Foster v. Eoff

47 S.W. 399, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 405, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 267
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 47 S.W. 399 (Foster v. Eoff) 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
Foster v. Eoff, 47 S.W. 399, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 405, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 267 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

FISHER, Chief Justice.

This action is by J. E. Foster and Cora B. Foster against J. W. Turney, Hat Burns, William Burns, and J. H. Eoff, as stated in their amended petition, filed January 3, 1898, wherein they sue in ordinary action of trespass to try title to recover from defendants the land in controversy, and ih a further count state that in the event they-are not entitled to recover the land, then they pray for a foreclosure of a vendor’s lien. On this branch of the case they plead that the plaintiff, J. E. Foster, through his guardian, Mary A. Chase, and Cora B. Foster, for herself, contracted to sell and did sell to defendants *407 J. W. Turney and J. H. Eoff the tract of land described in plaintiff’s petition, for the sum of $3 per acre, aggregating the total sum of $1080; that by the terms of sale one-half of this amount was to be paid in cash, and the other evidenced by a note executed by Turney and Eoff, with a vendor’s lien on the land to secure the payment thereof. This sale is alleged to have been made on the 15th of December, 1887; and that in the probate court of Harris County, where the matter of the guardianship of J. E. Foster was pending, on the 21st of March, 1887, a report of sale was made and was approved by the court, and the guardian ordered to make a proper conveyance to Turney and Eoff.

The petition then goes on to allege that in pursuance of said trade a deed was made and tendered to the defendants, and that defendants paid, as a part of the cash consideration, the sum of $287.50, and refused and failed to pay the balance of said purchase money, and refused and failed to execute and deliver the note, or if the same has been executed and delivered it has been lost, and that the plaintiffs were at all times ready and willing to comply with the contract, and that the defendants are in possession of the land, claiming the same by virtue of their purchase from plaintiffs; that in 1889 Eoff sold all the interest that he claimed in the land to his codefendant Hat Burns, and that the latter expressly agreed and contracted, as part of the consideration of the sale, to assume the payment of the amount due and owing the plaintiffs by Eoff. They pray for an enforcement of this contract and for foreclosure of the vendor’s lien.

On January 3, 1898, J. W. Turney and Hat Burns filed their second amended original answer, setting up a general demurrer, general denial, and plea of not guilty, and specially pleading:

First. That if any such sale as that alleged in plaintiff’s petition was ever made, which fact is denied, the plaintiffs, on or about Hovember 1, 1887, sold said land to said Turney and Eoff, authorized them to take immediate possession and occupy, use, and improve it as their own, agreeing, on or before December 6, 1887, to make, execute, and deliver to said Turney and Eoff a warranty deed conveying a good, clear, and perfect title to said land, the said Turney and Eoff agreeing to execute a note for $540 and deposit same and $540 in money in the First Hational Bank of Comanche, to be delivered to plaintiffs after they had executed and delivered said deed; that defendants performed their part of said contract, and believing the plaintiffs would perform theirs, took possession and in good faith made improvements, paid taxes and part of the purchase money. About August 7, 1890, Hat Burns purchased from Eoff, one-half of said land, and he and said Turney made other valuable improvements thereon; that plaintiffs did not have and have not now any title to said land, and were and are wholly unable to perform their part of said contract, and in the event the court should find that such a contract was made, defendants pray that it be rescinded and that they have judgment for said taxes, purchase money, interest, improvements, etc.

Third. That Cora B. Foster, representing that she owned said land, *408 about November 1, 1887, sold same to J. W. Turney and J. H. Eoff and authorized them to take immediate possession and improve same, agreeing and assuring them that she would, on or before December 6, 1887, execute to them a warranty deed conveying a good, clear, and perfect title, the said Turney and Eoff to execute a note for $540 and deposit same with $540 in money in the First National Bank of Comanche, to be delivered to said Cora B. Foster when her said deed was so executed and delivered. Said Turney and Eoff performed their part of said contract, and believing that said Cora B. Foster would perform hers, and without_ any notice of any right, title, or interest of J. E. Foster in said land, and without any notice that said Cora B. Foster had parted with her interest therein, they, in good faith, paid taxes and made valuable improvements aggregating $-, and about August 7, 1890, Nat Burns purchased from J. H. Eoff one-half of said land, and he and J. W.Turney in good faith paid taxes and made other improvements thereon aggregating $-; that said note and $287.50 of said deposit was received by Cora B. Foster as part payment for said land; that said Cora B. Foster never did execute to defendants said deed, and that, since paying said purchase money, taxes, and making said improvements, they have been informed and charge that Cora B. Foster only owned at the time of her said sale to defendants Turney and Eoff a life estate in one-third of said land, and that she is (not) unable to convey to defendants a greater title; that the consideration already paid by defendants is more than sufficient to pay for Cora B. Foster’s interest in said land, at least to the extent of said purchase money paid, taxes, and improvements; that defendants made said improvements and paid said taxes and purchase money in ignorance of any claim, title, or interest of J. E. Foster in and to said land, all of which was known to said J. E. Foster at the time, and he stood by and received the benefits thereof, and is estopped from setting up any title to said land, without first accounting to defendants for said taxes, purchase money paid, and improvements; and defendants ask a recovery of Cora B. Foster’s interest in said land, and that said land be partitioned and defendants’ rights to said improvements be respected, or that they recover for said taxes, purchase money, interest, and improvements, etc.

On December 17, 1897, plaintiffs filed their second supplemental petition, which set up a general demurrer, special plea that J. E. Foster was a minor until 1894, and alleged a sale to defendants the same as in the second count of plaintiffs’ said petition.

Plaintiffs by supplemental petition denied any of the allegations of defendants’ answer, but admitted that they received-the sum of $287.50, paid by the defendants, but they have refused to further comply with their contract to purchase, and they tender deed from Mary A. Chase, former guardian of J. E. Foster, and they also tender deed executed by themselves to these defendants for the land in controversy.

Judgment was rendered dismissing the suit as to William Burns, and that the plaintiffs recover of the defendants Turney, Nat Burns, and *409 Eoff the land and premises sued for, giving a description thereof, and in favor of J. W.

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Bluebook (online)
47 S.W. 399, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 405, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-eoff-texapp-1898.