Hambleton v. Southwest Texas Baptist Hospital

172 S.W. 574, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1515
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 1914
DocketNo. 5374.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 172 S.W. 574 (Hambleton v. Southwest Texas Baptist Hospital) 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
Hambleton v. Southwest Texas Baptist Hospital, 172 S.W. 574, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1515 (Tex. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinions

This suit was instituted by the Southwest Texas Baptist Hospital, which will hereinafter be designated as the Hospital, against Dorothea Dignowity and Hallie B. Dignowity, to remove cloud from the title to a block of land in the city of San Antonio which the Hospital had purchased from appellant. It was alleged that appellant derived her title to the land from her mother, Amanda J. Dignowity. The two Dignowitys, defendants in the court below and the real appellees in this court, although the Hospital is joined with them as an appellee, answered that the Hospital had acquired the property in controversy by warranty deed from appellant on March 28, 1913, and had agreed to pay therefor the sum of $37,500, of which $10,000 was in cash, and for the balance five promissory notes in the sums of $5,500 each, due respectively in one, two, three, four and five years, were executed by the Hospital; that appellant acquired title to the property by deeds from her mother, Amanda J. Dignowity; that at the time the deeds were executed it was agreed by and between appellant and her mother that appellant should hold three corner lots out of said block for the defendants, herein designated appellees, and Helen I. Hambleton; that on December 26, 1898, Amanda J. Dignowity executed and acknowledged four deeds, one to each of her granddaughters, appellees being two of them, conveying the four corner lots of the block to them; that, with the exception of the one to Florence J. Sullivan, neither of the deeds was ever delivered; that on January 16, 1907, the deed to Florence was delivered, and on the same day Amanda J. Dignowity executed a deed to appellant conveying to her all of the block, except that part conveyed to Florence; that the deed was made in trust to appellant, so far as the three lots belonging to appellees and Helen I. Beavens were concerned, and the power to sell the same was given to appellant, the proceeds from the sale to be paid to the owners of the same, and that the trust was accepted by appellant and was recognized by her for a long time after the death of her mother, and she accounted to said Florence J. Sullivan, formerly Dignowity, and Helen I. Beavens, formerly Hambleton, for their interest in the trust property, but refused to recognize the trust in favor of appellees; that the Hospital had notice of the trust when it bought the property; that the interest of each of the appellees was of the value of $6,000. It was alleged that appellant had no property except the vendor lien notes, and appellees prayed that a writ of *Page 576 injunction be issued to require the notes to be deposited in the registry of the court, and that they have judgment for $6,000 each, and the same be made a lien on the property in controversy.

Appellant filed a plea of privilege to be sued in Harris county, which was overruled before the amended answer was filed. The original answer upon which appellant was brought into court does not appear in the record, and we do not, of course, know what it contained. Its allegations may have been sufficient to justify the action of the court in overruling the plea of privilege. The plea of privilege was filed on October 7, 1913, was overruled on November 10, 1913, and the second amended answer, the only one contained in the record, was filed on March 3, 1914. The plea of privilege was never renewed after it was overruled. The answer upon which appellant was made a party may have stated matters which made it proper to sue appellant in Bexar county. There was no allegation of fraud in any of the allegations in order to secure venue in that county. We must presume that the court was justified by the allegations of the answer in overruling the plea of privilege.

The second assignment of error is sustained. The application for continuance was the first and should have been granted. The fact that the evidence of the absent witness may have been cumulative should not have been considered. The testimony of the absent witness may have produced a better impression upon the jury than that of the other witnesses. The statute does not contemplate the refusal of the first application for a continuance because there are others who will swear to the same facts as would the absent witness, for it provided:

"That on a first application for continuance, it shall not be necessary to show that the absent testimony cannot be procured from any other source."

The application for a continuance was in strict compliance with the statutes, and should have been granted. The testimony that the absent witness had told one of the appellees that he would not swear to the facts stated in the application should not have been admitted. We cannot say that the evidence of the witness might not have produced a different result.

The court did not err in refusing to strike out the testimony of Mrs. Purkiss concerning statements made to her by Mrs. Amanda J. Dignowity. The fact that she could not fix the dates on which the statements were made merely went to the weight of the testimony, and not its competency. The witness stated the substance of the statements, without pretending to state the exact language, and that was not a valid objection to her testimony. The evidence was not hearsay; Mrs. Dignowity being dead. Smith v. McElyea, 68 Tex. 70, 3 S.W. 258. The declarations were made before the deed to appellant was executed. The witness fixed the, time of one conversation a few days before the death of Mrs. Dignowity, and before she executed the deed. Appellant introduced statements made by Mrs. Dignowity, and cannot object to proof of statements by appellees. Smith v. McElyea, herein cited.

The court did not err in permitting testimony as to how Mrs. Dignowity felt towards her granddaughters. It was a circumstance that with others might tend to show that she did not intend to give all the property to her daughter. It is the established rule in Texas that a parol trust may be ingrafted upon a deed absolute upon its face. But it is also the rule, wherever such practice is permitted, that the evidence establishing such trust must be clear and satisfactory. Mead v. Randolph, 8 Tex. 191; Hall, v. Layton, 16 Tex. 278; Markham v. Carothers, 47 Tex. 28; Agricultural Association v. Brewster, 51 Tex. 262; King v. Gilleland,60 Tex. 271; Neyland v. Bendy, 69 Tex. 713, 7 S.W. 497; Goodrich v. Hicks, 19 Tex. Civ. App. 528, 48 S.W. 798; Kelly v. Short, 75 S.W. 877; Western Assur. Co. v. Hillyer-Deutsch-Jarratt Co., 167 S.W. 816.

The testimony offered by appellees was all circumstantial, such as the execution of deeds to them by Mrs. Amanda J. Dignowity, her declarations, most of them some time before the deed to appellant was executed, and the feelings of their grandmother toward them. The only direct testimony as to what occurred at the time the deed was executed was offered by appellant, which tended to show that there was no trust ingrafted on the deeds by the grantor. Mrs. Florence J. Sullivan, a granddaughter of the grantor, swore that the latter said at the time the land was conveyed to appellant: "Florence, I give you this with my love and affection. The other is for Emma." She further swore that her grandmother said "she wanted the corner lot for me and the rest of the property for Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
172 S.W. 574, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hambleton-v-southwest-texas-baptist-hospital-texapp-1914.