Ford v. Wallace

283 S.W. 934, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 888
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 1926
DocketNo. 11528.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 934 (Ford v. Wallace) 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
Ford v. Wallace, 283 S.W. 934, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 888 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

The following is the statement of the nature and result of the action ma^e toy appellant and agreed to by appellee, and which we adopt:

“On the 15th day'of March, 1922, M. M. Wallace and his wife, Susie Wallace, were living together as man and wife, and they owned,. among other property, lots Nos. 23 and 24 in block No-. 15 of the town of-Graham, which was community property between them. On that date they executed a deed to W. W. Benson, wherein they conveyed these lots and the building situated thereon to W. W. Benson, the consideration being stated in the deed as $2,000 cash in hand paid, and one note executed by W. W. Benson, payable to M. M. Wallace in the sum of $2,500, due on or before March 15, 1923, with interest from date at rate of 8 per cent, per annum, and providing for usual attorney fees, if sued on or placed in the hands of an attorney for collection. The note was secured by a vendor’s lien on the lots set out above. The deed was duly signed by both M. M. Wallace and his wife, Susie Wallace, and acknowledged before one W. D. McFarlane, a notary public of Young county, Tex., and the acknowledgment shows to be statutory in its form. Tire deed was duly delivered and placed of record in the deed records of Young county, Tex., on the 27th day of March, 1922.
“On the 29th day of March, 1922, M. M. Wallace, for a valuable consideration to him in hand paid, sold and transferred the note for $2,500 and the lien securing the same to H. M. Ford, the plaintiff below and the appellant in this court, and this transfer was duly acknowledged and placed of record in the deed records of Young county, Tex., on the 31st day of March, 1922
“The payee in the note defaulted in payment, and suit was filed by H. M. Ford on the 21st day of July, 1923, against W. W. Benson as maker of the note, and against M. M. Wallace as indorser thereon, and judgment was asked on the note, interest, and attorney'fees, with foreclosure of the vendor’s lien. On September 1, 1923, Mrs. Susie L. Wallace, the divorced wife of M. M. Wallace, filed her plea of interventiofi, wherein she setup that she was the former wife of M. M. Wallace; that they were divorced on March 26, 1923, after the execution of the deed1 and note in question, and said further that at *935 the time of the execution of the deed that it was intended by her to be a deed of trust on her homestead, and not a deed thereto; that she signed the same through fraud, duress, and undue influence of her husband; that she did not read the instrument, and was ignorant of its legal effect; that it was not explained to her as being a deed; and that no one explained it to her except her husband, who told her that it was a deed of trust on the homestead to secure the payment of a loan; that the deed was nothing more or less than a mortgage on her homestead, and hence void.
“Plaintiff filed certain exceptions to the plea in intervention which were sustained by the court, whereupon the intervener filed a supplemental plea of intervention, which is in the nature of an amendment, and had for its purpose to avoid the consequences of the ruling of the court on the special exceptions. The plaintiff urged the same exceptions to the supplemental plea, and they were by the court overruled.
“The case was submitted to the jury on two issues only, i. e.: Did the grantors and grantee intend the instrument to be a deed or a mortgage, and did Mrs. Wallace think that it was a mortgage at the time she executed it? Both of these issues were answered in favor of the intervener, and judgment was duly rendered thereon declaring the deed in question to be a mortgage and on the homestead of the inter-vener, and therefore void.”

The trial court recited’ in its judgment that, it appeared to the court that the instrument in question was intended and understood by the grantors and grantee as a mortgage, and that the property in question “is and was the homestead of intervener [Mrs. Wallace] at the time of the execution of said mortgage, and was given to secure debt, and that she was in, possession thereon at said time and prior thereto, and that plaintiff had due notice thereof at the time he purchased said note in question, and was not an innocent purchaser of same for value without-notice, and is therefore not entitled to foreclose his purported lien aganist the above described property; the same being the homestead property of intervener,” etc. The trial court’s finding'that plaintiff had notice of intervener’s rights in and to said property must rest entirely, if at all, upon her possession and occupancy of the property, for there is absolutely no evidence except her possession that plaintiff had any notice, constructive or otherwise, that the purported deed was intended by the parties thereto as a mortgage. Plaintiff testified that he never knew that she had ever lived on the property until about a month or six weeks after he had purchased the note, when he took dinner on,e day with Fred Arnold, his attorney, and asked Arnold who lived at the “Stewart house,” the property in question, and next door to Arnold’s home, and Arnold told him Mrs. Wallace lived there; that he then asked Arnold if that was not the place he held a note against, and Arnold replied that it was. Mrs. Wallace testified that she knew Ford well, and that he visited a place close to her often, and saw her occupying the house, before and after he purchased the note, and he had ample opportunity to see her about the place and knew she was using it. - That he never made any inquiry about the place. But Ford testified that the only time he was ever at the Wallace home prior to the purchase of the note was some six or seven years before, and that the Wallaces were not living at that time at the place next to Fred Arnold.

But, if Ford knew at the time he purchased the land note that the 'Wallaces were living at the place against which the note was executed, such fact would not be notice of any defect in the execution. of the purported deed. In Eylar v. Eylar, 60 Tex. 315, in an oft-cited opinion by Judge Stay ton, the Supreme Court said:

“In the case of Mullins, Guardian, v. Wimberly, 50 Tex. 446 [457], the question seems to have been considered, and the opinion seems to limit the application of the rule that possession is notice of whatever title the possessor has, to cases in which .the possessor is not knowingly in fault in permitting a deed which he has executed to be placed on record, or to cases in .which the possessor has not voluntarily aided- in misleading a purchaser. The facts of that case were peculiar, and one of the grounds upon which the title of the possessor was sustained, although a deed of the ancestor of the guardian’s wards was shown to have been executed and recorded before the right of the claimant attached, was that the instrument through which the claimant asserted title was executed in mutual mistake as to the land which both parties intended should be covered by it. Many cases can be found in our reports in which it is said that possession is notice of whatever title the possessor has. Among them are the following: Watkins v. Edwards, 23 Tex. 443; Hawley v. Bullock, 29 Tex. 223; Mainwarring v. Templeman, 51 Tex. 212; Wimberly v. Bailey, 58 Tex. 227. All of these were eases in Which the rule was applicable, and the language must be understood with reference to the facts of the cases.

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Bluebook (online)
283 S.W. 934, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-wallace-texapp-1926.