Cooley v. Buie

291 S.W. 876
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 23, 1927
DocketNo. 746—4687
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 291 S.W. 876 (Cooley v. Buie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooley v. Buie, 291 S.W. 876 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

SHORT, J.

James A. Cooley, G. O. Crisp, Angus G. Wynne, and Toddie L. Wynne brought a partition suit against I. D. Buie and his wife, Ida, alleging that they were the joint owners of four tracts of real estate sitiíated in Kaufman and Van Zandt counties, in which the original plaintiffs alleged they were entitled to an undivided one-third interest in said lands, and the original defendants were entitled to an undivided. two-thirds interest therein. It was also alleged that the property was not susceptible of an equitable partition, and recovery was sought also for a proportionate part of the rents.

Buie and wife, among other things- contained in their answer, denied that the plaintiffs owned any of the property sought to be partitioned, but alleged that they (the defendants) were the exclusive owners of all of it, and that the land constituted their homestead, specially setting up as matters of defense that Cooley & Crisp, being attorneys at law, had entered into a contract with I. D. Buie, who was insolvent, and who .had been declared a bankrupt, to represent him. in said bankruptcy proceedings for a fee'of $50, which was tendered in court, and that the instrument of writing in the form of a conveyance of a part of the land made to all the plaintiffs was in fact a' mortgage, and further that the instrument was executed under duress, and that the services contemplated by the parties to the first contract were the same as those contemplated by the second contract, by reason of which the same was without consideration and invalid, and also pleaded that this instrument was never in fact delivered. The instrument itself recited a consideration of $1,000, paid by James A. Cooley, G. O. Crisp, A. G. [878]*878Wynne, and T. L. Wynne, but explained that the consideration consisted of legal services in lawsuits pending in the district court of Kaufman county, in the bankruptcy court for the Northern district of Texas at Dallas, and for settlements and adjustments with creditors and-other parties.

Cooley & Crisp and Wynne & Wynne specifically pleaded' a condition of affairs between the parties, the legal effect of which, upon the theory that the statements in the replication were true, was to uphold the instrument according to its literal terms.

The court submitted the case to a jury upon special issues; the questions and answers being as follows:

“Question 1: Before the filing of the petition in the United States bankrupt court at Dallas, did Jas. A. Cooley and G-. O. Crisp, both or either of them agree to represent the defendant I. D. Buie as his attorney, in all matters incident to the bankrupt proceedings, including the preparation and filing of the petition and schedule, attend the meeting of his creditors, get his discharge as a bankrupt,.and have the exempt property set aside to him and accept therefor such attorney fees as might be allowed by said court? To question No. 1, we, the jury, answer, ‘Yes.’
“Question 2: 'After the trustee in bankruptcy had refused to set aside the lands in controversy to defendants as their homesteads, did Jas. A. Cooley and G. O. Crisp, both or either of them, agree to continue as defendants’ attorneys and have the property declared exempt, by the appellate courts for an attorney fee of $50? To question No. 2, we, the jury, answer, ‘No.’
“Question 3: After the trustee in bankruptcy had refused to set aside the land in controversy to the defendants as their homestead, did A. G. Wynne agree to represent the defendant I. D. Buie, in all matters, incident to having it set aside, for an attorney fee of $50? To question No. 3, we, the jury, answer, ‘No.’
“Question 4: Did Jas. A. Cooley and A. G. Wynne, both or either of them, agree with the defendants that the deed in question should be placed in the hands of Chas-, Ashworth and not be delivered to the grantees, and would be re-returned to the defendants on the payment of $800? To question No. 4, we, the jury, answer, ‘No.’
“Question, 5: Is the land in question susceptible to partition in kind in the proportion of one-third and two-thirds? To question No. 5, we, the jury, answer, ‘Yes.’
“Question 6: What is the reasonable rental value of the four tracts of land in controversy per year? To question No. 6, we, the jury, answer, ‘$1 per acre.’
“Verdict on- Special Issues Submitted by - Plaintiffs.
“Question 8: After the trustee had refused to set aside the exemptions to I. D. Buie and Ida Buie, was it mutually agreed between G. O. Crisp, Jas. A. Cooley, .and I. D. Buie that, as the trustee had refused to set aside the exemptions and the matter had to be further contested, G. O. Crisp and Jas. A. Cooley should have an additional fee of $800 or one-third of the land, in connection with the firm of Wynne & Wynne? To this question, we, the jury, answer, ‘Yes.’
“Verdict on Special Issues Submitted by Defendants.
“Question 9: At time Mrs. Buie signed the deed in question, did she do so that it should be held and not delivered to the plaintiffs, but whenever the plaintiffs should be paid $800 same should be returned to her or her husband? To this question, we, the jury, answer, ‘No.’
“Question 10: At the time the defendant Mrs. Buie signed the deed in question, did she do so with the understanding between her and her husband that she would sign the deed and deliver it to Chas. Ashworth or some responsible person to be held until she or her husband could pay plaintiffs $800, and when paid the deed should be returned? To this question, we, the jury, answer, ‘No.’ ”

Each party submitted a motion to render judgment in accordance with the findings of the jury in his favor, whereupon judgment was rendered against James A. Cooley and G. O. Crisp in favor of the defendants Buie that Cooley & Crisp take nothing by their suit, but rendered a judgment in favor of A. G. Wynne and T. D. Wynne against Buie and wife, adjudging to them a one-sixth joint interest in the lands described, and to the defendants Buie and wife the remaining five-sixths. The court found that the land was susceptible to partition, and entered the proper orders upon that premise securing á partition. The judgment in favor of Wynne & Wynne became final by the failure of either party to appeal therefrom, but Cooley & Crisp filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and, upon appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals, the judgment of the trial court was affirmed. In due time, James A. Cooley and G. O. Crisp presented a writ of error to the Supreme Court, which was granted, and the case has been referred to this section of the Commission of Appeals for consideration. The opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals is to be found in 284 S. W. 702.

The first assignment of error and the propositions thereunder follow:-

“The honorable Court of Civil Appeals erred in holding that the plaintiffs in error did not plead or offer to prove that they performed any services for defendants in error other than those services which the jury found they were obligated to perform under the original contract, because plaintiffs in error pleaded the ownership of the property, while the defendants in error pleaded that the original contract contemplated the performance of all services that had been performed. This the plaintiffs in error denied.

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Bluebook (online)
291 S.W. 876, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooley-v-buie-texcommnapp-1927.