Frazier v. Wynn

492 S.W.2d 54, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2481
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 1973
Docket8345
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 492 S.W.2d 54 (Frazier v. Wynn) 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
Frazier v. Wynn, 492 S.W.2d 54, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2481 (Tex. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, Justice.

Defendants have appealed from a judgment rendered against them for damages for breach of covenant of quiet enjoyment of a written farm lease. Affirmed.

Myrtle Frazier, vested with an undivided one-half interest, and her children, Glenn Frazier and Fern Frazier Wilson, each vested with an undivided one-fourth interest, owned approximately 1270 acres of land situated in Lipscomb County. The owners orally leased the land to Alvy Wynn on a year to year basis beginning in 1952. Glenn Frazier and Fern Frazier *56 Wilson executed a written instrument dated April 1, 1966, which recited that all of the land was leased to Alvy Wynn for a three year period terminating on April 1, 1969, for an annual cash rental of $2,450.00 payable in advance on the first day of April, 1966, 1967 and 1968. Although Myrtle Frazier neither was named as a party to nor signed the lease, the first annual rental installment was paid by Alvy Wynn by depositing $1,225.00 to the account of Myrtle Frazier, $612.50 to the account of Glenn Frazier, and $612.50 to the account of Fern Frazier Wilson.

Alvy Wynn died intestate on July 16, 1966, survived by his widow, Lova Wynn, 1 and her son, Don R. Wynn, who had been adopted by Alvy Wynn. The decedent’s estate consisted of cattle, the 1966 lease and a pick-up truck. No administration was or has been taken out on the estate.

Lova Wynn Barnett testified that she gave her interest in the lease to her son and, on March 18, 1969, she executed a written assignment thereof to him. The cattle were retained and no question arose about the lease until on or about September 15, 1966, when Don R. Wynn and his uncle, Otis Wynn, entered into a partnership to raise cattle. Don R. Wynn furnished the leases on other lands rented by him and, so he testified, the lease in question; Otis Wynn supplied the money to purchase the cattle from the Alvy Wynn estate and, so he testified, to buy the lease in dispute. The sale check was endorsed by Lova Wynn and delivered to Farmers Home Administration, the agency that had loaned money to Alvy Wynn for his operations, but the proceeds were deficient by some $300.00 to pay Alvy Wynn’s note held by that agency. Otis Wynn paid the 1967 annual rental installment due under the 1966 lease. Sometime before April, 1968, the partnership was terminated. Don R. Wynn deposited in escrow the annual rental for the third year under the lease, but the owners did not claim the money, and the escrow deposit was returned to Don R. Wynn. Myrtle Frazier and her children leased the land to Otis Wynn on or about April, 1968. Although the record intimates this 1968 lease was by a written instrument, no written evidence thereof is included in this record.

Plaintiff Don R. Wynn then filed two suits. The first suit filed was directed against Otis Wynn for an accounting and settlement of the partnership affairs. The second suit filed named Myrtle Frazier, Glenn Frazier and Fern Frazier Wilson as defendants, and sought damages from them for breach of covenant of quiet enjoyment of the 1966 lease. The second filed suit was tried and, based upon the jury’s verdict, plaintiff recovered judgment for $6,400.00 damages against the three defendants. That judgment was affirmed by this court, 459 S.W.2d 895, but the Supreme Court reversed the judgments and remanded the cause to the trial court. 472 S.W.2d 750.

In its opinion, the Supreme Court agreed with this court’s determination that Alvy Wynn’s death did not terminate the lease; however, the Court declared that the lease constituted a community asset vesting in the decedent’s widow and son, who held the same subject to the payment of community debts and subject to the right of the estate’s personal representative, who ordinarily is the only person entitled to sue for recovery of property belonging to the estate, to have possession and control under orders of the probate court during administration. Moreover, it was the Court’s opinion that, although it was shown that no administration was pending, the record disclosed a necessity for administration because of unpaid estate debts; therefore, since the suit was tried less than four years after Alvy Wynn’s death, plaintiff was not entitled at that time to maintain the suit in his own right as sole owner of *57 the leasehold estate. 472 S.W.2d at 752-753. Furthermore, the Court stated that Myrtle Frazier, who did not sign the 1966 lease, was not shown to be liable by estop-pel since the evidence did not show that she accepted payment with full knowledge of the material facts. 472 S.W.2d at 753.

Upon remand, plaintiff amended his petitions on file in both suits. The Otis Wynn suit was amended to allege a cause of action for contractual interference with the 1966 lease on the declaration that the cause was an alternative to the second suit, and it would not be asserted if plaintiff prevails in the second suit. The petition filed in the second suit was amended to delete Myrtle Frazier as a party defendant and to plead more fully the cause of action originally alleged. When the second suit again was called for trial, the three original defendants, joined by Otis Wynn, filed a motion to consolidate the two suits. The motion was overruled, and the trial proceeded to a jury determination.

Additional to the operative facts heretofore stated, the 1966 written lease and the assignment of Lova Wynn’s interest therein were introduced in evidence. Plaintiff’s mother testified that she made the assignment and sold the cattle to substantially retire the Farmers Home Administration debt. Furthermore, she stated that she never intended to convey any part of her interest in the lease to Otis Wynn. Otis Wynn testified that he bought the cattle on the condition that he be allowed to use the remaining part of the lease that was already paid for. The testimony was that for a part of the time the partnership existed, the cattle grazed land leased by Don R. Wynn other than the land owned by Myrtle Frazier and her children. It was the testimony of plaintiff that he told Glenn Frazier about the partnership arrangement and there was no objection from Glenn Frazier or from Fern Frazier Wilson. Plaintiff testified about improvements he had made on the leased land. Additionally, it was his testimony that the April 1, 1967 lease payment made by Otis Wynn was made on behalf of the partnership. Under the 1966 lease and prior to April, 1968, Don R. Wynn was shown by the office records of the Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service, U. S. Department of Agriculture, to be entitled to receive, and he did receive, the lessee’s allotted government payments, but in April, 1968, the records were changed to reflect those payments were to be made thereafter to Otis Wynn. When plaintiff was advised of this, he contacted Glenn Frazier who informed plaintiff the land had been leased to Otis Wynn. When Otis Wynn was asked, relative to his 1968 lease, if it was right that “you were in” and plaintiff “was out, as far as the Frazier Lease was concerned, from April, ’68 to April ’69,” he answered, “That’s right.” It was Glenn Frazier’s testimony that if the third year of a valid lease is taken away by leasing to another party, the first tenant is going to be damaged, and that damage is a foreseeable consequence.

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Bluebook (online)
492 S.W.2d 54, 1973 Tex. App. LEXIS 2481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazier-v-wynn-texapp-1973.