Cocke v. Conquest

35 S.W.2d 673, 120 Tex. 43, 1931 Tex. LEXIS 127
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1931
DocketNo. 5151.
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 35 S.W.2d 673 (Cocke v. Conquest) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cocke v. Conquest, 35 S.W.2d 673, 120 Tex. 43, 1931 Tex. LEXIS 127 (Tex. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Commissioner SHORT

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error, Emmett B. Cocke, has sought to appropriate to the satisfaction of a judgment, originally amounting to $6,300 against Lee Conquest, and reduced by the sale of the tract of land on which a vendors lien was foreclosed to about $4,000, besides interest, 188.4 acres of land situated in Hidalgo county, found by the court to be the homestead of the defendants in error, Lee and Minnie Conquest, husband and wife respectively, residents of Hidalgo county and citizens of Texas, which Lee and Minnie Conquest assert to have been their homestead at the" time the plaintiff in error sought to appropriate it, in addition to some other lands also belonging to Lee and Minnie Conquest, among the other lands being forty-five acres in several parcels.

However, the suit was originally instituted against the plaintiff in error in the district court of Hidalgo county by Lee Conquest, the said wife, and their son, John R. Conquest, against the plaintiff in error, and a certain constable of that county, who held a pluries execution, and who had levied the same on certain lands as the property of Lee and Minnie Conquest, aggregating as aforesaid about forty-five acres, in which the original plaintiffs, Lee and Minnie Conquest, alleged that they were the original owners on and prior to the 29th day of April, 1925, of the forty-five acres, and on and prior to the 2d day of September, 1925, they were the owners of the remaining aggregate amount of lands of 188.4 acres, each of these aggregate amounts being in several parcels and the several parcels composing the 188.4 being segregated by a distance of several *45 miles in some instances, the greatest distance being about twelve miles from the fartherest portions and which they alleged that on the 29th day of April they had conveyed to John R. Conquest the first aggregate amount of forty-five acres and on the 2d day of September, 1925, they had conveyed the remainder of said lands, each for a valuable consideration and that the plaintiff in error, Cocke, had filed a judgment lien in Hidalgo county, whereby he sought to appropriate said lands to the satisfaction of said judgment and that the other original defendant, as constable, had levied on the first named forty-five acres and that the filing of the judgment lien in Hidalgo county constituted a cloud upon the title of all the lands. Lee and Minnie Conquest also alleged that the 188.4 acres constituted their homestead at the time the judgment was rendered and the lien sought to be fixed, and asserted homestead rights in said 188.4 acres. The plaintiff in error filed a cross action asserting he had a judgment lien on all of said lands, and that the transactions between Lee and Minnie Conquest on the one hand, and their son on the other, were fraudulent and void.

The original plaintiffs had secured from the district judge an injunction prohibiting the sale of any of these lands, and the case having been tried without the intervention of a jury, the court, after hearing the testimony, rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff in error, dissolving the writ of injunction as to the amount of lands aggregating forty-five acres, on which the pluries execution had been levied, and established a lien in favor of the plaintiff in error on said lands, and ordered them sold to satisfy said execution. The court perpetuated the injunction as to the 188.4 acres of land, finding as a fact that while said 188.4 acres of land consisted of several segregated tracts, separated by a distance not exceeding twelve miles, that the same constituted the homestead of Lee and Minnie Conquest, and that while the conveyance made to their son was the result of a design on the part of Lee and Minnie Conquest to defraud the plaintiff in error, yet since the lands constituted the rural homestead of Lee and Minnie Conquest at the time they had conveyed it to their son, said fraudulent design was inoperative against them, the court holding under these facts that the temporary injunction as to the 188.4 acres should be perpetuated and entered judgment to this effect.

None of the original plaintiffs appealed from this judgment but the plaintiff in error did, and upon a hearing of the case in the Court of Civil Appeals at San Antonio, that court affirmed the judgment of the district court. 2 S. W. (2d) 992. The case has reached the Supreme Court in the usual way.

The Supreme Court having referred the case to Section B of the Commission of Appeals, it was there submitted on oral argument and the briefs of the parties, and an opinion was written by Judge Speer recommending that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals, affirming that *46 of the district court, be affirmed, which recommendation was, by the Supreme Court, adopted and the judgments of the district court and the Court of Civil Appeals were affirmed. 13 S. W. (2d) 348. However upon a motion for rehearing having been filed it was granted, and the judgment entered by the Supreme Court was set aside. The case has been resubmitted to, and heard by the Supreme Court, and the record has been re-examined.

The plaintiff in error presents the third assignment in his application in the following language: “The Court of Civil Appeals holds in this case that the language of the Constitution reading ‘provided that the same shall be used for the purposes of a homestead” applies to lots in town or city but in no manner applies to rural homesteads and thereby, in effect, holds that the head of a rural family is entitled to an exemption of 200 acres of land in every event, whether the same be used for homestead purposes”. He submits under this assignment as one of his propositions the following: “Where segregated tracts of land are claimed as rural homestead just such of them only as are used for homestead purposes are exempted”.

While the proposition is a correct statement of the law, the record shows clearly that it is not applicable to the facts found by the trial court. That court, among other things, found the following: “I find that when the said suit, meaning the original suit, in which the judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff in error against the defendant in error, Lee Conquest (out of which arose this suit), was filed in Bexar county, Lee Conquest owfied at least 315 or 320 acres of land, located in Hidalgo county and consisted of a number of separate tracts within a radius of eight miles from the twenty acres on which the residence stood, the greatest distance between any two tracts being about twelve or fourteen miles and all of which land was used by said Conquest for general farming purposes, in exactly the same way, for growing cotton, principally, and in addition he resided on the twenty acre tract above mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.W.2d 673, 120 Tex. 43, 1931 Tex. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cocke-v-conquest-tex-1931.