Hall v. Rawls

171 S.W.2d 324, 141 Tex. 235
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1943
DocketNo. 8004
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 171 S.W.2d 324 (Hall v. Rawls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Rawls, 171 S.W.2d 324, 141 Tex. 235 (Tex. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Smedley,

of the Commission of Appeals, delivered the opinion for the Court.

This case, as decided by the Court of Civil Appeals and as presented here, turns upon a question as to burden of proof and the application of Article 2190 of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925, as amended in 1931 (Arts Regular Session, 42d Legislature, Ch. 78, p. 120), which was in effect when the case was tried.

Mrs. Rawls sued petitioners Wisdom and Hall for the title and possession of a lot numbered 9 in Block 5 of the Edwards Subdivision of the town of Cleveland, alleging specially an oral agreement whereby Wisodm, to whom she had conveyed the lot, promised, to reconvey it to her. The trial court’s judgment in favor of Mrs. Rawls against petitioners Wisdom and Hall for the title and possession of the lot was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals. 160 S. W. (2d) 1005.

Mrs. Rawls, who owned Lot 9 on and before August 19, 1935, conveyed it on that day to Wisdom by general warranty deed for a recited consideration of $750.00 paid. On the same day Wisdom executed and delivered to Mrs. Rawls his promissory note for $1,150.00, due December 29, 1938. Mrs. Rawls alleged and obtained on the trial a jury finding that when the deed and note were executed and delivered it was agreed between her and Wisdom that he would place certain improvements on the lot, would accept the use of the premises to December 29, 1938, as reimbursement to him for the cost of the improvements and would on or before that date reconvey the property to Mrs. Rawls, she to surrender to him, at the time of the reconveyance, the promissory note for $1,150.00. It clearly appears from the evidence that the note for $1,150.00 was executed for. the purpose of assuring Mrs. Rawls of the performance by Wisdom of his agreement to improve and reconvey the property to her.

There was a controversy between Mrs. Rawls and Wisdom as to the terms of the oral agreement, he contending that she promised to pay him the cost of the improvements to be placed on the lot and an additional $65.00 as compensation to him and that he agreed to reconvey the lot to her when she made those payments. Wisdom made the improvements and after Mrs. Rawls declined to pay him for them he sold and conveyed the lot to petitioner, Hall, who, according to a finding made by the jury, knew that Wisdom had promised to reconvey the property to Mrs. Rawls. Thereupon Mrs. Rawls, without the consent of [238]*238Hall or Wisdom, took the possession of the lot and of the house that Wisdom had built on it.

Wisdom, as one of his defenses to the suit, alleged that there was a dispute between him and Mrs. Rawls with respect to the terms of the oral agreement made August 19, 1935, and the rights and obligations of the parties under the agreements, and that in order to settle and adjust the controversy he and Mrs. Rawls made and executed a written contract as follows:

"to whom it may concern:
"this agreement made and' entered into this 21st day of September, A. D. 1938, between Mrs. R. T. Rawls and F. Wisdom, that;
“whereas, Mrs. R: T. Rawls holds a $750.00 note against the said F. Wisdom, and the said Mrs. R. T. Rawls has agreed to accept one certain lot, this day deeded to her, the said Mrs. R. T. Rawls, by the said F. Wisdom, and one 10 x 24 foot house, which is to be moved on the said lot at the expense of the said Wisdom, with two 12 x 12 foot rooms to be built on same, and one 6 x 12 porch, all to be at the expense of the said F. Wisdom, in payment for said moneys due on said note.
“Mrs. R. T.- Rawls hereby agrees to deliver to said F. Wisdom the said note upon the completion of the above house, according to the above measurements. And further agrees to give F. Wisdom possession of the building known as the Pago Package Store, upon receipt of the said deed.
F. Wisdom Mrs. R. T. Rawls”

Wisdom further alleged that contemporaneously with the execution of the written agreement he executed and delivered to Mrs. Rawls a general warranty deed conveying to her Lot 8 in Block 35 of the Whitmire Subdivision of the Edwards Addition to the Town of Liberty. The execution of the written contract and the execution and delivery of the deed were alleged as a full compromise and settlement of Mrs. Rawls’ claims under the oral agreement of August 19, 1935.

Mrs. Rawls, in her supplemental petition, after a general • denial, alleged that:

“Said alleged settlement agreement was never consummated; that at the time of the execution of said agreement plead by defendants in their said answer as dated, September 21, 1938, [239]*239plaintiff informed the defendant, Wisdom, that she wished to consult her attorney about the agreement and the deed; that on the day she received same from the said deféndant Wisdom, she consulted her attorney, Mr. Love, of Cleveland, who advised her that the deed was no good and accordingly that very day she returned to Wisdom, advised him of the attorney’s opinion and tendered the deed back to him, which he refused to accept.”

She further alleged that:

“There was no meeting of the minds between the said F. Wisdom and the said Mrs. Rawls with reference to said alleged settlement and the agreement was never concluded, it being merely an attempt at settlement on the part of the said defendant, which plaintiff promptly refused as hereinbefore set out.”

The substance of these allegations is that the- contract of settlement which Mrs. Rawls and Wisdom executed was not effective or was not binding upon her, because it was agreed at the time that the contract and deed were to be submitted to her attorney for his approval, in other words, that she executed the contract conditionally, that is, subject to approval by her attorney.

Mrs. Rawls in her testimony admitted that she and Wisdom executed the written contract and that he executed and delivered to her the deed conveying Lot 8, but her testimony tends to prove that she did not intend to be bound by the settlement and that it was understood and agreed that she should not be bound until her attorney’s approval of the instrument was obtained. She testified that after the written contract was executed she surrendered possession of Lot 9 to Wisdom or Hall, that the following day she took the deed to her attorney, who told her “it wasn’t any good,” that thereupon she offered the deed back to Wisdom, who refused to accept it, and that she moved back into the house on Lot 9.

It was proven by undisputed evidence, including testimony of Mrs. Rawls, that only the note she held against Wisdom was the note for $1,150.00, executed August 19, 1935, and that in the written contract of September 21, 1938, the parties intended to refer to that note, and further that the building described in the conract as Pago Package Store was the building on Lot 9 which Mrs. Rawls had conveyed to Wisdom.

[240]*240The written contract of September 21, 1938, was pleaded and proved by petitioners as a complete defense to Mrs. Rawls’ suit for the enforcement of the oral agreement made in August, 1935. It was an agreement shown by its terms and by the testimony of both of the parties to it to have been intended as a substitute for the oral- agreement and in satisfaction of that prior agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.2d 324, 141 Tex. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-rawls-tex-1943.