Eckert v. Stewart

207 S.W. 317, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1336
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 13, 1918
DocketNo. 1362. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 207 S.W. 317 (Eckert v. Stewart) 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
Eckert v. Stewart, 207 S.W. 317, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1336 (Tex. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

HUFF, C. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered upon an instructed verdict. The assignments present as error the refusal of the court to instruct a verdict for the appellants, and the refusal of requested charges submitting certain issues of fact and error on the part of the court in taking the case from the jury and directing a verdict. The questions involved will require a somewhat lengthy statement of the facts and issues.

The controversy is over the title to a section of land in Armstrong county (section No. 177, block B4), which was owned by C. W. Stewart and his wife, Mary Stewart, during their lifetime, and a part of their community estate. The question involved Is whether the land passed to S. B. Stewart by deed to him from C. W. and Mary A. Stewart, or passed by their will to the named children and grandchildren of C. W. and Mary Stewart, as joint residuary devisees. The plaintiffs, appellants here, Otto Eckért and his wife, Minnie Eckert, Q. D. Black and his wife, Hermie Black, and Charles Taylor, filed their first amended original petition June 15, 1916, making new parties. The parties defendant are S. B. Stewart, Mrs. Joe Stewart, Ida Stewart, Charles Stewart, Jr., Nannie Stewart, C. K. Stewart, Charles Stewart, Ambrose Stewart, Jr., May Stewart, and Jeb Stewart. The petition set up the respective interests *318 of the plaintiffs and defendants to the section of land under two wills, properly probated, one by O. W. Stewart, the father and grandfather of the parties, and one by Mary A. 'Stewart, the mother and grandmother of the jjarties. The respective interests of the parties, as set out in the petition under the two wills, it is not deemed necessary to state at this time. The petition sought to have the interests of the respective parties ascertained and the land partitioned between them. The original petition of the plaintiff declared against S. B. Stewart alone in trespass to try title, suing for their alleged interest in the land. That petition was filed September 23, 1915. The amended original petition set out more fully their claim under the will, but no new parties were brought in by the amendment, which was filed June 15, 1916. J. B. Stewart answered by general denial and not guilty, and specially alleged that at the time C. W. and Mary A. Stewart made their respective wills that they had no legal title to the land, but that the section belonged to S. B. Stewart. He also pleaded in bar the three and five year statutes of limitation against all parties. Mrs. Joe Stewart, the wife of S. B. Stewart, adopted the answer of her husband. The minors, Ida Stewart, Charles Stewart, Jr., Nannie 'Stewart, Mur-rill Stewart, Ambrose Stewart, Jr., and O. K. A. Stewart answered by guardian ad litem appointed by the trial court, and they adopted the pleadings of the plaintiff. By supplement answer S. B. Stewart and wife set up the right of subrogation to certain vendor’s lien notes paid off by S. B. Stewart, and also set up a deed executed by C. W. and Mary A. Stewart to the land, conveying the same to S. B. Stewart, and alleged that they did not know of the deed at the time the wills were probated and not until some time after. The plaintiffs, by supplemental petition, answered that the deed was never delivered, and would not support the statute of limitations; that the deed never passed from the control or dominion of C. W. Stewart; and they also pleaded the statutes of limitations, three, four, and ten years, against Stewart’s plea of sub-Xogation. The defendant S. B. Stewart and wife also filed a trial amendment, which at this time is not necessary to set out. The trial court directed the jury to return a verdict ih favor of S. B. Stewart against all the other parties to the suit, and judgment was accordingly so rendered. Charles Stewart, Mary Stewart, Jeb Stewart, and Ambrose Stewart filed no answer, and default judgment was rendered against them.

The appellants Minnie Eckert, Hermie Black and Charles Taylor are the children of Mrs. Sophia Catherine Stewart Taylor, a daughter of C. W. and Mary A. Stewart. Mrs. Taylor, the mother of plaintiff, died December, 1906. S. B. Stewart, Ambrose Stewart, and Charles Stewart are the sons of C. W. and Mary A. Stewart. Ambrose Stewart had no children. The minors Ida, Charles, C. K., and Nannie are the children of S. B. Stewart and grandchildren of C. W. and Mary A. Stewart. May, Jeb, Murrill, Ambrose, and O. K. A. Stewart are the children of Charles Stewart. May and Jeb were of age at the institution of the suit; the other three are minors, represented by the guardian ad litem. C. W. Stewart and Mart A. Stewart executed a warranty deed in the usual form, conveying the section of land in •question, No. 177, to S. B. Stewart. It was acknowledged in due form, and dated September 24, 1906, reciting therein the consideration to be “one dollar cash, and the assumption and payment by said S. B. Stewart of one-third of two promissory vendor’s lien notes, each for the sum of $1,493.00, with a credit of $493.00, due on November 1, 1905, respectively, payable to Wm. Brooks, Close, and Ed Ford North, for the premises hereinafter described, and section No. 139 and 179, in block B4, H. & G. N. Ry. Co., Armstrong county, Texas, and other valuable considerations”; retaining a vendor’s lien until the notes and interest were fully paid. This deed was filed for record the 20th day of April, 1911. On October 15, A. D. 1906, Wm. Brooks Close and Ed Ford North executed a release of the above vendor’s lien notes, in which release it was recited they had conveyed the three sections of land, Nos. 139, 177, and 179, to C. W. Stewart on the 25th day of August, 1902, by deed of that date, and in said deed retained vendor’s lien on-said section to secure part of the purchase money evidenced by three notes for $1,493 each, payable to the order of the grantors, November 1, 1903, 1904, and 1905, respectively, with 8 per cent, interest; that the notes had been paid to them, for which they did thereby* release, discharge, and quitclaim unto C. W. Stewart all right and title, interest and estate, to the land, etc. This release was recorded November 17, 1906. On the 27th day of November, 1906, C. W. Stewart made his will, and in the preamble thereof he recited: “Being desirous of disposing of all the estate of which I may die possessed,” he made and published the will as his last will and testament. The second clause expresses a desire that his just debts, etc., be first paid out of his estate. By the third clause he gave to his son Charles Stewart all of section 138, block B4, and also all of section 144, block B4, in Armstrong county. By the fourth clause he gave to his son S. B. Stewart all of section 179, in block B4. The fifth clause directed, after his death, that his debts should be paid out of any personal property of which he died possessed. “And if that be not sufficient to discharge all such debts, then that the remainder thereof shall be paid out of the proceeds of sec *319 tion No. 177, in Armstrong county, Texas.” Tile sixth clause:

“I further desire and direct that, after the payment of all my just debts, the remainder of the property of which I may die possessed, whether the same be real, personal, or mixed, choses in action or choses in possession, and wheresoeyer the same may be located or to be found, shall pass to all my children then living, share and share alike. If any shall die before I do, then the share of such a one is hereby bequeathed to the children of such decedent. And I hereby give and bequeath to my said children S. B.

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Bluebook (online)
207 S.W. 317, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 1336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eckert-v-stewart-texapp-1918.