Cox v. Clay

237 S.W.2d 798, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1836
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 11, 1950
Docket6100
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 237 S.W.2d 798 (Cox v. Clay) 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
Cox v. Clay, 237 S.W.2d 798, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1836 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinions

STOKES, Justice.

The record in this case reveals' that, prior to the year 1915, W, M. Cox and his wife, Martha Jane Cox, acquired, as their community property, 236½ acres of land in Henderson County upon which they lived and made their home. On February 1, 1915, W. M. Cox died intestate leaving surviving him his wife ■ and ten children including appellant, D. L. Cox and M. A. Cox who was known as Cager Cox. At intervals between the years 1916 and 1936 Cager Cox purchased the interests of all of his brothers and sisters in the land, which they had inherited from their father W. M. Cox, paying most of them $200 each, some of them $150 each, and one of them $300 for their respective 1/20 undivided interests. He procured a deed from appellant D. L. Cox on June 26, 1928 in which, for the sum of $200, appellant conveyed to him by warranty deed all of appellant’s undivided interest in the land, the deed reciting: “I am hereby conveying all my right, title and interest in said 236½ acres.”

Cager Cox died intestate on April 7, 1943, and left surviving him his wife, Lillie Cox, who afterwards married the appellee Alex Luther 'Clay, and the appellees Mildred Brannon, Marguerite Asmussen and W. M. Cox. Appellant, D. L. Cox, filed this suit on the 21st of December 1948, against the appellees, the surviving wife and children of Cager Cox, alleging that, on January 30, 1919, his mother, Martha Jane Cox, .con[800]*800veyed to him ¡by warranty deed her undivided one-half interest in the 236½ acres of land. He alleged that he was then fourteen years of age and that his mother never disclosed to him her action in executing the deed, but that the deed was forthwith filed in the office of the county clerk of Henderson County and duly recorded in the deed records thereof. He alleged further that his mother, Martha Jane Cox, died in the year 1936, and that he did not learn of her conveyance to him, and could not have learned of it by the exercise of due diligence, until about two years before he filed this suit. He alleged that he did not know of his mother’s conveyance when he executed his deed conveying his interest in the land to Cager Cox and, when it was executed, both he and his grantee, Cager Cox, thought and believed appellant owned, and was conveying to 'Cager Cox, only the 1/20 undivided interest in the land inherited by appellant from his father W. M. Cox, and that the deed was executed under a mutual mistake as to the amount of land being conveyed by him. He prayed for reformation and correction of the deed so that it would convey only a 1/20 interest and exclude therefrom the interest owned by him. which was conveyed to him by his mother.

Appellees answered by general and special denials, pleaded estoppel and ratification-, laches and stale demand, the 3 and 10 years Statutes of Limitation as defenses to appellant’s cause of action. They also pleaded a cross-action and sought affirmative relief under the 3 and 10 years Statutes of Limitation, Articles 5507 and 5510, Vernon’s R.G S.

The case was submitted to a jury upon twelve special issues of which the jury answered only two. In answer to those two it found that appellees had held peaceable, continuous and adverse possession of the land in controversy, under title or color of title,' for more than three years after June 26, 1928, when appellant executed his deed conveying his interest in the land to appellees’ ancestor, Cager Cox, and before December 21, 1948, when this suit was filed, and that they had held continuous, peaceable and adverse possession of it, cultivating or enjoying it for a period of ten years after June 26, 1928, and before December 21, 1948, when this suit was filed. The special issues not answered by the jury requested it to find: (1) Whether appellant did not know his mother.had conveyed to him her oneffialf interest in the tract of land when he executed the deed to appellee’s ancestor, Cager Cox, on June 26, 1928; (2) to find the date upon which appellant first learned hi's mother had executed her deed to him; (3) whether or not appellant used due diligence to learn -of his mother’s deed; (4) to find' the earliest date upon which, by the exercise' of due diligence, appellant could have learned of his mother’s deed; (5) whether appellant would not have executed his deed to -Cager Cox if appellant had known -of the deed executed by his mother conveying to him her interest in the land; (6) whether or not Cager Cox knew of the execution of the deed from his mother, Martha Jane Cox, to appellant at the time he received the conveyance from appellant ; (7) if he did know of it, then whether or not he failed to disclose to appellant knowledge of the execution of the deed by their mother to appellant; (8) to find what part of the land in controversy appellant intended to convey to Cager Cox by his deed of June 26, 1928; (9) whether Cager Cox did not intend to purchase all of the interest of appellant in the land in controversy; and (10) whether or not appellant, by the exercise of due diligence, could have discovered that his mother executed a deed to him conveying her one-half interest in the land in controversy, for a period of more than four years prior to December 21, 1948, when this suit was filed.

Upon the motion of appellees, the court rendered judgment in their favor upon their cross-action for the title and possession -of the land involved and, appellant’s motion for a new trial being overruled, he duly perfected an appeal to the Court of 'Civil Appeals of the Fifth District at Dallas, and the case has been transferred to this court by -order of the Supreme Court.

'Appellant presents the case for review upon two assignments of error in which he contends, first, since his cause of action was for the reformation of a deed and the evidence raised the issue of mutual mistake, [801]*801the court erred in submitting to the jury, over his objection, the issues of adverse possession under the 3 and 10 years Statutes of Limitation, Articles 5507 and 5510, Vernon’s Revised Civil Statutes: Secondly, the court erred in refusing to declare a mistrial, since the jury did not answer any of the material issues submitted to it.

The controlling question in the case is whether or not the court erred in entering judgment upon the verdict of the jury when it failed to answer the special issues submitted to it concerning the allegations of mistake made by appellant in his pleading. He alleged that the.one-half undivided interest owned by him in the land that had been conveyed to him by his mother was not intended by either him or 'Cager 'Cox to be included in the deed; that neither of them knew their mother had theretofore conveyed to appellant her undivided one-half interest in the land; and that the inclusion in the deed of the one-half undivided interest con-veyéd to him by his mother was a mutual mistake. If these allegations were material and were supported by any evidence of .probative force, the issues concerning them were properly submitted to the jury and a judgment rendered by the court without a finding by the jury upon them was not warranted.

The theory upon which judgment was rendered by the court was, as contended by the appellees, that the allegations and contentions concerning the alleged , mistake weré immaterial because the undisputed evidence was to the effect that the appellees and those under whom they claimed had had peaceable and adverse possession thereof, cultivating, using and enjoying the same for more than ten years before appellant instituted his suit.

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Bluebook (online)
237 S.W.2d 798, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-clay-texapp-1950.