Green v. Duncan

134 S.W.2d 744
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 24, 1939
DocketNo. 3881.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 134 S.W.2d 744 (Green v. Duncan) 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
Green v. Duncan, 134 S.W.2d 744 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

PRICE, Chief Justice.

Appellee, Mary S. Duncan, hereinafter called plaintiff, on the 22nd day of April, 1938, filed this action in the District Court *745 of Marion County against appellants, Londy Green and his wife Mary Green, hereinafter referred to as defendants.

Count one of plaintiff’s petition was founded on two promissory notes in the respective sums of $250 and $200, said notes being each payable to Andy Elrod, and alleged to have been given by defendant Londy Green in part payment of two described tracts of land in Marion County. Judgment on the notes, with interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum and attorney’s fees, together with a foreclosure of the vendor’s lien, was sought. On the fifty-acre tract the alleged vendor’s lien was confined to an undivided one-fourth interest therein. The date of the alleged purchase of the land was February 1, 1918. The $250 note was alleged to mature one year after its date, the one for $200 two years after its date. It was further alleged that there was now due on the notes the sum of $2754.65 principal, interest and attorney’s fees; that defendants on August 8, 1935 acknowledged the justice of said debt in writing and agreed to pay same.

Plaintiff’s second count was in the alternative. It adopted all of the allegations of the first count as part thereof. Plaintiff then alleges tha*t defendants! had, on August 8, 1935, sued plaintiff here and the other heirs of A. T. Duncan, deceased, in the District Court of Marion County, and attached to plaintiff’s, petition as an exhibit was a copy of the petition of plaintiffs (defendants here), and by reference same was made a part of the second count of plaintiff’s petition. By appropriate allegations it is shown that defendants here in that cause secured a final judgment against plaintiff here and the other heirs of A. T. Duncan, deceased, establishing and adjudicating that a certain deed from defendants here, Londy Green and wife, to A. T. Duncan was in fact a mortgage, and establishing in favor of plaintiff here and the other heirs of said A. T. Duncan that the two notes described in the first count of plaintiff’s petition here were secured by a vendor’s lien on the two tracts of land described. On the fifty-acre tract there and here described the lien was established only on the one-fourth interest therein held by Londy Green and wife; that according to the terms of said judgment there was due on the notes the sum of $1711.30. On the second count judgment was sought foreclosing the lien as established by the judgment aforesaid.

Defendants here filed answer to the first and second counts of plaintiff’s petition. This answer consisted of general exception and general denial. By way of special defense the two and four years statutes of limitations were pleaded. The defendant Mary Green set up her coverture and that the property had been her homestead for twenty years.

Defendant Londy Green set up partial failure of consideration for the notes, the factual basis alleged was that the notes were given in part payment of the ninety acres described; that the sale was on the basis of $8.35 per acre; the title had failed to the extent of thirty-four acres, and he was entitled to a credit of $251.40, if plaintiff was entitled to recover.

Plaintiff filed supplemental petition consisting of general demurrer, special exception and general denial; specially denied the notes were barred by limitation. In said supplemental petition plaintiff, as to the plea of failure of consideration, averred an estoppel to make súch plea on the ground that defendant was aware of the fact that his brothers and sisters owned an interest in the property after the death of the life tenant; that said defendant had acquired the estate of the life tenant and that there had been no interference with the possession of defendant.

At the close of the evidence the court instructed a verdict in favor of plaintiff for the amount sued for in the first count of her petition and for foreclosure of the lien on the land described. Judgment was rendered on the verdict that plaintiff recover the sum of $2,892.38 against defendants, together with a foreclosure of the lien in that amount on the property involved.

Defendants duly perfected appeal from the judgment 'and the case is here for review.

The facts are somewhat complicated and a- statement thereof is necessary. There are two tracts of land involved here; one of about 40.53 acres, the other of fifty acres. Hutch Green, the father of Londy Green, originally owned the fifty-acre tract. In the settlement between the heirs of Hutch Green and his second wife, Virginia, a life estate was given Virginia in this property. Londy Green, defendant here, was a party to this settlement along with the other heirs of Hutch Green. Virginia thereafter married Tom Stewart. On the 17th day of January, 1906, Virginia. *746 joined by her husband, Tom Stewart, executed a conveyance of this fifty-acre tract to Londy Green. The deed was general warranty in form and purported to convey a fee simple title. In 1915 Londy Green conveyed this property by warranty deed to Andy Elrod. In 1918 Andy Elrod by warranty deed conveyed this property back to Londy Green, together with the other tract of 40.53 acres. Part of the consideration was the $250 and $200 vendor’s lien notes that are the foundation of the action asserted by plaintiff here in count one. On October 27, 1926, Londy Green executed an extension agreement extending the notes to October 27, 1929. Andy Elrod transferred these two notes to A. T. Duncan, now deceased, by written assignment dated January 4, 1932. Plaintiff now holds all rights heretofore held by A. T. Duncan in and to these two notes.

In 1932, for a recited consideration of $500 and the cancellation of the two aforesaid vendor’s lien notes in the respective sums of $250 and $200, Londy Green and wife conveyed the two tracts in controversy to A. T. Duncan.

In 1935, defendants here, Londy Green and wife, brought suit against plaintiff here and the other heirs of A. T. Duncan to have this deed last above mentioned declared a mortgage. Answer was filed to that suit by the defendants therein, and certain heirs of Hutch Green intervened therein claiming an undivided three-fourths interest in the fifty-acre tract as heirs of Hutch Green. This suit resulted in judgment in the trial court substantially as follows : That the named interveners recover of and from the plaintiffs and defendants an undivided three-fourths interest in the fifty-acre tract in question, subject to the life estate of Virginia Green (then the wife of Tom Stewart) and her assigns; the deed from Londy Green and wife to A. T. Duncan was set aside; the named defendants in the suit, including plaintiff, were adjudged to have a lien for $114.53 against the entire interest in both tracts of land representing taxes paid, and there was a foreclosure of this lien decreed. The named defendants were adjudged a recovery against Londy Green in the sum of $1,579.50, the amount of the principal and interest of the two notes, part of the purchase money, and same was adjudged a lien on all' of the 40.53-acre tract and .on the one-fourth interest in the fifty-acre tract. The lien was ordered foreclosed. On this foreclosure, however, it was ordered that if the said sum was not paid within sixty days, with interest at the rate of ten per cent per annum from the date of judgment, that an order of sale issue.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hull v. Fitz-Gerald
232 S.W.2d 93 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1950)
Vick v. Merchants' Fast Motor Lines, Inc.
151 S.W.2d 293 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 S.W.2d 744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-duncan-texapp-1939.