Comstock v. Lomax

135 S.W. 185, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 883
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 135 S.W. 185 (Comstock v. Lomax) 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
Comstock v. Lomax, 135 S.W. 185, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 883 (Tex. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

JAMES, O. J.

(after stating the facts as above). The writ of certiorari to annul proceedings of the county court in probate matters is not a writ of right in the sense that the proceeding will be revised for errors as on appeal. Relief is only granted in such cases when it is made to appear that the proceeding is void, or that some substantial wrong and injustice to the estate has been done.

The first assignment of error complains of the refusal of the following peremptory instruction: “You are instructed to return a *187 verdict in the plaintiff’s favor for the land ¡sued for, and yon will find for defendants, Alice Lomax and John Lomax, her husband, in the sum of $947.02 and interest on same from November 13, 1905, at 6 per cent, per .annum up to the present time; and also find in favor of said Lomax and his wife for the enhanced value of the land in consequence ■of their improvements on same (that is, for the difference between the value of the land •on December 5, 1906, without the improvements placed by them on same between November 13, 1905, and December 5, 1906, and the value of the land with such improvements on same); and you will further find 'in plaintiff’s favor against said Lomax and •his wife for the rental value of said land, ■to wit, the value of the use of said land as the same existed on November 13, 1905, as ¡shown by the evidence, up to the present time.” The assignment is that the charge ■should have been given because the undisputed evidence showed that the guardian’s sale was really made to carry out a previous ■agreement between the guardian and the defendants Lomax, the price of the land having been agreed on, and that the application ■and order of sale were obtained for the benefit of said defendants to carry out such previous agreement, and this being so Mrs. Lo-max and her husband were affected by each and all the irregularities in the proceedings under which the sale was made.

The assignment proceeds upon the theory that the irregularities alone were not enough to require the sale to be set aside; and that this rule is correct seems to be well settled. Kendrick v. Wheeler, 85 Tex. 253, 20 S. W. 44; Lomax v. Comstock, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 340, 110 S. W. 762. The irregularities shown ¡are all of such character as not to entitle plaintiff to be relieved, unless, in connection with them, it appears that a disadvantageous sale was effected. On the former appeal we remanded the cause (the trial court Laving directed a verdict) because, under the testimony in that record, the question should have been submitted to the jury whether or not such previous agreement, if any, had the •effect of interfering with the obtaining of a better price for the property. This matter was submitted and determined at the recent trial, in favor of the sale.

Instead of discussing here the matter of ■such previous agreement, arrangement, or negotiation, whichever it was, we refer to the discussion thereof in the former opinion, a repetition of which is unnecessary. In deference to the verdict we conclude as a matter of fact from the testimony in the present record that the transaction between the guardian or the county judge and Mrs. Lomax prior to the sale and with it in view, did not amount to and was not intended to be an agreement for the sale of the property to Mrs. Lomax, regardless of better purchasers, or opportunities; that it was nothing more than negotiations on the part of the guardian to secure a purchaser at a certain minimum price, which price was in fact, at the time of the sale, all the property was worth, and all that could have been obtained for it; and further that such arrangement did not cause the guardian to abandon or relax his efforts to sell the property to others. Under this condition of facts the charge was properly refused.

The second assignment complains of the refusal of this charge: “The evidence in this case shows that the land involved in this case was improved property at the time the order of sale was made, November 6, 1905, and was sold in contravention of the statute requiring at least one-third of the purchase price to be paid in cash, and was sold without proper service of notice upon the application for its sale, and without an application such as the law requires, showing the condition of the estate in so fab as personal property was concerned. And you will return a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the land sued for and find as to value of the defendant’s improvements and the rental value of the property and the $947.02 and interest as instructed in the court’s general charge.”

Except for the first matter stated in the assignment, we may dismiss a discussion of it with the remark that the alleged defect in the notice, and in the application, will not operate to nullify the sale, in view of what is said under the preceding assignment as to the prior agreement or understanding, and the adequacy of the price obtained. The first-mentioned matter is that the property was improved property and the statute required at least one-third of the appraised value to be paid in cash, which appraised value was $400 per acre (the price for which it was sold to Mrs. Lomax) whereas the sale was for one-fifth cash, consequently contrary to law. An investigation of the evidence clearly discloses that if this was improved property in the sense of the statute no injury has resulted to plaintiff by the taking of less than one-third cash payment. The evidence is substantially the same as it was in the former record, and we here adopt what we said on this question in the opinion delivered on that appeal. Lomax v. Comstock, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 340, 110 S. W. 764.

The third assignment complains of the refusal of a charge in effect that if the jury believed that the guardian agreed beforehand that he would sell the land to Mrs. Lo-max, after he should obtain an order of sale, and received $100 upon such agreement and that the sale made was to carry out such agreement, to find for plaintiff. This was properly refused. The court gave what was a proper instruction on the subject in giving plaintiff’s special charge No. 8.

The fourth assignment complains of the refusal of a charge in effect, that if the jury believed that the land was sold by the guardian to Alice Lomax or her husband at a grossly *188 inadequate price to return a verdict for plaintiff for the land and for defendant Lomax for a certain sum and interest, and for the enhanced value of the land by reason of defendants’ improvements, etc. We have held that the simple fact that property of an estate is sold for a grossly inadequate price, is not such a wrong or injustice that would require the sale set aside in a certiorari proceeding. Clopper v. Hutcheson, 16 Tex. Civ. App. 157, 40 S. W. 604. Certainly the proof in such a case would have to be such as to show that the inadequacy was so pronounced as to shock the conscience. The proof in this record is not of that character. The opinion testimony of many witnesses was taken as to the market value of this property at the time of the transaction in November, 1905. All the witnesses, with a few exceptions, testified that $400 per acre was its full value. The exceptions as pointed out by appellant’s brief are the witnesses Coles, C. B. Stevens, Austin, H. B. Stevens and J. A. Happer and Hadlock.

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Bluebook (online)
135 S.W. 185, 1911 Tex. App. LEXIS 883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comstock-v-lomax-texapp-1911.