First Texas Joint Stock Land Bank of Houston v. Webb

82 S.W.2d 159, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 451
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 5, 1935
DocketNo. 12989.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 82 S.W.2d 159 (First Texas Joint Stock Land Bank of Houston v. Webb) 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
First Texas Joint Stock Land Bank of Houston v. Webb, 82 S.W.2d 159, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 451 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

In 1893, on the 22d day of May, one B. F. Wilson, a citizen of the city of Nashville, state of Tennessee, executed a deed naming two of his brothers, G. W. Wilson and R. J. Wilson, citizens of Denton county, state of Texas, as the trustees, in which he attempted to create a trust for the following uses and purposes (in four tracts of land, lying in Denton county, aggregating 371 acres of land), viz.:

First. Enjoining upon the trustees the duty of taking so much of the rents and revenues derived from the lands necessary for the payment of the taxes, as may annually accrue, and the payment thereof.

Second. To his nephew Jas. M. Owens, the right to live upon, occupy, possess, and enjoy the lands, to receive and apply as he deemed best all rents, revenues, etc., thereof, less the amount necessary to pay the taxes.

Third. Expressly providing that Jas. M. Owens shall not mortgage, encumber, or in any way create any lien upon the lands, and likewise restricting the trustees.

Fourth. Upon the death of Jas. M. Owens, and if at such time he should leave surviving him a wife and children of his body, or a wife without such children, then the trustees should continue to hold the legal title to the land and take enough rents, revenues, etc., therefrom and pay the taxes, and so long as the surviving wife remains the widow of Jas. M. Owens, she and the surviving children should be permitted to live upon, occupy, and enjoy the lands and rents, etc., less the amount necessary to pay the taxes.

Fifth. Upon the death or marriage of Owens' wife, who may survive him, or when she shall cease to be his widow, or if Owens died without leaving a wife surviving him, and should have and leave at such time any children of his body or their descendants, then the whole of the lands should pass "in fee absolute" to Owens' children then living, share and share alike, and if any child be dead leaving bodily heirs, such would take the dead parent's part, and the trust should terminate, "except to partition said land as herein-after provided."

Sixth. Should Owens die without leaving any children and issue of his body, or the descendants of such, or if at the death or marriage of his surviving wife, or when she ceased to be his widow, there should be no child or children, or descendants of such, *Page 160 living, then the lands should "pass and vest in fee absolutely" in the brothers and sisters of Owens, if any such be then living, share and share alike, and if any such be dead and leave bodily heirs, such heirs should be entitled to the dead parent's share.

Seventh. Upon the termination of the trust, the trustees should execute deeds partitioning the lands among those entitled to the fee, at that time.

Eighth. If Owens should die without leaving surviving him any children of his body, or descendants of such, or any brothers or sisters, or descendants of such, and if at the time of the death or marriage of his surviving widow, no child or children of his body, or no descendants of such, and no brothers or sisters, or descendants of such, should then be living, or if the said Owens should "refuse to accept the estate conveyed upon the conditions herein stipulated or having accepted the same abandon and refuse to appropriate or use the estate hereby conveyed for his benefit for the period of three years, then the whole of the estate hereby conveyed shall be divested of said trustees and shall revert back to and reinvest in the said B. F. Wilson, if then living, and, if then dead, in his heirs."

The second trust deed was executed by B. F. Wilson on January 20, 1897, and named only R. J. Wilson as trustee, and it conveyed 120 acres of land in said county, and is identical in all of its terms and conditions with the first deed.

Jas. M. Owens and his wife, Jessie T. Owens, took possession of the lands, after these deeds were executed, and occupied, used, and enjoyed them.

On July 12, 1916, Jas. M. Owens filed suit in the district court of Denton county, Tex., alleging that B. F. Wilson, on and before May 22, 1893, had and held for the use and benefit of plaintiff the several tracts of land described in the two trust deeds, that they represented a portion of a trust fund belonging to the plaintiff, but the legal title was vested in B. F. Wilson, and plaintiff was entitled to receive from Wilson a conveyance thereof in fee simple, and it was Wilson's duty to so convey same.

After pleading the execution of the two trust deeds and their contents, Owens alleged that the actual and real consideration for which the deeds were delivered was that the lands conveyed therein were part of a trust fund belonging to Owens, and should have been conveyed to him, by Wilson, without any restrictions; that the restrictions and limitations in the deeds "were wrongful and illegal and null and void," etc.; that immediately after the execution of the first deed, he, knowing and understanding that he was entitled to receive the lands and hold same without any restrictions, and having full confidence in his uncle, B. F. Wilson, without examining the deed, entered upon and took possession of the lands described in the deed, and has since held and claimed same as his own, and has had peaceable and adverse possession of same, cultivating, using, and enjoying same; and that immediately after the execution of the second deed, he entered upon and took possession of the lands described in that deed and did not discover that the conveyances had been made, one to G. W. Wilson and R. J. Wilson and the other to R. J. Wilson, until after the execution of the second deed, and then he notified B. F. Wilson and R. J. Wilson and G. W. Wilson that the lands described in both deeds were his own, and he set up his claim thereto, adverse to B. F. Wilson, and R. J. Wilson and G. W. Wilson, and has ever since had and held the same; and that neither G. W. Wilson nor R. J. Wilson has ever interfered with him in the management and control of said lands in any way whatever, or attempted in any manner to discharge any of the functions of trustee, as provided in either of the deeds.

That the wrongful provisions in the deeds and the conveyance of the lands to R. J. Wilson and G. W. Wilson cast a cloud upon his title to, and have reduced the value of, his lands, and interfere with the proper use and enjoyment thereof by him and his children.

He further set up adverse possession for more than ten years.

He prayed for judgment against all of the defendants, divesting them of all rights in and title to the lands in controversy; that the restrictions in the trust deeds be held null and void; that the title to the lands be vested in him, the cloud upon his title be removed, and possession of and title to the lands be quieted in him.

In this suit Owens made defendants of the two trustees, his five children, his brother, and all of his sisters, including half-sisters, and the descendants and heirs of those deceased. The settlor, B. F. Wilson, being dead, Owens made the executors of Wilson's estate, and his surviving wife and children, all parties defendant. The only minors involved are Benjamin I. Owens and *Page 161 Harry W. Owens, two of Jas. M. Owens' children, whom he made defendants, and prayed that a guardian ad litem be appointed for them in the trial of the cause. His other children, of age at the time, were Annie Utley, Jas. M. Owens, Jr., and Will H. Owens.

Trustee G. W. Wilson waived issuance and service of process upon him, disclaimed and admitted the allegations of plaintiff's petition. Trustee R. J. Wilson was duly served with process, which writ stated in detail the nature of plaintiff's suit, and the status of R. J. Wilson as a trustee and the relief prayed for against the trustees, and other defendants.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Spoor v. Gulf Bitulithic Co.
172 S.W.2d 377 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1943)
Thompson v. Bruce
90 S.W.2d 265 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)
First Texas Joint Stock Land Bank of Houston v. Webb
82 S.W.2d 159 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 S.W.2d 159, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-texas-joint-stock-land-bank-of-houston-v-webb-texapp-1935.