Collins v. Hall

174 S.W.2d 50, 141 Tex. 433, 1943 Tex. LEXIS 345
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1943
DocketNo. 8086.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 174 S.W.2d 50 (Collins v. Hall) 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
Collins v. Hall, 174 S.W.2d 50, 141 Tex. 433, 1943 Tex. LEXIS 345 (Tex. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Taylor,

of the Commission of Appeals, delivered the opinion for the Court.

This suit arose out of a controversy between the four children of Mrs. Lillie Halford who died intestate in 1935. The controversy concerns 800 acres of land in Wilbarger County, which juries have twice found, in effect, to be the joint inheritance of the children from Mrs. Halford, their widowed mother. The litigants, the four children, are Mrs. Nannie Mae Collins, a widow, Mrs. Sarah Elizabeth Hall (married to W. M. Hall, a pro forma party), J. B. (Johnnie) Halford and S. B. (Britt) Halford. The mother about two years before her death deeded a quarter section of the land (the E l/4th of section No. 44, Block 12, H. & T. C. Ry. Co. Survey) to Mrs. Hall, and, on the same date, three quarter sections (the E 1/2 and SE l/4th of section No. 45 of the same block) to Johnnie, reciting the consideration in each deed to be one dollar and love and affection. Prior to the two conveyances referred t'o the mother had conveyed to the First State Bank of Vernon a quarter section, *435 hereinafter called the home place, to further secure" a debt of about $5,000.00, which Britt owed the bank. About two years before the mother conveyed the four quarter sections to Mrs, Hall and Johnnie, Mrs. Collins left Wilbarger County and did not return until 1937, her whereabouts in the meantime being unknown, Mrs. Hall and the brothers believing her to be dead.

Mrs. Collins after her return to Wilbarger County sued Mrs. Hall and her two brothers for cancellation of the deeds made by the mother to Mrs.. Hall and Johnnie, and for her undivided one-fourth interest in the lands conveyed thereby, alleged to have been owned by the mother at the time of her death and held in trust for her and her estate by the grantees in the two deeds. The suit has been twice tried, the present appeal being from the second trial. It is necessary to refer to the allegations, proceedings and result of the first trial, notwithstanding there is little different between the pleadings and jury findings in the two. See the opinions of the Court of Civil Appeals, the first, 151 S. W. (2d) 338; the second, 167 S. W. (2d) 210.

Mrs. Collins alleged that at the time of her mother’s death she (the mother) owned as her separate estate the 640 acres deeded by her in trust to Mrs. Hall and Johnnie. Mrs. Collins alleged that in February, 1936, the year following the death of her motherj Mrs. Hall was duly appointed administratrix of the mother’s estate and has continuously acted as such and has received, and still is receiving, all the moneys and income from the estate, the several amounts being unknown to plaintiff. She further alleged that shortly prior to the time the mother acquired the 640 acres (January 16, 1933) dissension arose between Mrs. Hall and Johnnie on the one hand and Britt on the other over the manner in which Britt was assisting his mother in the management of her property, Mrs. Hall and Johnnie contending that he was receiving more than his part and that if not prevented from further participation in the management he would continue to acquire more than his portion; that in order to hold the estate intact, Mrs. Hall, Johnnie and Britt entered into an arrangement among themselves whereby the mother should execute the deeds to Mrs. Hall and Johnnie conveying to them the 640 acres, with "the understanding that they respectively hold the lands in trust for the sole use and benefit of the mother and her estate; that thereafter the mother, on January 16, 1933, did execute and deliver the deeds to them for the purpose stated, which deeds were of record in the deed records of Wilbarger County; that the mother, after the execution of the deeds, continued to occupy, control and manage the lands up to *436 the time of her death in 1935. Mrs. Collins alleged that about April, 1931, some two years before the execution of the deeds referred to, she left home and knew nothing of her mother’s death until a few days before returning in 1937. She also alleged that it was further agreed by defendants in connection with the execution of the deeds that if she (plaintiff) was still living she was to receive her portion of the estate, and if deceased, her children were to receive such portion. She further alleged that she had not received any portion of the estate. Mrs. Collins also alleged that Mrs. Hall had failed and refused as executrix to inventory, appraise and list the 640 acres as property belonging to the mother’s estate; that* she was wrongfully withholding same from inventory arid that the grantees named in the deeds were since her return asserting claims to all right, title and interest in and to the lands conveyed thereby. She further alleged, upon information and belief, that if mistaken as to the above facts, then at the time her mother executed and delivered the deeds the grantees agreed to execute and deliver to the mother deeds reconveying the lands to her. She prayed for removal of the cloud cast upon her interest in the lands by the above deeds, for the cancellation thereof, and for her undivided one-fourth interest in the lands.

Mrs. Hall and Johnnie answered by general demurrer and general denial and special pleas respectively of limitation as against Mrs. Collins’ prayer for cancellation.

. Britt made common cause with his sister, Mrs. Collins, and filed, in addition to his answer, a cross action against Mrs. Hall and Johnnie, making substantially the same allegations that Mrs. Collins made against the three. He alleged also that he became indebted to the First State Bank at Vernon for about $6,000.00 which was secured by a mortgage on certain real estate owned by him and that the bank desiring further security, his mother signed his note as surety and further secured its payment by giving the bank a deed of trust on the home place; that he reduced the amount of the indebtedness and obtained a loan from Miss Mary Schmoker whereby she took over the bank’s loan and extended the time of payment. He also alleged that before the Schmoker loan was obtained Mrs. Hall, then administratrix, required him, as a part of that transaction, to convey to her his one-fourth interest in the home place; that he received no consideration for the conveyance of his interest to Mrs. Hall, the agreement being that she would reconvey the same to him upon his payment of the Schmoker indebtedness; that the Schmoker debt was a just charge against his interest *437 in his mother’s estate, but that he was not otherwise indebted to the estate than as confessed by him. He prayed for cancellation o of the deed to Mrs. Hall and Johnnie; also for cancellation of his deed to Mrs. Hall of his one-fourth interest in the home place; that the land he declared to be the property of the estate of his mother and inventoried as such, and, for partition of the estate with an accounting.

(It is pointed out in this connection that the evidence discloses an" application made by the administratrix to renew and extend the bank’s loan, and that same was transferred to Miss Schmocker, and that Mrs. Hall, though Britt’s deed was made to her personally, claims to have received it as administratrix only; also that Mrs. Hall made payments as administratrix to Mrs. Collins for her support, and that she, as administratrix, paid out other moneys for Britt in arranging the payments and transfer to Miss Schmoker of his debt to the bank.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W.2d 50, 141 Tex. 433, 1943 Tex. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-hall-tex-1943.