Felton v. Davenport

148 S.W.2d 988
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1941
DocketNo. 3996.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 148 S.W.2d 988 (Felton v. Davenport) 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
Felton v. Davenport, 148 S.W.2d 988 (Tex. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

SUTTON, Justice.

This cause is here for review on writ of error from the District Court of Live Oak County. The suit was brought and tried on the third amended original petition of James M. Davenport and George Davenport, individually and as executors and sole devisees of W. L. Davenport, to recover on certain vendor’s lien notes against D. W. Snyder, and to foreclose the vendor’s lien on certain lands described in their petition, situated in Live Oak County, against D. W. Snyder, A. J. Felton, the Great Southern Life Insurance Company, W. F. Felton, individually and as administrator of the estate of A. J. Felton, deceased, and Clifford Mays, administrator of the estate of A. J. Felton, deceased, L. E. Mounger, J. A. Mounger, J. B. Sneed, and Charles E. Rattan.

The parties will here be referred to as in the trial court.

The trial was before a jury, and, on the findings of the jury and determination of the law by the court, judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs on the notes against Snyder, ■ and a foreclosure decreed as against all of the other defendants named, except the Great Southern Life Insurance Company, who disclaimed. From that judgment the Feltons, Moungers and Charles E. Rattan, as plaintiffs in error, have prosecuted this appeal.

The pleadings are very lengthy and somewhat involved, but we will make a sufficient reference to them in the opinion for an understanding of them as applicable to the issues raised.

By deed duly recorded W. L. Davenport, J. M. ^Davenport, G. H. Davenport and Iona Davenport, conveyed to D. W. Snyder some three thousand acres of land in Live Oak County for a consideration of $28,200; $2,500 cash, one note for $5,000, one for $10,000, and one for $10,700, all dated of even date with the deed, May 31, 1928, and all due five years after date, payable to the order of W. L. Davenport, and containing the usual provisions found in such notes.

Plaintiffs allege the first note had been paid, but that the remaining two were in default.

February 4, 1932, Snyder conveyed the lands to A. J. Felton, subject to the notes and the vendor’s lien.

The defendants L. E. and J. A. Mounger claimed an undivided one-half interest in the lands under the following contract:

“State of Texas,
“County of Live Oak.
“Whereas, the undersigned W. L. Davenport and L. E. Mounger heretofore made contract, for recovery of certain lands in Live Oak County in which it was agreed that Davenport should convey certain lands to said Mounger or his assigns, on which suit was to be instituted for the quieting *990 of title to same and after the termination of such suit or suits the said Mounger was to reconvey to said Davenport one-half interest in said lands so recovered or to which title was quieted, and,
“Whereas it is now agreed that such suits should be brought in the name of W. L. Davenport, it is now agreed and the said W. L. Davenport hereby binds himself, his heirs and assigns, to convey to said Mounger, his heirs and assigns, one-half of any lands so recovered or title thereto quieted as set out in said agreement between Mounger and Davenport herein referred to.
“The consideration for said transfer being service rendered and to be rendered by said Mounger, his heirs or assigns, or his attorneys, in the institution and prosecution of said suits relating to said lands.
“(Signed) W. L. Davenport
“Witness:
“(Signed) J. B. Sneed
“(Signed) Roy C. Ledbetter.”
J. A. Mounger, a brother of L. E. Moun-ger, claimed the one-half interest as as-signee of L. E. Mounger by virtue of the ' following assignment:
“San Antonio, Texas,
“Jan. 2, 1928
“I, L. E. Mounger, for and in consideration of $1.00 and other good and valuable considerations, in hand paid, do here assign and transfer all my interest in Davenport ranch in Live Oak County, Texas, about IS miles West of George West, Texas, to J. A. Mounger being half interest in land held for me by W. L. Davenport and to be conveyed to me by him.
“(Signed) L. E. Mounger.”

Charles Rattan, attorney for the Moun-gers, claimed a one-fourth interest by virtue of an assignment from the Moungers to him in payment of his fee.

The suit to clear title, as mentioned in the contract between W. L. Davenport and L. E. Mounger, was brought and tried in the District Court of Live Oak County, Texas, and a judgment rendered in that cause on the 28th day of December, 1927. The purpose of the suit was to perfect title under the statutes of limitation to some two hundred tracts or lots of ten acres each, as subdivided by a Dr. Simmons, which lots had been sold by Dr. Simmons to many different owners. These small tracts were in the pasture of W. L. Davenport and occupied and used by him in connection with the operation of his ranch on other lands owned by him.

Snyder and the Feltons claimed payments and credits on the notes sued on by the plaintiffs other than those credits admitted by the plaintiffs. The questions arising on these matters were submitted to the jury and determined by the jury, as will hereinafter be noted.

The plaintiffs, by proper pleading, alleged that the contract claimed by L. E. Mounger had never been executed; that if it had, Mounger had never performed his part of it, and therefore had acquired no interest in the land; but if they were mistaken in that, then he had been paid various sums of money, as will be shown hereinafter in this opinion, in lieu .of any interest he might have been entitled to in the lands; that he was present and knew of the sale of the land by'W. L. Davenport and others to Snyder, and had never, prior to the filing of his answer in this suit, asserted any claim to an interest in the lands nor to the cash proceeds, nor the vendor’s lien notes.

It is rather difficult to understand and gather from the pleadings and the evidence the relations existing between the defendants in- this suit. Roy C. Ledbetter, the attorney who brought the suit to clear the title to the Live Oak County lands, and J. B. Sneed witnessed the contract between Davenport and Mounger. Snyder, to whom the Davenports conveyed the lands, is the father-in-law of Tom Poynor, who testified he furnished the money for the cash payment, and that Snyder took the land in trust for him. A. J. Felton, to whom Snyder conveyed, subject to the lien, was a lifelong friend of Poynor, according to Poyn- or’s testimony, and Poynor had dealt with him since he was sixteen years of age, and that Felton died in Poynor’s house, in a room Felton called his own. Poynor made all the subsequent payments after Felton took the deed. L. E. Mounger testified he was interested in the suit that he might sell the lands through Tom Poynor and Jack Felton to Snyder and others. Ledbetter testified he did not know the relations existing between the several interested parties. L. E. Mounger was on several occasions, as detailed in the testimony, delivering payments on the written authority W. L.

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Bluebook (online)
148 S.W.2d 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/felton-v-davenport-texapp-1941.