Gaines v. Lee

175 S.W.2d 728
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 1943
DocketNo. 2564.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 175 S.W.2d 728 (Gaines v. Lee) 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
Gaines v. Lee, 175 S.W.2d 728 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

RICE, Chief Justice.

Cleo Gaines and her husband, Vernon I. Gaines, brought this suit against A. A. Lee and others for the purpose -of setting aside two deeds insofar as the same affected the title of Cleo Gaines to certain real estate.

The wife of J. T. Lee predeceased him and left no will. J. T. Lee died in 1934, leaving a will which was denied probate. On his death the community estate of himself and his deceased wife consisted of 176 acres of land situate in Freestone county, Texas, the title to which vested by inheritance in their eleven surviving children, and the surviving widow and children of Frank Lee, a deceased son.

On March 3, 1934, the majority of the heirs of J. T. Lee, including the defendant A. A. Lee, executed and delivered to plaintiff Mrs. Cleo Gaines a deed containing clauses of general warranty, conveying to her a tract of 30 acres out of the tract of 176 acres, on which tract so conveyed was situate the original Lee home and out *729 houses. On August 20, 1934, eight of the sisters and brothers of A. A. Lee (including Mrs. Cleo Gaines, joined by her husband) executed and delivered to him a deed conveying all of the 176-acre tract less the 30 acres theretofore deeded to plaintiff. This deed recited as the sole consideration therefor the execution by grantee of eight vendor’s lien notes, each in the principal sum' of $400; each of said notes naming as payee one of the grantors in said deed; and all of said notes were payable two years after date. The deed contained clauses of general warranty, and the vendor’s lien was therein retained to secure the payment of the above mentioned notes. This deed also recited: “Cleo Gaines renounces all her right under will dated January 13, 1934, executed by J. T. Lee, willing her thirty acres, by reason of the fact that under said deed, recorded in Vol. 136, page 338, Deed Records of Freestone ■County, grantors conveyed to her another 30 acre tract.” ThSsf deed was' filed for record December 11, 1937.

By deed dated January 27, 1936, and reciting that it was executed for the purpose of partition, the heirs joining in the ■deed of August 20, 1934, to A. A. Lee, to.gether with A. A. Lee and plaintiffs, conveyed to the remaining heirs a 50-acre tract out of the land remaining on hand .after deducting the 30-acre tract theretofore conveyed to Cleo Gaines; and on the ■same day, said remaining heirs, grantees ■in the deed last above mentioned, executed •and delivered to the grantors in said deed to them, a deed in partition, conveying all ■of the 176-acre tract, less the 50-acre tract so conveyed to them.

After the execution of said partition deeds on January 27, 1936, A. A. Lee secured a release of the lien retained in the deed dated August 20, 1934, from seven of the eight heirs named as grantors, they 'being all of the grantors save plaintiff Cleo Gaines, who never executed a release of ■such lien.

On March 22, 1941, A. A. Lee, joined by his wife, executed and delivered to Mrs. •Grace Moseley Capers, wife of I. L. ■Capers, a general warranty deed to 59 acres of the J. T. Lee land, being a part of the lands described in the deed of August 20, 1934; and in said deed to Mrs. Capers the vendor’s lien was retained in favor of The Teague National Bank to secure part of the purchase price advanced by said bank. Thereafter, on April 23, 1942, plaintiffs instituted this suit against A. A. Lee; Mrs. Grace Moseley Capers; I. L. Capers, her husband; and The Teague National Bank of Teague, Texas, seeking to have cancelled the above mentioned deed from A. A. Lee and wife to Mrs. Capers and the deed executed by plaintiffs and others to A. A. Lee, dated August 20, 1934, as well as to remove cloud from her title to the land in said deeds described; alleging as ground for the cancellation of said last mentioned deed that she had been induced to execute it by fraudulent representations of defendant A. A. Lee, and also because the consideration therefor had failed. In the alternative, plaintiff sought judgment for the value of her interest in said land as of August 20, 1934, and prayed for general relief.

The jury found, in answer to special issues submitted, substantially as follows: (1) Mrs. Capers purchased the 59-acre -tract of land without notice of any fraudulent representations, if any, made by defendant A. A. Lee in securing the execution of the deed by plaintiffs to himself; (2) Mrs. Capers had no knowledge that the plaintiff Mrs. Gaines was claiming an interest in the 59 acre tract when she purchased it; (3) The Teague National Bank had no notice of any fraudulent representations, if any, made by A. A. Lee in securing the execution of said deed to him when it advanced its money to pay part of the purchase price of said land; (4) The Teague National Bank did not know that Mrs. Gaines was claiming any interest in the land in controversy when it advanced its money to pay a part of the purchase price of said land; (5) Mrs. Cleo Gaines agreed to execute a release to the $400 vendor’s lien notes mentioned in the deed dated August 20, 1934; (6) Mrs. Cleo Gaines received a valuable consideration for her interest in the lands and premises; (7) defendant A. A. Lee had been in peaceable and adverse possession of the land in controversy, cultivating, using and enjoying the same and paying taxes thereon and claiming under a deed or deeds duly registered, for five years prior to March 23, 1942; (8) the deed of August 20, 1934, was executed by Mrs. Cleo Gaines and others to A. A. Lee for the purpose of giving him authority to make a division of the estate among all the heirs of J. T. Lee, deceased; (9) and that said, deed was a deed of conveyance. No issue as to fraud practiced by A. A. Lee on plaintiffs was submitted *730 to the jury, and no such issue was requested by plaintiffs.

Plaintiffs’ motion for an instructed verdict, as well as their motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, were overruled by the court. The trial court thereupon rendered its judgment in favor of defendants on the verdict of the jury and on the undisputed evidence. In said judgment the court expressly found, from the undisputed evidence, that after the defendants, A. A. Lee and Anna Lee, conveyed to the defendant, Mrs. Grace Moseley Capers, the lands and premises described in deed dated March 22, 1942, there was remaining unsold 18 acres of the J. T. Lee land; and that the 18 acres had not been conveyed at the time of the filing of this suit nor at the time this case was tried. The court further found, as a matter of law, that A. A. Lee and Anna Lee had the legal right to convey any specific portion, or all of the lands in question, subject to the rights of the plaintiff, Cleo Gaines, if she was a co-tenant, to secure an equitable partition of such lands, against any party or parties who might at the time be the owners of an undivided interest therein.

By their third point plaintiffs say the court erred in refusing to instruct the jury at the close of the evidence to return a verdict against all defendants, cancelling and holding for naught the deed dated August 20, 1934, from Cleo Gaines et al. to A. A. Lee, and the deed of March 22, 1941, from A. A. Lee and wife to Mrs. Grace Moseley Capers, insofar as the same affects the title of Cleo Gaines to said land, and declare her interest free from any and all liens held by The Teague National Bank.

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175 S.W.2d 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaines-v-lee-texapp-1943.