Dillard v. Duke

107 S.W.2d 414, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 664
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 17, 1937
DocketNo. 1890.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 107 S.W.2d 414 (Dillard v. Duke) 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
Dillard v. Duke, 107 S.W.2d 414, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 664 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, Chief Justice.

A brief statement of the facts out of which this suit arose will aid in a ready understanding of the issues of law involved. J. D. Duke died in 1922. He owned at that time as community property with his wife, Etta Duke, who survived him, 228 acres of land, which they occupied as a homestead. Eight children of their marriage were living at that time. A partition of said tract was had, in which 114 acres, constituting the south half thereof, were set aside to the surviving widow and the north half was divided equally between said children, each child receiving title to 14.28 acres. V. M. Duke and a sister, Phama Duke, were both minors at that time and their shares were set aside to them jointly in a tract adjoining the tract set aside to their mother as aforesaid. V. M. Duke subsequently married, and after his marriage re.sided first with his mother and afterwards in a small two-room house situated on her land. He, from year to year, cultivated the 28.56 acres of land set aside to him and his sister Phama as aforesaid and appropriated the crops raised to his and her benefit. In addition thereto, under some arrangement with his mother, he cultivated from year to year a portion of the land set apart to her. He so cultivated such lands during the year 1929. In the spring or early summer of said year, Mrs. Etta Duke was killed in an accident. D. L. Duke, a brother of V. M. Duke, was killed at the same time. He had received as his share of his father’s estate a tract of 14.28 acres. He died intestate. He was unmarried and his surviving brothers and sisters were his only heirs. There is no contention that V. M. Duke’s inheritance from his father, mother, and deceased brother did not amount in the aggregate to 32 acres of land out of the original tract. There is a brief reference in the statement of facts to a partition suit in the district court brought by Mrs. Etta Dillard against Claude Dillard and others on the 28th day of September, 1929, for division of the land inherited from Mrs. Etta Duke and said D. L. Duke; a decree establishing the interest of each of the several heirs therein, and a report of sale of the property by a receiver to Mrs. Etta Dillard and Claude Dillard for approximately $9,000. No attempt to consummate this sale and purchase was shown. Mrs. Etta Dillard and Mrs. Maude M. Dillard were sisters of V. M. Duke. The former was a widow and the latter the wife of said Claude Dillard. The share of Mrs. Maude M. Dillard in the partition of her father’s estate was set aside to her on the north side of the original homestead tract. Claude Dillard, at the time of the transactions under consideration, had purchased the share of B. D. Duke which adjoined her share on the south, and also the share of another of the heirs, which share lay immediately south of the B. D. Duke share. Said 3 shares amounted in the aggregate to approximately 42 acres.

Claude Dillard desired to acquire all, or the major portion, of the remainder of the lands owned by his wife’s parents, but did not have the money to do so unless he could, in connection therewith, dispose of the three tracts amounting in the aggregate to approximately 42 'acres as aforesaid. He was apparently an experienced business man and was active in the affairs pertaining to the partition of said estates. V. M. Duke was shown by the testimony to have been uneducated and apparently inexperienced in business affairs. He claimed that the real trade between him and Claude Dillard was that he was to exchange his interest in the estate of his parents and his deceased brother, amounting to approximately 32 acres'of land as aforesaid, acre for acre *416 for .32 acres of land off the north side of the tract owned by Claude Dillard as aforesaid; that he was to buy the remaining 10 acres off the south side of said tract so owned by Claude Dillard and certain teams and tools to be used by him in operating the lands acquired, for the aggregate sum of $1,250, which wa,s to be secured by a lien on said 10-acre tract alone. Claude Dillard claimed that the real trade between him and said V. M. Duke consisted, first, of the sale by the latter of his interest in the estates of his deceased father, mother, and brother to him, the said Claude Dillard, and the subsequent purchase by said V. M. Duke from him of his 42-acre tract as aforesaid, and the execution, as a part of the purchase' price therefor, of a note' for $1,250 to be secured by a lien on said entire tract. The testimony bearing on these conflicting claims is so voluminous as to render impractical even a condensed statement of the same.

Claude Dillard and wife, on or about the 25th of October, 1929, executed and acknowledged a deed conveying to V. M. 'Duke the entire 42-acre tract aforesaid, and an additional tract of 19.75 acres which apparently did not constitute any part of the estate of his deceased parents. The consideration recited therein was $4,244, being $2,284.80 cash and one promissory note executed by V. M. Duke and payable to Mrs. Etta Dillard for the sum of $1,250 as a part of the purchase price of the land. It was further expressly stipulated therein that said 19.75-acre tract was taken subject to an indebtedness of $709.29, but that the grantee did not assume such indebtedness. It was shown affirmatively that no part of the cash consideration so recited was ever paid. V. M. Duke, at or about that time, at the instance of Claude Dillard, executed his note to Mrs. Etta Dillard for the sum of $1,250 and she advanced the money thereon to said Claude Dillard. While there was testimony concerning said note, it was not introduced in evidence and the contents of the same other than the amount thereof as aforesaid, were in no way shown. Said deed, however, contained a provision that the holder of said note should be subrogated to all the rights, equities, and liens for the collection of the same that the grantor would have had had the same been payable to him. About that time V. M. Duke and wife moved into the house on the Claude Dillard tract and he moved onto the tract formerly occupied by Mrs. Etta Duke. The deed above described was never delivered to V. M. Duke. He was not present when it was prepared and testified that no one told him what was contained therein. It remained with the notary before whom it was acknowledged until some time in March, 1933, when Mrs. Etta Dillard caused it to be delivered to the • county clerk for record. A notation thereon showed that it was mailed, after recording, to the attorney for the Dillards. There is no contention that Mrs. Pauline Duke ever saw said deed or knew anything about its contents.

V. M. Duke failed to pay said note to Mrs. Etta Dillard at its maturity, or to make anything more than a trivial payment thereon. He testified that she offered him $15 to deed the entire tract'of land to her as the holder of said note and that he declined. She thereafter, on May 22, 1933, instituted suit in the district court to recover judgment on said note and to foreclose the vendor’s lien. Such foreclosure was sought only upon the 42-acre tract. No reference was made to the 19.75-acre tract. V. M. Duke alone was made defendant in said suit. He was served with citation, but testified that he thought the foreclosure sought was upon the 10-acre strip which he contended was the only part of his purchase to be charged with a lien for the payment of said note. He further testified that he did not know that the 19.75-acre tract was included in the deed executed by Dillard and wife to him as aforesaid, and did not know what became of' the same. Mrs. Dillard obtained judgment by default. An order of sale was issued on such judgment and the property sold thereunder to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.W.2d 414, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillard-v-duke-texapp-1937.