Dicken v. Cruse

176 S.W. 655, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 541
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 7, 1915
DocketNo. 6785.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 176 S.W. 655 (Dicken v. Cruse) 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
Dicken v. Cruse, 176 S.W. 655, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 541 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

LANE, J.

This suit was brought by ap-pellees against appellants and others who are not parties to this appeal, on the 20th day of November, 1911, to recover the 388 acres of -land involved in this appeal, and other land, not necessary to be mentioned in this opinion, as the title to the same is not involved by tnis appeal. The appellants are the heirs of R. N. Dicken, to whom U. M. Gilder conveyed the said 38S acres of land on the 16th day of October, 1863. The ap-pellees are the heirs of Wm. Minter, from whom Gilder, the vendor of R. N. Dicken, purchased the land in question. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment was rendered for appellees.

There were other parties before the trial court who were disposed of by the judgment; but, as no appeal was taken by them, no further mention will be made of them in this opinion.

[1] Appellants omit from their brief their : assignments 1 and 2, and therein specially waive the same. The effect of assignments 3, 4, 5, and 6 in their brief is: First, that the court erred in rendering judgment for appellees because the recitation in the deed from William Minter and wife to U. M. Gilder, of date March 11, 1863, hereinafter mentioned, is that the purchase money for the land was paid in cash, and there is no evidence to show that the. recitation in the deed is not true, and therefore the appellees have failed to show title in themselves, as against appellants, who claim under such deed; second, that William Minter had taken a mortgage upon the land sold by him to Gilder, and also upon another tract of 937 acres of land owned by txilder, but never owned nor sold by Minter, to secure the payment of the notes given in part payment for the purchase money for land sold by Minter to Gilder, which included the 388 acres involved in this suit, and as thereafter Minter’s heirs, appellees herein, changed their suit against Gilder from one upon the purchase-money notes and foreclosure of the mortgage lien on all the property mortgaged to a suit for the land, or, in other words, for a rescission of the contract, they released the 388 acres sold by Gilder to R. N. Dicken from all incumbrances, and are estopped to claim said 388 acres, as it was their duty to-resort to the property of the estate of Gilder, upon which the mortgage rested, for the payment of said notes, before resorting to the land conveyed by Gilder to R. N. Dicken.

The evidence established that on the 11th day of March, 1863, vv'm. Minter and wife, who were the owners, conveyed to U. M. Gilder a tract of 1,555.9 acres of land, part of the N. Tatman league (which tract includes the land in controversy), and by the same conveyance a tract out of the Ann Fisher league, in the same county; the consideration recited being $3,661 in hand paid.. On the same date of March 11, 1863, Wm.. Minter executed a bill of sale to U. M. Gilder for a number of negro slaves, wagons, mules, horses, and oxen for a consideration recited of $42,440 in hand paid. On the same-date of Marcn 11, 1863, U. M. Gilder executed three notes payable to Wm. Minter, aggregating $25,471.12. On the same date of' March 11, 1863, U. M. Gilder and wife executed a mortgage to Wm. Minter, to secure the identical three notes mentioned,. on the same land described in the deed of the same date, and including other lands, and on the-same personal property covered by the bill of sale. The deed and the mortgage were-both filed for record in the county clerk’s office on the same day and recorded in the same record book on consecutive pages. On January 6, 1866, U. M. Gilder having defaulted in the payment of these notes, Wm. Minter filed suit thereon in the district court of Tyler county, seeking to enforce the mortgage upon the land, and asking that it be- *657 sold to satisfy the lien. It appears that to this action defendants U. M. Gilder and wife answered, setting up, in substance, a failure of consideration by reason of the emancipation of the negroes, and asking a rescission of the contract as follows:

“Defendants here tender the said negroes or persons of color, as mentioned in said mortgage, purchased from the said Minter, plaintiff, together with all of the property purchased from the said plaintiff at the time the negroes were purchased, and asks that said contract based upon said mortgage and the promissory notes be canceled, and that said mortgage be declared null and void and of no effect.”

And the defendants in that suit also sued in reconvention to recover back $23,-000 paid on the contract of purchase on March 11, 1863. It appears that this suit continued on the docket of the court for some years thereafter; and, Gilder and wife having died, their heirs were made parties defendant by scire facias; and, Minter and his wife having died, their heirs were properly made parties plaintiff. The plaintiffs in that suit, the heirs of Minter, on December 22, 1884. filed their amended petition in the form of ordinary action of trespass to try title to recover the land described in the mortgage above referred to. The defendants in that suit, heirs of Gilder, answered by general demurrer, general denial, and plea " of not guilty, filed on the same date. Thereupon an agreed judgment was entered in the cause in December, 1884, in which the heirs of Wm. Minter, as plaintiffs, recovered back the 1,555.9 acres of the Tatman league and the tract of the Ann Eisher league, being the identical lands which Minter and his wife had conveyed to Gilder; and the heirs of Gilder recovered from the heirs of Minter the other tracts of land described in the mortgage ; and, the personal property having been lost by the freeing of the negroes, it was so declared. It appears, however, that on October 1C, 1863, U. M. Gilder conveyed to R. N. Dicken the identical tract of 38S acres in this suit and covered by the mortgage previously given and recorded by Gilder to Minter. R. N. Dicken is the ancestor under whom appellants in this case claim. It was proven, though, that R. N. Dicken stated that, after he bought the land, he found out that the Minters (Wm. Minter) had a claim on the land for purchase money; that the land had not been paid for, and that Gilder could not make him a good title, and that was the cause of his abandonment of the land; that he left it and gave it up. It was further proven that R. N. Dicken was sheriff of the county from 1870 and for many years during the pendency of the suit between the heirs of Minter and the heirs of Gilder, and never took any steps to assert any right to the property now claimed by his heirs. Also the record does not show, and appellant offered no proof, that the consideration named in the deed from Gilder to Dicken was in fact paid.

Under all these facts, which are practically undisputed, we think a finding by the trial court that there was sufficient proof to show that the purchase money for the land was not in fact fully paid by Gilder to Minter, and that R. N. Dicken, under whom appellants claim as heirs, so knew, at the time of his deed, and that the superior title remained in Minter, and Dicken did not acquire title thereto as against Minter, and, as he had abandoned his claim thereto before the judgment of rescission was taken and failure to avail himself of an equity of redemption, appellants have no title to the land in question. Before appellants can ask equity, they must do equity. Harris v. Catlin, 53 Tex. at page 8.

[2] The deed, mortgage, notes, and bill of sale were all executed by the same parties and simultaneously.

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Bluebook (online)
176 S.W. 655, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dicken-v-cruse-texapp-1915.