Dearing v. Jordan

130 S.W. 876, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 107, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 162
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 130 S.W. 876 (Dearing v. Jordan) 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
Dearing v. Jordan, 130 S.W. 876, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 107, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 162 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

This suit was brought by appellant against appellee to recover the amount due upon three promissory notes for the sums of $2500, $1000 and $500,' respectively, and to foreclose a mortgage lien given to secure the payment of said notes upon lots Nos. 657 and 656, and a strip of land 10 feet in width off the north side of lot No. 655 in block No. 26 of the city of Beaumont. Plaintiff also sought to recover certain taxes and premiums for insurance on the property paid by him. The suit is against J. S. Jordan, Lawrence R. Jordan and Willie M. Jordan. The material allegations of the pleadings briefly stated are as follows:

The amended petition upon which the cause was tried alleges in substance that Lawrence R. Jordan was a minor, the son of Mrs. Sallie A. Jordan, deceased; that there had been no administration on her estate, but that J. S. Jordan had qualified as survivor in community of the estate of himself and his deceased wife, Sallie A. Jordan; that Willie M. Jordan was the present wife of J. S. Jordan.

That on July 28, 1899, J. S. Jordan and Sallie A. Jordan borrowed from the Fidelity Savings Association $2500 on stock which they owned in said Association as evidenced by certificate No. 120. To secure this- *111 loan they executed a deed of trust on lots 657, 656 and ten feet off the north side of lot 655 in block 26 of the original town of Beaumont, Jefferson County, Texas; that on December 28, 1899, J. S. Jordan and his wife, Sallie A. Jordan, borrowed $1000 from the Fidelity Savings. Association on stock in that Association owned by them, as evidenced by certificate No. 350, and gave a deed of trust to secure said money on the same property as hereinbefore described; that these deeds of trust soured all taxes and premiums on fire insurance paid by the Fidelity Savings Association, or the owners and holders of said indebtedness, and the lien was given on the property hereinbefore described to secure any sums so paid out, which were to bear interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum.

That Sallie A. Jordan died on July 4, 1900, intestate, and left Lawrence B. Jordan as her only heir; that thereafter, on December 2, 1900, J. S. Jordan married the defendant, Willie M. Jordan, and they are now husband and wife; that on February 25, 1901, J. S. Jordan and Willie M. Jordan became the owners of stock in the Fidelity Savings. Association as evidenced by certificate No. 1228, and borrowed $500 from that Association to secure which they executed their deed of trust on their interest in the property hereinbefore described.

That on March 8, 1904, plaintiff, at the instance of J. S. Jordan, purchased the notes and liens and paid insurance and taxes due on said notes, being $3106.96, besides taxes and insurance in the sum of $176.75. That subsequently, towit, on January 3, 1906, plaintiff purchased said property at tax sale for taxes, paying therefor $226.11, and also paid $75 insurance, of which $25 had been returned to him, leaving $50 due. Plaintiff sought judgment against J. S. Jordan for all said indebtedness, and a foreclosure upon said property above described; also costs of suit and attorney’s fees.

The defendant, Lawrence B. Jordan, by his amended answer filed March 18, 1909, on which he went to trial, after the general demurrer and special exception and general denial, specially denied that J. S. Jordan was ever guardian of his estate or authorized to act for him as guardian of his property, or make any contract for or on his behalf' affecting the property in any way. He further alleged the death of his mother and that the property sought to be foreclosed upon was the separate property of his mother; that his mother, Mrs. Sallie A. Jordan, was a surety upon the contracts sought to be foreclosed upon, and her estate being such surety, the plaintiff and J. S. Jordan entered into a new contract, which is attached to his answer, by virtue of which the property sought to be foreclosed upon was released. He also alleges that the contract sought to be foreclosed upon was usurious. He further alleged that at the date of the last deed of trust executed by J. S. Jordan and Willie M. Jordan, they had no interest whatever in said property and no authority to encumber the same with any lien. He further alleged that the property sought to be foreclosed upon was the home *112 stead of J. S. Jordan and Sallie A. Jordan at the time of the execution of the deeds of trust sought to be foreclosed.

J. S. Jordan made a similar answer as Lawrence R. Jordan; that is to say, denying that he ever qualified as guardian, claiming that the ■property was the homestead of himself and his deceased wife at the time of the execution of the deeds of trust sought to be foreclosed for the $2500 and the $1000; that the property was the separate estate of Sallie A. Jordan; that a new contract had been entered into, by and through which the property had been released; that the contract was usurious, and in addition pleaded that of the $2500 borrowed, only ¡$1450 was actually paid him.

The defendant, Willie M. Jordan, wife of J. S. Jordan, in an answer in which she was joined by her husband, pleaded facts similar to those alleged by Lawrence R. Jordan and J. S. Jordan, and, in addition thereto, alleged that at the date of the execution of the deed of trust to ■secure the $500 loan, towit, on February 25, 1901, the property sought to be foreclosed, upon was the homestead of herself and J. S. Jordan. She alleged that J. S. Jordan had no interest in the property other than his homestead and a life estate in and to an undivided one-third thereof during his natural life.

"Plaintiff, by supplemental petition, after the exceptions, answered ;'the plea of homestead asserted by the defendants, alleging that if Sallie A. Jordan and J. S. Jordan, and J. S. Jordan and Willie M. Jordan, '.had ever occupied the property sought to be foreclosed upon as a home, land the same was ever their home, then the same had been permanently abandoned by them in 1895, when they went upon and occupied T. & N. O. section 86 as their home; that they so represented to the agent of the Fidelity Savings Association at the time the $2500 loan was made, and also at the time of the $1000 loan and the $500 loan; that said loans would not have been made except for said representations that said property was not the homestead of the defendants; that J. S. Jordan was further estopped to dispute the amount due as he represented to the plaintiff that there was due $3106.96 on the notes and $176.75 insurance, and by virtue of said representations plaintiff purchased said notes.

Plaintiff further alleged that in so far as the $2500 was concerned, Sallie A. Jordan and J. S. Jordan had, prior to July 28, 1899, procured various and sundry loans on the property sought to be foreclosed upon, setting them out specifically in his supplemental petition. That the $2500 was borrowed for the purpose of discharging these deeds of trust, and was used for said purpose, and to that extent the property, if it was the separate property of Sallie A. Jordan, was benefited and the same was for the improvement and benefit of her separate property.

The defendants, J. S.

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.W. 876, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 107, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dearing-v-jordan-texapp-1910.