Dupree v. Savage

154 S.W. 701, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 328
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 S.W. 701 (Dupree v. Savage) 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
Dupree v. Savage, 154 S.W. 701, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 328 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

The appellant, J. M. Du-pree, filed suit in the district court of Lubbock county, Tex., to recover on a vendor’s lien note for $120, and for the purpose of foreclosing the vendor’s lien securing said note on lots 20, 21, 22, and 23 of the Dupree addition to the town of Lubbock. The appellant had sold to the defendant Penney the property above described, who had executed the above note as a part of the purchase consideration for said property, and that afterwards the appellee Penney had conveyed to the appellee Savage two of the lots he had purchased from Dupree, and. as a part of the consideration for that conveyance Savage assumed the payment of the $120 vendor’s lien note, executed by Penney, in favor of Dupree. In the deed from the appellant Dupree to the appellee Penney, and also in the conveyance from Penney to the appellee J. B. Savage, there were contained clauses of general warranty in the ordinary form and in vogue in this state. The appellant Dupree had prior thereto purchased a larger tract in which these lots were contained from one E. B. Logan, who had also purchased it prior thereto from one Thad Tubbs, and in each of these deeds — that is, from Tubbs to Logan and Logan to Dupree — there is a stipulation as a part of the consideration, as follows: “And it is a further consideration in this deed that the grantee herein is to grant a strip fifty feet in width along the east line of the tract of land herein described and conveyed; also to give and grant ten feet in width, a strip along the west line of said tract of land hereinafter described, both of the said strips to be granted and used as streets and alleys.” The evidence shows that, after the appellant Dupree had purchased this property from E. B. Logan, he platted the same as an addition to the town of Lubbock according to lots and blocks and streets and alleys, and executed a deed of dedication to the public for that purpose, and that in selling the four lots above described to the appellee Penney he stated to him that he had an abstract to Said addition, but that the title was good, and that he would not furnish an abstract of title to the property. He further represented to the ap-pellee Penney, after pointing out the lots to him, that the same had been surveyed, and informed him that the lots were about 40 feet wide by 142 feet long. He further showed the said Penney where to build his house, and stated, if he would build it at the place that he pointed out, that he would let the said Penney have the property, and that the house was built in accordance with the suggestion of the appellant. The appellee Penney further testified that he believed that the porch to the house was .within 20 feet of the front of said lots and in the street if there was 50 feet left for street purposes, and, if 20 feet had to come off for street purposes, then the front of the house would be in the street, and 'would have to be moved off to be of any value. The said Penney did not know the condition of the title as to the said 20 feet off of the 50 feet indicated in the two deeds from Tubbs to Logan and Logan to Dupree. The testimony further evidences that the appellee Penney relied upon the statements and representations made with reference to the title to the property and the status and condition of the lots, and that in accordance with statements made by the appellant Du-pree, with reference to the size of the lots, he started the erection of his house upon the property,, a part of which was upon the 20 feet which was a part of the 50 feet on the east side of the property sold to Dupree indicated f,or street purposes. The appellee *702 Savage testified that lie asked Mr. Penney for an abstract, and that Penney told Mm that he had bought the lots from Dupree, and that Dupree had said that he had an abstract and had it examined and that the title was good, and .that Dupree had said that the lots were about 40 by 142 feet, that Penney made the same representations to Savage, made to the former by Dupree, as to the size ánd location of the lots; and the testimony is susceptible of the construction that, if the said Penney had not made the statements with reference to the- title to the property formerly made to him by Dupree, as well as to the size and location of the lots, he would not have purchased the same. Penney stated that Mr. Dupree was present, to the best of his recollection, at the time he was trading with Mr. Savage, and at the timé of his representations and statements with reference to the lots and the title to the property. However, the witness Savage had no recollection on the subject, although stating that he did rely upon what Penney said Dupree had told him. Both of the appellees in this case resisted the payment of the vendor’s lien note, pleading a partial failure of consideration on account of the alleged partial failure of title to said property, asking for judgment upon the warranty, also alleging the representations from Dupree to Penney and from Penney to Savage, pleading damages on the ground of fraud and deceit. The case was tried before the district court of Lubbock county without a jury, who gave judgment against the said Savage and Penney for the sum of $166.90 and $16.09 as attorney’s fees, with interest from the date of the judgment at the rate of 10 per cent, per annum, foreclosing the lien only .on lots 22 and 23, and by deductions rendering the final judgment for $18.59 against appellees.

[1] First. The appellant Dupree in several assignments and propositions contests the answer of ''the appellees and the judgment of the trial court on the principal ground that the stipulation contained in the deed from Tubbs to Logan and repeated in the deed from Logan to Dupree to grant the strip off the property for streets and alleys “are only covenants and that for their breach Tubbs or Logan might sue Dupree, but that such covenants do not pass to the grantees as they are reserved for the benefit of the grantors,” and to support his contention cites the line of cases where the grantee in a deed, as a part of the consideration for the purchase of the land, agrees to perform some act which would constitute a personal covenant, and not a condition subsequent or otherwise, which would not operate as a ground for the forfeiture of the estate, or a rescission of the contract; for example in Railway Co. v. Titterington, 84 Tex. 218, 19 S. W. 472, 31 Am. St. Rep. 39, the Supreme Court held that where the' railroad company, the grantee, promised in consideration of a conveyance of a right of way to construct and maintain,a station.upon the land granted, without some provision for a reversion, although there was a nonperformance of the stipulation by the company, that the title to the right of way vested in the railroad company, and the grantor would be remitted to a suit for damages. However, it will be noted that the court, in announcing the above rule, stated the exception in substance that if the railroad company, for the purpose of deceiving the grantor, made false promises and representations to the grantor, relied upon by him and for the purpose of inducing the grantor to execute the deed, coupled with the subsequent failure to perform, would be ground for a rescission of the deed and the recovery of the land.

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.W. 701, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dupree-v-savage-texapp-1913.