Dendinger v. Martin

221 S.W. 1095, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 546
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 1920
DocketNo. 1648.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 221 S.W. 1095 (Dendinger v. Martin) 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
Dendinger v. Martin, 221 S.W. 1095, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 546 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BOYCE, J.

The appellant, Mrs. Lula Den-dinger, brought this suit to cancel a certain deed executed by her and her husband, J. R. Dendinger, dated February 9, 1911, whereby they conveyed to A. J. Martin certain property in the city of Dallas, including their homestead, which belonged to the community, and other property which belonged to Mrs. Den-dinger in her own right. The defendants in the suit were Mrs. M. A. Martin, the surviving wife of the said A. J. Martin, deceased, Mrs. Lela Wooley, daughter and heir of A. J. Martin, Albert Wooley, her husband, H. Hol-linsworth, and J. R. Dendinger, plaintiff’s husband, who, it was alleged, refused to join her in the suit. The case was submitted to a jury on special issues, and judgment rendered on the verdict of the jury against the plaintiff, from which judgment she prosecutes this appeal.

The facts pleaded by the plaintiff and defendants are voluminous and complicated in their details. A statement of the general result of the allegations, however, is all that is necessary to a decision of the assignments presented.

Plaintiff alleged that, shortly before the execution of the deed in question, A. J. Martin offered her $12,000 cash for the property described in the deed; that she did not accept the offer, but told him she would consider it; that soon thereafter her husband induced her to sign and acknowledge said deed on representations that the said Martin could then go ahead and have the title examined, and there would be no delay in closing the transaction in.the event she decided to sell; that she did not read the deed, but thought it recited a consideration of $12,000, and relied on her husband’s representations as to its contents and the purpose of its execution; that the deed in fact recited a consideration of one dollar, and the assumption by the said A. J. Martin of the payment of two notes which constituted a lien on said property; that the certificate of acknowledgment to said deed was false, in that she was not examined privily and apart from her husband, and such instrument was not explained to her by the officer taking the acknowledgment; that she did not authorize her husband to deliver the deed, and if it was delivered such delivery was without her authority; that she received no consideration therefor, and a fraud was perpetrated upon her in the delivery and record of the deed; that she later learned that the deed had been delivered to Martin, and subsequently informed him that she had decided not to sell the property, and he agreed to return the deed to her, and it was subsequently reported to her that the deed was lost; that she did not learn of the record of the deed until May, 1916 f that the recording of the deed cast a cloud upon her title. Wherefore she prayed that the deed be canceled and her title quieted. It is not necessary to make any statement as to the claim of H. Hollins-worth, since no one is complaining of the judgment against him.

Mrs. M. A. Martin and Mrs. Lela Wooley and her husband answered that the deed was executed with the formalities required by law; that the consideration agreed to be paid for said land, in addition to the assumption of the notes constituting a lien thereon, was $20,000 in notes secured by vendor’s lien on land in Bowie county; that Mrs. Den-dinger delivered the deed to her husband as her agent, and that he delivered it to the said A. J. Martin, who in turn delivered) the said $20,000 Bowie county land notes to the said J. R. Dendinger for Mrs. Dendinger; that at the time of such exchange said A.- J. Martin leased said Dallas property to J. R. Dendinger for $150 per month, and settlement of rents was thereafter made to April 1,1916; *1097 that Mrs. Dendinger and her husband have since April 1,1916, been occupying and collecting rents on the premises, and are liable as joint tort-feasors for the rental value of said property at the rate of §100 per month. Certain facts, not necessary to specifically set out, are alleged in support of a plea of estop-pel against the plaintiff. Said defendants further alleged that they, in good faith, expended certain sums of money in payment of taxes and in discharge of liens and in the erection of improvements on said property. They prayed that their title to said property be quieted, and that they have judgment against plaintiff and her husband for rents; and in the alternative, in the event plaintiff should recover said property, that they have judgment for the value of the Bowie county land notes and the amounts expended on said Dallas property for improvements and in payment of taxes, etc.

The defendant J. R. Dendinger answered that he was not authorized to sell the property for plaintiff; that the deed was delivered to Martin for examination only; that Martin agreed to return said deed, but later informed him that it was lost; that he received the Bowie county land notes in exchange for some Ft. Worth property, which he conveyed to the said A. J. Martin; that in closing up the agreement for exchange of such properties, and the modifications thereof later agreed to, it was finally agreed between Dendinger and the said Martin, after the said Dendinger had discovered that the deed to the Dallas property was still in possession of the said Martin and had been recorded, that the said A. J. Martin should hold the deed to the said Dallas property to secure the payment of certain indebtedness which Dendinger owed Martin, growing out of the exchange of the Ft. Worth property for the Bowie county land notes; that ¡this agreement for. retention of the deed by Martin was made without authority from Mrs. Dendinger, and that he and the said Martin colluded together to keep Mrs. Dendinger from acquiring any knowledge of this transaction; that it later developed that he did not owe Martin anything on the exchange of the Ft. Worth property.

More than SO special issues were submitted to the jury. We copy the following, with their answers, as being the only ones necessary to be referred to in the disposition of the appeal:

“(1) Do you find and believe from the evidence that just prior to February 9, 1911, the plaintiff, Mrs. Dula Dendinger, authorized her husband, J. R. Dendinger, to negotiate as her agent for the sale of the property in controversy to A. X Martin? Answer: Yes.
“(2) Do you find and believe from the evidence that the plaintiff, Mrs. Lula Dendinger, agreed to accept as consideration for conveyance of the property- described in the deed of February 9, 1911, the $20,000 vendor’s lien notes on the Bowie county property? Answer: Yes.
“(3) Do you find and believe from the evidence that the officer taking the acknowledgment of Mrs. Lula Dendinger to the deed of February 9, 1911, to Andrew J. Martin, took such acknowledgment in accordance with the certificate in said deed? Answer: Yes.
“(4) Do you find and believe from the evidence that A. J. Martin entered into an agreement with X R. Dendinger to withhold from the plaintiff, Mrs. Lula Dendinger, information as to the real consideration for the deed so executed? Answer: No.”
“(6) Do you find and believe from the evidence that A. X Martin or his agent delivered to X R. Dendinger the $20,000 in vendor’s lien notes as payment for the property described in the deed of February 9, 1911? Answer: Yes.
“(7) Do you find and believe from the evidence that the plaintiff, Mrs. J. R. Dendinger, authorized or directed her husband, the said J. R.

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W. 1095, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dendinger-v-martin-texapp-1920.