Crawford v. Gibson

203 S.W. 375, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 446
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 20, 1918
DocketNo. 7933.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 203 S.W. 375 (Crawford v. Gibson) 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
Crawford v. Gibson, 203 S.W. 375, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 446 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

RASBURY, J.

The plaintiffs in error, L. H. Crawford, George W. Crawford, Mrs. Kate Wilkins, Mrs. Francis Ellis, and Miss Lucy Crawford, sued W. B. Gibson, J. K. B. Crawford, and Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford, in statutory trespass to try title for cer *376 tain undivided interests in a lot on Crutcher street, in the city of Dallas, and for injunction pencante lite restraining defendant in error, Gibson, and the sheriff of Dallas county from dispossessing plaintiffs in error of said land under authority, of a judgment rendered in the suit of W, B. Gibson v. Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford and J. K. _B. Crawford in the district court of Dallas county. Briefly and generally stated, plaintiffs in error alleged that the property of which defendant in error, Gibson, was threatening to dispossess them was community property of Dr. J. W. Crawford, deceased, and his wife, Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford, which the latter, after the death of Dr. J. W. Crawford, undertook to convey to J. K. B. Crawford, in consideration in part of said J. K. B. Crawford’s promissory note secured in its payment by the vendor’s lien on said land retained in the deed, and which note was, through mesne assignments, acquired by defendant in error, Gibson, who in a suit against Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford and J. K. B. Crawford had foreclosed the lien retained on said land, and was claiming the title and right of possession thereto in virtue of purchase at sheriff’s sale under said judgment, but that, due to the fact that plaintiffs in error were children and heirs of Dr. J. W. Crawford, who died intestate, said conveyance to J. K. B. Crawford was ineffectual to pass the interest of plaintiffs in error in said land, etc. Plaintiffs in error also alleged that the''sale by Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford to J. K. B. Crawford Was simulated, and was but a mortgage in the guise of a deed. Defendant in error, Gibson, among other defenses, pleaded, in substance, first, that the land was the^separate property of Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford, and that she, as a consequence, was authorized to convey it; and, second, if community, that fact was immaterial, since the conveyance to J. K. B. Crawford was for the purpose of paying community debts, and as a consequence conveyed the title. Mrs. Lucy M. - Crawford, who was made a defendant below, and who is a plaintiff in error here, made common cause with plaintiffs in error, and pleaded in addition that the judgment relied upon by defendant in error, Gibson, was void as against her for the reason that she had never been served with citation therein, and because the conveyance to her son was not a sale, but a mortgage, and, the property being her homestead, was void. J. K. B. Crawford, also made a defendant below, defaulted. There was trial before jury, but upon conclusion of the evidence the trial court peremptorily directed verdict for the defendant in error, which was returned, and followed by similar judgment.

The controlling facts deducible from the record, and upon which the trial judge based his action, are in substance these: Prior to the time Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford and her deceased husband came to Dallas they were living in Corsicana upon property formerly owned by their son J. K. B. Crawford, the deed to which was taken in the name of Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford. While J. IC B. Crawford testified that he “thought” he deeded to both his mother, Mrs. Crawford, testified positively that she remembered seeing the deed, and that it was deeded to her, which was not denied by J. K. B. Crawford. The Corsicana home was destroyed by fire, and the sum of $950 insurance thereon collected. Thereafter J. W. Crawford and his wife, Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford, and their children, removed to Dallas, and the property in controversy was acquired April 23, 1899, from C. E. Bird. The deed was made to Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford, and recited that the consideration was “paid and secured to be paid by Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford.” The consideration was $1,650, of which $500 was paid' in cash, the balance being evidenced by three notes, one for $150 and two for $500 each. The vendor’s lien was retained in the deed to secure payment of the deferred payments evidenced by the notes. L. H. Crawford, who was with his father J. W. Crawford when the purchase from Bird was consummated, testified that when Bird asked his father to whom the land should be conveyed he replied, “You had just as. well make it out to Mother; she is liable to live longer than I am.” Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford, the wife of Dr. Crawford, the only other witness who testified concerning what was said at that time, testified that when the property in controversy was acquired her husband was in feeble health, and he told her that he had the property conveyed to her because he knew she would outlive him; that he would die in a year or so — so that she would have the property, so that it might be her “own separate estate,” and that slie so regarded it. The cash payment of $500 and the $150 note were made from the insurance money collected from the policies upon the Corsicana property during the lifetime of Dr. J. W. Crawford. He died August 8, 1901. No administration was had upon his estate, nor was administration necessary. After the death of Dr. Crawford various sums of money were paid on the two unpaid $500 notes, all of it, according to Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford, being advanced by her children in unequal contributions. Of the amount so paid $600 was advanced by L, H. Crawford. From the dafce of the acquisition of the property to the date of the transaction herein detailed it was occupied and used by Mrs. Crawford as her homestead. On July 1,1904, Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford, by general warranty deed, conveyed the property to her son, J. K. B. Crawford. The consideration recited in the deed was $1,900 cash, and the note of the vendee for $1,100, payable to the vendor in one year after date, and secured in payment by the vendor’s lien retained in the conveyance. The cash consideration recited in the deed was not in fact paid. On the same day the note and the vendor’s lien securing its payment of *377 same was assigned to the Investors’ Mortgage Security Company, Limited; also on the same day J. K. B. Crawford, the vendee in the foregoing instruments, hy the usual deed of trust, conveyed the land acquired by him to Robert Balsón for the purpose of securing the original indebtedness to his mother so acquired by the Investors’ Mortgage Security Company, Limited, which note was by the provisions of the deed of trust extended in time of payment to July 1, 1909, and the lien securing same renewed and likewise extended. The Investors’ Mortgage Security Company, Limited, advanced in cash the full amount of the note acquired from Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford, the money being applied as follows: $318 to C. E. Bird in satisfaction of the unpaid 'purchase price upon the land in dispute; $118.80 for state, county, and city taxes; $12.65 insurance premium; $6 abstract of title; $10.75 attorney’s and recording fees; $635 to Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford. The money paid to Mrs. Crawford was by her in turn paid to her son, L. H. Crawford. The money advanced to L. H. Crawford was not in payment of any money he had contributed to his mother, but, so far as disclosed by the record, a contribution. In that connection, as between Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford and her son, J. K. B. Crawford, it was not intended by the conveyance to pass to the latter the title to the property. Their purpose was to secure money for L. H. Crawford, and then reconvey the property to Mrs. Lucy M. Crawford. It was, however, the intention to also pay the debts they did pay in order to secure the money for L. H. Crawford. On August 5, 1904, J. K. B.

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203 S.W. 375, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 446, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-gibson-texapp-1918.