Clarkson v. Graham

52 S.W. 269, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 355, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 361
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 31, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 52 S.W. 269 (Clarkson v. Graham) 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
Clarkson v. Graham, 52 S.W. 269, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 355, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 361 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinions

The action was originally in trespass to try title to certain property, brought by Graham, but was changed into a foreclosure suit.

The amended petition, besides alleging title in plaintiff, alleges a deed of trust upon the property executed to Mrs. Clarkson for herself as independent executrix of the estate of C.H. Merritt, deceased, on June 29, 1892, to secure her note for $3000, which provided for certain interest and attorney's fees, which notes were sold by Francis Smith to the Investors' Mortgage Security Company. *Page 356

Also a deed of trust on same property executed on April 26, 1893, by Mrs. Clarkson and D.M. Clarkson (she having since the first deed of trust married Clarkson) to secure an additional loan of $3000 represented by their notes, which notes were also transferred to the Investors' Mortgage Security Company. That on January 30, 1895, in pursuance of an arrangement between Mr. Smith and Mr. and Mrs. Clarkson, the former took up and paid said notes, paying therefor the sum of $6653.48, and the Clarksons conveyed the property to Smith in consideration of said sum; and that thereafter, on December 23, 1895, he reconveyed the property to said Kate M. Clarkson, on defendants' solicitation, for the sum of $12,142, — $4000 cash and three vendor's lien notes of $2714 each, maturing on or before the first day of November, 1896, 1897, and 1898 respectively, with certain interest and attorney's fee, and with provision that the holder might declare them all due upon nonpayment of any; that default was made in respect to the first note when due, and plaintiff being the holder of the notes exercised the option and declared them all due. That plaintiff purchased the notes by indorsement before maturity, paying valuable consideration, and also took an assignment from Francis Smith of his right, title, and interest in the property, including his superior title thereto. That plaintiff purchased the notes without notice of any of the defenses now urged by defendant; that the money so paid by Francis Smith for the land, and by plaintiff paid to Francis Smith for the notes, to wit, $8142, went to pay off and discharge the liens of said deeds of trust of June 29, 1892, and April 26, 1893. Plaintiff prays that, if he be held not entitled to recover in trespass to try title, that he have judgment for the notes held by him, with foreclosure of lien, and failing in this, that he be subrogated to all the rights of Francis Smith.

The answer set up (1) that the property was the homestead of defendants from the time of their marriage (April 3, 1893), and had continuously prior to this time for many years been the homestead of Merrit and his wife. (2) That the deeds of trust of June 29, 1892, and April 26, 1893, and the debts intended to be secured thereby, were settled, extinguished, and released in the transaction of 1895, wherein they conveyed the property to Francis Smith, and if this be not so, said deeds of trust gave no lien because the place was a homestead; and even if this be not so, this plaintiff can not recover on said deeds of trust because they were not executed for his benefit, and he is a stranger to said transaction and deeds of trust, and has not acquired any rights therein. (3) That Francis Smith and those claiming through him are estopped from claiming the benefits of the deeds of trust of 1892 and 1893, because his purpose in the transaction of 1895 was to circumvent the homestead claim of defendants as a defense by getting the notes sued upon in the form in which they were given, and getting them into the hands of one who would fraudulently figure as an innocent purchaser of them. (4) That the conveyance to Francis Smith in 1895, although apparently a deed, was a mortgage; that no sum of money was paid defendants as is recited in *Page 357 the deed, and the notes given in that transaction represented the amount of the two previous loans with some additional advances of money made by Smith to defendants. (5) That plaintiff was not an innocent purchaser of the notes. Defendants prayed that plaintiff take nothing, for removal of cloud from their title, and for cancellation of the notes and the alleged superior title, etc.

The above statement of the pleadings is made because it appears to be the shortest way of exhibiting the issues. It is not necessary to state what is in the supplemental petition.

The effect of the verdict (in view of the charges) was to find that the transaction in 1895 constituted a mortgage of the property, and that Graham was not an innocent purchaser for value; also that when the second deed of trust — that of 1893 — was given by Clarkson and wife, the property was in fact their homestead. Hence the verdict and judgment that plaintiff recover of Clarkson the full amount of the notes, but that a lien existed on the property for the sum of $5208.33 only, the amount secured by the deed of trust given in 1892, after Merritt's death and prior to the widow's marriage to Clarkson.

The demurrers presented to the petition were properly overruled. There was no error in refusing to permit defendant to open and conclude the argument. The admission filed was that plaintiff has a good cause of action to recover the premises, or to recover on the three notes sued on with foreclosure thereof, except so far as he may be defeated in whole or in part by the facts of the answer constituting a good defense. The amended petition asserts not only a cause of action on said three notes, but, in the alternative, on the notes given in 1892 and 1893. Consequently the admission was not sufficient.

The fifteenth assignment is that the court erred in refusing to give an instruction in effect that if the jury believed that the three notes sued on were not for purchase money for the property, but that it (the transaction of 1895) was a simulated transaction for the purpose of making it appear that they were purchase money notes, and were obtained by Smith for the purpose of evading the homestead laws, that Graham could in no event become a bona fide purchaser of the notes; but defendants would be entitled to set up the same defense against Graham as they could against Smith. The jury found, however, that Graham was not an innocent purchaser of the notes. As the jury also found the deed in 1895 to have been of the character of a mortgage, the matter mentioned in the sixteenth and seventeenth assignments need not be considered. And as the jury found the property to have been homestead when the second deed of trust was given in 1893 and in 1895, it is not necessary to notice the nineteenth assignment.

By the eighteenth assignment it is contended that the court erred in refusing to charge that if the three notes sued on do not really represent purchase money for defendant's homestead then Graham can not recover, unless the jury should further find that he was an innocent purchaser. The twenty-third assignment presents a similar theory thus: "The court *Page 358

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.W. 269, 21 Tex. Civ. App. 355, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clarkson-v-graham-texapp-1899.