Glenn v. Rhine

115 S.W. 91, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 291, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 611
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 115 S.W. 91 (Glenn v. Rhine) 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
Glenn v. Rhine, 115 S.W. 91, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 291, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 611 (Tex. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

BOCKHOUT, Associate Justice.

This suit was instituted by the appellee, Mariah Rhine, in the District Court of Collin County against the appellants, E. D. Glenn and others, in the usual form of trespass to try title to recover the J. B. Menafee survey in Collin County. The petition also alleged that “the plaintiff here now tenders and pays into the registry of this court, for the benefit of the defendants entitled thereto, the sum of fifty dollars heretofore paid to Isaac Rhine by W. H. Herron, on an executory contract of sale which has never been executed, and the terms of said sale have never been complied with by W. H. Herron, his heirs or assigns. A part of said executory contract hereinabove referred to is in writing, and is in the possession of the defendants, and they are notified to produce the same on.the trial hereof to be used in evidence, and failing to do so, secondary *292 evidence as to its contents will be offered in evidence.” Plaintiff also plead offensively the three, five and ten years statute of limitation. The appellants answered by a plea of not guilty, and the statutes of three, five and ten years limitation. The plaintiff, in reply to this plea, filed her first supplemental petition setting up the executory contract of sale, alleging that the defendants and those under whom they claim were placed 'in possession by'the plaintiff and those under whom plaintiff claims, and that the possession of the defendants was the possession of plaintiff. That by the terms of said contract the defendants and those under whom they claim were permitted to fence and improve said land, but that said improvements were not to cost plaintiff or those under whom she claims anything, and that defendants and each of them are estopped from setting up or claiming under the statutes of limitation, and are also estopped from claiming anything for value of improvements, if any, made by them. To this supplemental petition was attached a copy of the receipt or contract under which it was alleged that the defendants and those under whom they hold went into possession of the property. Said receipt or contract is as follows: “Received, McKinney, Texas, March 10, ’85, from 'William H. Herron, Fifty Dollars, which money is to be applied as a part payment on 199 acres of land in the J. B. Menafee survey, Collin County, Texas, the title to said tract Jenkins & Pearson are now examining into to remove a cloud on title. If said title is perfectly satisfactory, then the said William H. Herron will take said lands as per contract and price and terms agreed upon, and in the event of a failure to perfect title not satisfactory to said Herron, then this receipt and money (Fifty Dollars), is to be refunded to said Herron without any interest. Said Jenkins & Pearson are riot under any obligations or contract as to definite time for perfection of title, nor has this any definite time to run; this also authorizes said Herron to fence said land at his expense and cost for his use and benefit, but shall not. cost said Rhine anything whatever if said Herron does not take said land. (Signed) Isaac Rhine, per Ben W. Rhine, agent. (Signed) Wm. H. Herron.” The defendants replied by supplemental answer excepting to the pleading of plaintiff, and plead that in case they were mistaken as to their former pleas, then they were willing to pay the original purchase price of the land according to the terms of the original contract between Rhine and Herron, but that they could not tender the price for the reason that they did not know what the same was, and further allege that for the past twenty-one years no "claim has been made for the land or the purchase price and plaintiff had led defendants to believe that the contract would not be rescinded until after demand for purchase price. Plaintiff by supplemental petition excepted to defendants’ offer to pay because no sum was tendered in court, and alleged that the contract of sale was not in writing and was within the statute of frauds and prayed judgment of the court.

Error is assigned to the court’s action in overruling a special exception to plaintiff’s petition, the exception being that the said pleading does not set out or allege the price and terms agreed upon between Isaac Rhine by Ben Rhine,, agent, and Wm. H, Herron, for the *293 land in controversy, or that defendants have failed to pay such price, or that Wm. H. Herron failed to comply with the terms of said sale. The contention is, as we understand it, that the defendants being in possession of the land are entitled to have the terms of the executory contract set out so that they may comply with its terms; that it would be inequitable to permit the plaintiff to recover the land while contending that the possession of defendants was illegal and wrongful. We do not concur in this contention. It was not incumbent upon plaintiff to set up the terms of the contract. Plaintiff alleged that the contract was executory. She also alleged that she and those under whom she claims placed defendants and those under whom they claim in possession of the land, and that defendants and those under whom they claim held and hold said property as tenants at will under and by virtue of a contract in writing, and that said tenancy at will was terminated by the bringing of this suit; that neither said tenancy nor the title of plaintiff was ever in any manner repudiated and notice of any character given to plaintiff or those under whom she claims, until the filing of defendants’ answer on this day, to wit, September 9, 1907. Plaintiff further says that by the terms of said contract the defendants and those under whom they claim were permitted to fence and improve said land, but said improvements were not to cost’plaintiff nor those under whom she claims anything, and that the possession of the defendants is the possession of plaintiff, and the defendants and each of them are estopped from setting up or claiming under the statute of limitation, and also estopped from claiming anything for the value of improvements, if any, made by them. The executory contract set up in plaintiff’s supplemental petition was in reply to the defendant’s plea of limitation, and as plaintiff did not seek to recover on said contract it was not necessary for her to set out any more of said contract than she thought necessary to defeat defendants’ plea of limitation. The plaintiff did not in her pleadings, as contended in argument by appellants, admit title to the land in defendants. She distinctly alleged that the executory contract of sale was never performed by W. H. Herron, his heirs or assigns. If the defendants acquired any equity under the executory contract of sale it would be purely a matter of defense which should have been specially pleaded by them. No such pleading was filed. (Patrick v. Roach, 21 Texas, 251; Moore v. Giesecke, 76 Texas, 543; Fuller v O’Neal, 69 Texas, 351.)

It is insisted that the pleadings of plaintiff fail to show when Isaac Rhine was to perform his part of the contract, or that he had performed it or was able to perform it, and for this reason neither he nor his heirs could recover the land in controversy. ■ The court overruled a special exception raising this contention, to which ruling defendants excepted and have assigned error.. There was no error in the court’s action in this respect. Herron, the ancestor of defendants, took possession of the land by virtue of the instrument, copy of which is attached to plaintiff’s pleading and read in evidence. As stated, if defendants had acquired any equities under the executory contract they should have plead the same.

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Bluebook (online)
115 S.W. 91, 53 Tex. Civ. App. 291, 1909 Tex. App. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-v-rhine-texapp-1909.