Haecker v. Haecker
This text of 268 S.W. 757 (Haecker v. Haecker) 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.
Opinion
This is, in effect, an action of trespass to try title to a certain small tract of land on which are situated a certain windmill, cistern, and pipe line and. fittings used in connection therewith to* pump water from the Cibolo creek, for an injunction to restrain Henry Haeeker, Sr., and A. J. Haee-ker, appellees, from interfering with her use of said water properties, and for the sum of $250.
The facts upon which the suit is based are pleaded in nine pages of the transcript. Ap-pellees answered by pleas of misjoinder of causes of action, general demurrer and special exceptions, general denial and not guilty, and set forth the facts upon which they rested their defense. They also set up a cross-action against appellant, which was dismissed, and a verdict was instructed for ap-pellees.
This suit was instituted by appellant as surviving wife and sole heir of Henry Haec-'ker, Jr., deceased, against appellees, alleging a conveyance by Henry Haeeker, Sr., .to her husband of 110 acres of land in Guadalupe county, on Cibolo river; that it was supplied with water by a windmill and cistern located on an adjoining tract of land of 110 acres, which was sold to A. J. Haeeker by Henry Haeeker, Sr., at the same time the 110 acres was conveyed to Henry Haeeker, deceased; that by mutual mistake a conveyance w$s not made to Henry Haeeker-, deceased, containing any reference to the windmill and other improvements situated on a tract of land conveyed at the same time to A. J. Haeeker. Appellant alleged—
“that in connection with the purchase of said land this plaintiff and her deceased husband purchased from said Henry Haeeker, Sr., the windmill, tank, and pipe line above referred to, paying therefor the sum of $200; that through a mutual mistake no mention was made in the deed of said purchaser, but same was always recognized by defendants herein until about January 29, 1924, and that in connection with such sale said Henry Haeeker, Jr., was permitted to leave said improvements on said property of Henry Haeeker, Sr., so long as said Henry Haeeker, Jr., cared to leave same there.”
The evidence failed to establish- any mutual mistake in the deed. Henry Haeeker, Jr., deceased, and appellant read the deed directly after it was executed, and it was not suggested by them that there had been any I mistake made in the deed, mutual or other-I wise, and no question of mutual mistake was *758 ever suggested until it was embodied as a conclusion in tbe pleadings herein copied. When appellant talked to Mrs. Henry Haec-ker, Sr., about the windmill and water, she claimed that they belonged to her and her husband. There was no mistake in omitting the improvements on some one .else’s land from appellant’s deed, but it must have been intentionally done. All the agreements claimed to have been made about the improvements were made before and not at the time the deed was executed. It is not claimed that it was. a contemporaneous.- agreement with the execution of the deed, and the pa-rol agreement could not be considered in the absence of allegation and proof of mutual mistake or fraud. There was no such allegation of mutual mistake as the rules of pleadings demand. No facts were alleged tending to show mutual mistake, but it is merely dogmatically stated that there was a mutual mistake. Dalton v. Dalton (Tex. Civ. App.) 143 S. W. 241; Yantis v. Jones (Tex. Civ. App.) 184 S. W. 572; Arden v. Boone (Tex. Com. App.) 221 S. W. 265. The evidence failed to show that any mutual mistake was made. The court did not err in instructing a verdict for appellees.
The Judgment, is affirmed.
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268 S.W. 757, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haecker-v-haecker-texapp-1925.