Guitar Trust Estate v. Boyd

120 S.W.2d 914
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 11, 1938
DocketNo. 1834.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 120 S.W.2d 914 (Guitar Trust Estate v. Boyd) 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
Guitar Trust Estate v. Boyd, 120 S.W.2d 914 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

LESLIE, Chief Justice.

September 30, 1938, this court delivered an opinion in this case reversing the judgment of the trial court and remanding the cause for another trial. The appellees have filed a motion for rehearing, presenting various contentions challenging the correctness of the legal conclusions in the original opinion as well as the accuracy of certain statements that seem to have crept into the final draft of the opinion. In deference to these contentions we have re-examined the record and restate our conclusions and the reasons therefor.

The court is of the opinion that the original disposition of the case is a correct one, and the judgment pursuant thereto will not be disturbed in date or in substance. The original opinion will be withdrawn and this one substituted therefor.

The plaintiff S. A. Boyd and husband instituted this suit against the Guitar Trust Estate, an unincorporated association, composed of Earl Guitar, Trustee, and others, to cancel deeds theretofore executed by plaintiffs to defendants conveying lots 17 *915 and 18 in block 134, Thom’s Addition to the Town of Hawley in Jones County, Texas. The first count of the petition is in trespass to try title and the second seeks cancellation of certain defeds on alleged grounds of fraud. Defendants answered by general -and special denial. Trial was before the court and jury, and upon the latter’s answer to special issues judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, canceling the deeds, etc. The verdict of the jury found the lots to be the separate property, of the wife, Mrs. S. A. Boyd, and that she acknowledged the deeds separately and apart from her husband. These findings are not challenged. The remainder of the verdict deemed favorable to the plaintiff will now be considered.

(1) The jury found that the defendants, or their agents, told the plaintiffs, in the negotiations for the purchase of the lots, that it would be impossible to obtain a permit to drill an oil. well upon the lots in question; that such statement was false and a material inducement to the plaintiffs in conveying the lots; (2) the jury also found in answer to other special issues, that the defendants and their agents told the plaintiffs that the lots in question had no value, and further found that such statements were false and a material inducement to the plaintiffs to convey the lots.

Other issues and grounds of fraud were submitted but resolved by the jury in favor of the defendants. Still other grounds of fraud were alleged. They were either abandoned or not submitted. If the judgment is to stand it must rest upon one or both of the grounds established by the above findings.

At the conclusion of the trial the defendant asked for an instructed verdict and later for judgment notwithstanding the verdict. The correctness of the verdict and judgment are challenged from many angles as not being supported by the testimony.

The Boyds acquired said lots in 1909. They were then husband and wife and the deed conveyed the property to Mrs. S. A. Boyd in general terms and without separate property recitals. Thus the record stood until the 'verdict and judgment in this case adjudicated the lots to be her separate property. These lots were part of a regularly platted addition to the town of Haw-ley. The defendants, or Guitars, in later years becoming the owners of the addition, or about 25 acres surrounding these lots, turned their lots back to acreage, excepting from that proceeding the plaintiffs’ lots and a few others they did not own. In November, 1936, the Guitars became interested in purchasing the plaintiffs’ lots. Through their agent, Rogers, they opened negotiations with the owners for such purchase. The first negotiations between the plaintiffs and the Guitars apparently not being successful, the plaintiff A. S. Boyd was returned to his home by said Rogers, who, on arriving there, reopened the negotiations by making a new offer of $150 or $175. This renewed effort to purchase the lots resulted at that time in the contract ■of date November 28, 1936, whereby the plaintiffs agreed to sell the lots to the Guitars, of one of them, for $200, subject to good title, etc. In due time plaintiffs furnished abstract and the same was submitted by the defendants to their attorney who passed thereon and rendered an opinion pointing out" several defects disclosed by the record title. When plaintiff A. S. Boyd came in to see what progress the deal was making, defendants called in their attorney who read his opinion on the same, or discussed with plaintiff and defendants the merits of the objections raised. Some of the objections pointed out that two judgments had 'been abstracted against the plaintiffs by the banking commissioner and that there were unpaid delinquent state, county and school taxes, etc. The plaintiff was of the opinion that the lien of the abstracted judgments would not “catch” the lots. Some conversation and discussions arose at that time between the defendants and the plaintiff. The plaintiff’s testimony reflects in part the substance of it in this manner: “* * * he (John Guitar) just pushed my papers back and says ‘Here are your papers, I don’t want it’ * * * he says T don’t want it’ and says T can’t do nothing with it.’ I said ‘What will you give me for it’ he says ‘I’ll risk it for $100 — or something that way’ I said ‘I’ll take $125 not to miss getting anything out of the lots.’ That is just what I told him, that’s the truth and that is what I told him.” In this connection, the plaintiff further testified that in this conversation he (Guitar) said: “I wouldn’t have room for a slush pit and nobody wouldn’t use them; that I couldn’t do nothing with them, they were too small.”

Following this conversation a deed was prepared reciting a sale of the lots to the defendants for $125. This was taken to the home of the plaintiff where he and his wife executed the same. With reference to this *916 occasion the plaintiff testified: “Well they came out and my old woman said she didn’t want to sign the deed. I told her ‘That is the best we can do; sign the deed.’ I talked her into the notion of signing it,- and she signed it, and I signed it. But they never did read no deed to me that I knew of.” Neither of the Guitars were present at said time. This deed was executed and delivered at the residence of the plaintiff January 16, 1937. The $125 consideration was delivered by defendants and accepted by plaintiffs. Nothing further transpired concerning the deal until later when the defendants discovered that the January conveyance called for the lots as being in block 34, where as they were in fact in block 134. The defendants, or their agents, appeared immediately thereafter at plaintiffs’ home seeking a correction of this error. Such deed was presented to plaintiffs and each of them signed it with some complaint that they had not received the $200 originally promised them upon the basis of a clear title. The wife signed the deed and as to the husband’s attitude toward it he testified: “Well, I says ‘I’m not going to sign it.’ Well he (Guitar) says ‘We can’t do a thing without you sign it.’ I thought it was all done gone anyhow, I said ‘You promised me $200.’ * * * When he went out of the door he gave me a dollar. He said ‘Here, Slicker, I will give you a dollar.’ ”

Further relating what was said on this occasion the plaintiff testified: “A. No sir, after she signed it she turned around.

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120 S.W.2d 914, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guitar-trust-estate-v-boyd-texapp-1938.