Davis v. Burkholder

218 S.W. 1101, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 139
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 28, 1920
DocketNo. 1601.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 1101 (Davis v. Burkholder) 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
Davis v. Burkholder, 218 S.W. 1101, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 139 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

■ HUFF, C. J.

The appellees, C. C. and Amo Burkholder, sued to cancel an oil lease on 120 acres of land, purporting to have been executed by them to Charlie Spencer, the named lessee therein, on the 18th day of March, 1919. The suit was originally brought against Spencer, who disclaimed, and by agreement and permission of the court Davis, the appellant, was substituted as party defendant. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and upon proper request the trial court filed findings of fact, which we believe will sufficiently present the issues without the necessity of setting out the pleadings further at this time. The facts in the case are sufficient to sustain the court’s findings, which are as follows:

“The court finds that the defendant, J. W. Davis, sought plaintiffs, husband and wife, to lease from them their homestead in Donley county, Tex., for oil and gas; that said defendant presented to plaintiff a printed form for a contract for such lease, which being filled out by defendant, Davis, and W. C. Hog-gard, notary public, was signed and acknowledged by plaintiffs before said notary public; that neither of said plaintiffs read the said contract either before or after it was signed and acknowledged, and that they depended on said defendant Davis’ representations as-to the contents; that said defendant Davis tcdd and represented to plaintiff that said instrument was a lease contract for said homestead land to J. W. Davis, and not to Charlie Spencer; that said defendant Davis represented to plaintiff that said contract was for a three-year lease term; that is, that it was to run for a period not exceeding three years and was to expire in six months after date thereof unless on or before the expiration of said six months’ period the defendant Davis should drill or cause to be drilled a prospect well on such place and make semiannual payment of $50 for six months’ *1102 extension thereof, and that thereafter the renewal payment should be $50, payable semiannually until the expiration of a period of three years from date of lease contract. The court finds that the defendant, J. W. Davis, read'or pretended to read to plaintiffs the said contract executed by them before they signed it, and that in doing so he represented to them that it was in terms and words substantially as above set forth. The court finds that defendant Davis was experienced in obtaining oil and gas leases and in the sale of capital stock of oil and gas developing companies, and that the plaintiffs were inexperienced in such matters, and that this was their first venture in the oil and gas leasing business: that the defendant, J. W.- Davis, was familiar and well acquainted with the contents of the printed form of contract which he presented to plaintiffs to execute and with the contract, after its execution and acknowledgment; that plaintiffs were not familiar or acquainted with the contents of the blank form of contract presented to them by defendant Davis for execution nor with the contract after its execution and acknowledgment; and that plaintiff would not have executed said lease contract except for the representations of defendant, J. W. Davis, as above found. The court finds that the lease contract which was in fact executed by plaintiff is the one alleged by plaintiff to have been recorded in the deed records of Donley county, Tex., and introduced in evidence; that said contract was on its face a lease of the plaintiffs’ 120-acre homestead to Charlie Spencer; that said lease contract was to run for a period of not exceeding ten years; that it was to become void unless drilling should commence within one year from date thereof or unless a payment of $50 should be made to plaintiff before the expiration of one year from date of said lease contract, and that such payment would extend the lease for another twelve months; that such lease might again be extended by successive annual payments for a period of ten years from that date. The court' finds that the plaintiff did not intend to sign the instrument which they in fact did sign, and that they were induced to do so by the above misstatements and misrepresentations and acts of the defendant, J. W. Davis, knowingly and intentionally used by the defendant, Davis, for the purpose of obtaining the lease. The court finds from the testimony of plaintiff Amo Burkholder that she understood the lease contract as first above set out, and that the same was thus explained to her in her privy examination by W. C. Hoggard, notary public. The court finds that the plaintiffs were not negligent in relying upon and believing the representations of the defendant, J. W. Davis, and that the [plaintiff] defendant Amo Burkholder - was not negligent in relying upon and believing the explanation of the instrument by the notary public to her; that the lease was for the defendant, Davis, for three years, with semiannual payments, and that neither of plaintiffs would have executed said instrument if they had known it was a lease to Charlie Spencer'; that it was for a period of ten years; and that the renewal payments were to be annual instead of semiannual.”

The first assignment presented is to the effect that the court erred in permitting Hoggard to impeach his own certificate of acknowledgment to the instrument sought to be canceled, made by Mrs. Burkholder, for the reason the evidence varies the written acknowledgment. W. C. Hoggard was the notary public who took the acknowledgment of C. C. and Amo Burkholder, husband and wife, to the lease. The certificate for married women as required by the statute was used in taking the wife’s acknowledgment. The testimony objected to as set out in the bill is substantially that Hoggard was the notary public before whom the instrument was acknowledged. The question and answer objected to are:

“Q. When you took her acknowledgment, did you explain it to her (referring to the lease contract)? A. Yes, sir; I explained it to her as Mr. Davis had explained it to me, but I didn’t read it over — the instrument — to her. I only took Mr. Davis’ word for what was in it.”

The objections urged at the time were that the testimony attempted to vary a valid written instrument, the notary’s certificate of acknowledgment by parol testimony, and was an impeachment by parol of the prior official acts of the witness. The witness also testified, to which no complaint was made, by exception, that he heard Davis talking to the appellees about the lease, and he said it would run three years; that he (Hoggard) explained to Mrs. Burkholder explicitly and told her it would run three years, and after he made that explanation she signed the three-year lease. He further testified what he meant by explaining it to her was that he did not read it over to her, but that he explained to her it was a three-year lease, and not a deed. He was examined particularly with reference to certain clauses in the lease and whether he read or explained them. He designated some which he did read and some he did not. As an illustration of the examination of this witness, we take the following:

“I stopped and didn’t read that part of it which says, ‘In like manner and upon like payments or tenders, the commencement of a well may be further deferred for like periods of the same number of months successively during the entire ten-year term of this lease.’ I stopped before I got to it. I thought it might work against the man. I thought it might work against Davis getting the lease, I thought, to read further.”

With reference to this clause h'e stated at another place:

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 1101, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-burkholder-texapp-1920.