240, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 168, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 393
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 24, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 49 S.W. 240 (Caldwell v. Bryan's & Ella Beauchamp) 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
Caldwell v. Bryan's & Ella Beauchamp, 49 S.W. 240, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 168, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 393 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

RAINEY, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellant against J. H. Bryan and C. H. Beauchamp, Sr., to recover the lands here in controversy, the basis of plaintiff’s claim being that said lands were formerly the property of said Beauchamp; that on the 2d day of December, 1887, a writ of attachment was levied upon said lands, which said writ was issued by the Hnited States Circuit Court in a suit then pending, wherein the White Sewing Machine Company was plaintiff and the said Beauchamp was defendant, in which suit plaintiff was seeking to recover on an indebtedness due it by said Beauchamp. Subse* quetly a judgment was rendered in said suit in favor of plaintiff for the amount of said indebtedness and a foreclosure of the attachment lien. An order of sale was issued and said land sold thereunder, and same bid in by one Martin, who conveyed it to the appellant, who holds same in trust for said company and associates.

The defendant Bnran died during the pendency of the suit. His death was suggested, and his executor, Wesley Clark, made defendant. Said Clark answered, and as executor claimed said land by reason of the following: That on the 3d day of December, 1887, two writs of attachment were levied upon said land, which were issued out of the District Court of Dallas County in two suits then pending, wherein said Bryan was the plaintiff and C. H. Beauchamp was defendant, in which plaintiff was seeking to recover on an indebtedness due him by said Beauchamp; that subsequently judgment in both eases was. rendered in favor of plaintiff for the amount of indebtedness and foreclosing the attachment liens, an order of sale was issued by virtue thereof, and said lands sold thereunder, which were bid in by him. He also claimed that there was collusion between C. II. Beauchamp, Sr., and the White Sewing Machine Company, in which it was agreed that said machine company would bid in said land at the sale under "these judgments and convey the same to some person to be named by the said Beauchamp, who was to hold the same in trust for the said Beauchamp, and the said company was to reserve a lien upon said land to secure the indebtedness; that said sale was made at the door of the courthouse in Greenville, where it is not customary to make such sales, while at the same time the sheriff of said Hunt County was making sales at another door which was the customary place for making such sales and where the crowd had assembled, all of which was done for the purpose of defrauding him, the said executor.

C. H. Beauchamp entered a plea of not guilty. Appellee, Ella Beau-champ, intervened, claiming one tract of 313 acres, known as the Romine tract, in Hunt County. Appellee Clark, in reply to Ella Beauchamp’s plea of intervention, pleaded the three years statute of limitation. Judg *170 ment was rendered in favor of the appellant for part of the land. Appellee Clark recovered part of the land, and the appellee Ella Beauchamp recovered 313 acres claimed by her. From this judgment the appellant, A. Caldwell, alone appeals.

We will first notice the issues between appellant and Ella Beauchamp.

The first assignment presented is: “The court erred in giving the third paragraph (of the court’s charge) touching the rights of recovery of Ella Beauchamp as to the 313 acres tract of land without accompanying the said charge with the charge of estoppel as requested by plaintiff.” The charge requested is: “If you believe the interest had by intervener herein was a secret interest which she had in said land not shown by any record made public prior to December 2, 1887, and her interest or title was subject to the $1800 bond read in evidence, and that she failed to pay off and discharge the same when due, and kept silent on said claim until A. Caldwell had paid off the same with the interest thereon and penalty thereon accrued, and that she still failed to claim said land until said bond and claim became barred, then she is estopped from claiming said land, and you should find for A. Caldwell against her as to said 313 acres.”

The evidence shows that Ella Beauchamp and brother, C. H. Beau-champ, Jr., children of the said C. H. Beauchamp, Sr., owned a tract of land jointly in La Salle County, Texas, which they inherited from their mother. In September, 1887, by an agreement between Ella Beau-champ, C. H. Beauchamp, Jr., and C. H. Beauchamp, Sr., the latter traded the La Salle County land to J. Romine for the said 313 acres of land in Hunt County. Ella Beauchamp and C. H. Beauchamp,' Jr., executed a deed to said J. Romine for the said La Salle County land, and said J. Romine on September 9, 1887, executed a deed to C. H. Beauchamp, Sr., for the 313 acres of land in Hunt County, same being known as the Romine tract, but being a part of the Moore survey. The deed from Romine recited a payment in cash by C. H. Beauchamp, Sr., of $5000 and his assuming to pay a mortgage for $1800 on said 313 acres executed by Romine and wife to the J. B. Watkins .Land Mortgage Company, together with all interest thereon. The real consideration paid to Romine for said land was $500 in money and vehicles turned over to him by O. H. Beauchamp, Sr., out of his hardware store, the tract of land in La Salle County, and the assumption of the $1800 mortgage on said land. For C. H. Beauchamp, Jr.’s, interest in said La Salle County land, C. H. Beauchamp, Sr., agreed to deed him other lands, which he did. A short time after said transaction, to wit, on October 5, 1887, C. H. Beauchamp, Sr., deeded to Ella Beauchamp the Romine 313 acres tract of land in Hunt County, and two other tracts of land, which two tracts, however, are not claimed by the said Ella Beauchamp in this suit. A part of the consideration recited being the assumption by Ella Beauchamp of the said mortgage lien, which deed was filed for record December 3d, at 10:53 o’clock a. m., 1887, in the county clerk’s office of Hunt County.

*171 C. H. Beauchamp, Sr., testified that said deed was executed to said Ella Beauchamp in consideration of said La Salle County land and other indebtedness due her by him. On December 2, 1887, the machine company caused a writ of attachment to be levied on this and other lands as the property of C. H. Beauchamp, Sr., which lands were subsequently sold under the judgment foreclosing the attachment lien. The evidence further shows that the said Watkins’ mortgage was subsequently paid off by the appellant.

We are of the opinion that the court did not err in refusing to give the requested charge under consideration. The deed of Ella Beauchamp was on record long before appellant paid off the mortgage and it gave him constructive notice at least, that Ella Beauchamp was claiming the land. The evidence discloses no act or omission on the part of Ella Beauchamp constituting an estoppel.

The controlling issue between the appellant and Ella Beauchamp is presented by the fourteenth assignment of error, which is as follows: “The jury erred in its findings as to the title'of said 313 acres of land as under the third paragraph of the court’s charge in this, it found that the land conveyed by the intervener to J. Bomine for said 313 acres tract was the sole cash consideration paid for said land; when the undisputed testimony of C. H. Beauchamp showed that she (and her brother) conveyed the West Texas land to J. Bomine for the sum of ($5000) five thousand dollars, and that C. H. Beauchamp furnished ($500) five hundred dollars in trade out of his hardware store to J.

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Bluebook (online)
49 S.W. 240, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 168, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-bryans-ella-beauchamp-texapp-1898.