Dallas Joint Stock Land Bank v. Gore

100 S.W.2d 396, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 1208
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1936
DocketNo. 5016
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 S.W.2d 396 (Dallas Joint Stock Land Bank v. Gore) 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
Dallas Joint Stock Land Bank v. Gore, 100 S.W.2d 396, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 1208 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

HALL, Justice.

This suit was brought in the district court of Hunt county by J. W. A. Gore and wife, Mary Gore, on May 31, 1932, against appellant for an injunction to prevent the sale of certain land under a deed of trust to satisfy an indebtedness of $15,000 due appellant by appellees, under the claim that the land sought to be sold was appellees’ homestead. Appellant answered this suit and filed a cross-action for the amount due on its note and for foreclosure of its deed of trust lien securing same. Appellees answered this cross-action alleging in detail that the land covered by the deed of trust was, on the date of its execution and for many years prior thereto, their homestead and was their homestead at the time of the trial. Appellees further alleged that certain agents of appellant knew of the homestead character of the land in controversy by-virtue of their having been on the premises at various times and especially at the time the land was appraised preliminary to securing the loan on same, to which the deed of trust sought to be foreclosed is referable. Appellant answered this contention by alleging that appellees were estopped from claiming the land in controversy as their homestead for the reason that they had made a homestead designation before the loan was approved which set apart land other than that now claimed as their homestead, and, further, that J. W. A. Gore represented to appellant that the prior liens existing on the land now claimed as a homestead, and which the loan in controversy was designed to liquidate, were valid and subsisting liens on the land in controversy; that appellant relied upon the statements and representations made to it by appellees, Gore and wife, and made the loan to them. J. W. A. Gore died before the trial and his wife, Mary Gore, was continued as plaintiff, and L. J. Gore, a son of J. W. A. Gore by a former marriage, intervened in the suit as plaintiff. The injunction 'was granted by the trial court as prayed for by appellees. At the instance of appellant the trial court appointed a receiver to take charge of the land in controversy during the pendency of the suit in the lower court and the appellate court.

A trial was had to a jury upon special issues, some of which were answered favorably to appellees, and some favorably to appellant. Based upon the favorable answers of the' jury to it, and notwithstanding the jury’s unfavorable answers,' appellant filed its motion for judgment, which was not granted. The trial court, presumably upon its own motion, entered judgment for appellant for the principal, interest, and attorney’s fees due on two vendor’s lien notes secured by lien on 62½ acres of land, a part of the claimed homestead, and for the principal, interest, and attorney’s fees due on a note executed before the marriage of J. W. A. Gore and Mary Gore secured [398]*398by; a deed of trust lien on fifty acres of land, a part of the claimed homestead. The indebtedness secured by the two liens foreclosed by the court in his judgment was part of the $15,000 claimed by appellant as evidenced by its note and deed of trust, and for the whole amount of which it sought judgment and foreclosure. Both appellant and appellees excepted to this judgment, but only appellant has prosecuted its appeal to this court.

The note sued on herein and the deed of trust securing it was a part of a $20,000 loan secured by a deed of trust covering the property in controversy executed on September 15, 1925, by appellees in favor of appellant. The money obtained from this loan was used to pay off certain debts owing by appellees to other parties which were also secured by deeds of trust and the deed of trust securing the $20,000 advanced by appellant contained a subrogation agreement. At the time of making the loans prior to the one here in controversy, in fact, from 1910 to the trial of this case in' th,e court below, the land involved herein was used by appellees as their homestead and at the time the prior loans were made and the deeds of trust securing them were executed there was recorded in the county clerk’s office in the county where the land was located a homestead designation covering the land her.e in controversy.

On September 5, 1925, J. W. A. Gore made application to appellant for a loan to be consummated by September 15, 1925, in which he set out the indebtedness owing by him together with the liens securing same. In this list appears the debts liquidated by the loan here in controversy and the lien securing same, and in the same application J. W. A. Gore represents that 28 acres of the land covered by the prior liens, to which appellant was to be subrogated, was a portion of his homestead. On September 18, 1925, and before the money evidenced by the $20,000 note was ordered paid by the attorney representing appellant to the holders of the prior liens, J. W. A. Gore and wife made and executed the following homestead designation:

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W.2d 396, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 1208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-joint-stock-land-bank-v-gore-texapp-1936.