Firestone v. Hall

143 S.W.2d 797
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 27, 1940
DocketNo. 14212
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 143 S.W.2d 797 (Firestone v. Hall) 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
Firestone v. Hall, 143 S.W.2d 797 (Tex. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, Chief Justice.

Mrs. C. W. Firestone, a feme sole, has presented to this court her application for leave to file her petition for a writ of mandamus, to compel Honorable Earl P. Hall, Judge of the District Court of Clay County, Texas, to enter a judgment in her favor against Tom Firestone and twelve of the heirs of Lucinda Firestone, deceased, áll of whom were made parties defendant to the application for leave to file. The petition for writ of mandamus is attached to the application to file, and the right asserted for that relief is predicated upon the proceedings in Cause No. 6313 in the District Court of Clay County, Texas, instituted by Carman Firestone Sims and eleven others, as heirs of Lucinda Firestone, deceased, against Tom Firestone, to set aside two certain deeds of conveyance to the mineral interest in 200 acres of land in Clay County, executed by Lucinda Firestone, as grantor, in favor of defendant, Tom Firestone, dated September 5, 1938, on three grounds: First, because said Lucinda Firestone was of unsound mind when the deed was executed; second, on the ground of undue influence exerted upon her by Tom Firestone; and, third, because no valuable consideration passed to said grantor for said conveyances.

It was further alleged by plaintiffs in their suit that oil had -been discovered in the land, having a value in excess of $100,-000, and all of the rents, revenues and royalties from the land had been collected and appropriated by Tom Firestone for his own use and benefit, in denial of any rights in the plaintiffs to participate therein.

The defendant, Tom Firestone, filed an answer in that suit. He specially denied that Lucinda Firestone was of unsound [798]*798mind at the time of the execution of her conveyance to him; he also denied that there was a want of consideration for the execution of the deed, coupled with the further denial of the exercise of any undue influence upon her, inducing its execution. He further alleged that in 1930 one Warren A. Boger executed his deed of conveyance to Lucinda Firestone to the mineral interest in the 200 acres, in satisfaction of an indebtedness he then owed to her, and on September 5, 1938, Lucinda Firestone, now deceased, conveyed to him, the defendant Tom Firestone, the same interest.

Tom Firestone also filed a cross action in trespass to try title against all the plaintiffs in the suit, and all other heirs of Lucinda Firestone, and also against W. A. Boger and his minor children, who are also grandchildren of Lucinda Firestone:

Further allegations were that W. A. Boger is now of unsound mind. A guardian ad litem was appointed to represent his interest and the interest of his minor children.

John Firestone, of Harris County, John S. Firestone, of Clay County, Lewis Firestone and C. W. Firestone, former husband of the plaintiff in the petition for mandamus, were all made parties defendant to that cross action, all of whom filed disclaimers of any right, title or interest in the land in controversy.

W. A. Boger, through his attorney and guardian ad litem, filed a plea of not guilty and also specially alleged that at the time of his conveyance of the mineral interest in the land to Lucinda Firestone, on December 18, 1930, he’ was the owner and in lawful possession of the premises, as against all other parties to the suit. In the alternative, he alleged that at the time he executed the deed of conveyance to Lucinda Firestone, he was of unsound mind, for which that deed should be held for naught. Following those pleadings, he alleged that on March 16, 1938, Lucinda Firestone had recovered judgment in trespass to try title against him and his minor children, in the District Court of Clay County, quieting title in Lucinda Firestone to the mineral interest in the land in controversy, as against any claim of interest by W. A. Boger or his minor children, but that said judgment was procured by fraud, and was therefore without force or effect.

The relator, Mrs. C. W. Firestone, is the widow of C. W. Firestone, who died during the pendency of the suit, and at the request of Tom Firestone she was also made a party defendant to Tom Firestone’s cross action in trespass to try title. After she was thus made a party, she filed a plea of not guilty to that cross action and in addition thereto a plea for affirmative relief and cross action, in which she claimed an interest in the minerals upon the theory of resulting trust, based upon allegations that at the time the property was conveyed to Lucinda Firestone by W. A. Boger, on December 18, 1930, she was the owner in her own separate right of the promissory note executed by W. A. Boger and his wife, Helen Boger, and that W. A. Boger executed the deed to Lucinda Firestone in consideration of the cancellation of that note owned by relator, and other .notes owing by said Boger to Lucinda Firestone; the resulting trust so claimed being based upon the allegations that the surrender of relator’s note against Boger was a part of the consideration paid by him to Lucinda Firestone as purchase money for the property, and that Tom Firestone and all the other heirs of Lucinda Firestone, now deceased, took any and all interest claimed by them,' chargeable with that trust, which was never repudiated by Lucinda Firestone.

The relator, Mrs. C. W. Firestone, further alleged that on August 31, 1938, Lucinda Firestone executed a deed of conveyance to the property in controversy, which was the same property which she had acquired from W. A. Boger, which deed had been duly filed for record in the Deed Records of Clay County, but that the said conveyance did not affect the rights of Mrs. C. W. Firestone owned by her by reason of the resulting trust in her favor already alleged, notwithstanding the fact that after such conveyance Tom Firestone repudiated said trust.

Following those allegations, Mrs. C. W. Firestone sought an accounting by Tom Firestone for the royalties and revenues collected by him after oil had been discovered on the property, and for recovery of a personal judgment for a large portion of those revenues, which, according to allegations in the pleading, Tom Firestone had converted to his own use, in denial of relator’s claim of right to any interest therein.

In relator’s application for the writ of mandamus, the purport of, the pleadings above referred to are alleged, without set[799]*799ting them out in haec verba, followed with further allegations that upon those pleadings and the evidence introduced, the case was submitted to a jury on special issues, the substance of which, together with the jury’s findings thereon, were as follows:

Issue No. 1. On September S, 1938, when Mrs. Lucinda Firestone executed to Tom Firestone a deed with warranty of title to the mineral interest in the land in controversy, she had mental capacity to execute the same.

Issue No. 2. On December 18, 1930, when Warren A. Boger executed a like deed to Mrs. Lucinda Firestone to the same property, he had sufficient mental capacity to execute the same.

Special Issue No. 3 was as follows: “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the making and execution of the warranty deeds dated August 30th, 1938, from Lucinda Firestone to Tom Firestone were procured by undue influence, as undue influence has been defined above, on the part of Tom Firestone or Mrs. Lou Firestone?” The jury made no finding on that issue because of their inability to agree upon the same.

Special Issue No. 4. “Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that C. W.

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143 S.W.2d 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/firestone-v-hall-texapp-1940.