Hayes v. Pennock

192 S.W.2d 169, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 817
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1945
DocketNo. 4310.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 192 S.W.2d 169 (Hayes v. Pennock) 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
Hayes v. Pennock, 192 S.W.2d 169, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 817 (Tex. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

MURRAY, Justice.

O. H. Pennock, in his capacity as administrator of the estate of Mrs. Odia Hayes, deceased, brought suit in the district court of Jefferson County against Mark Hayes, Jr., to cancel a deed to certain real estate made by said Mrs. Hayes to Mark Playes Jr., her grandson, on the ground that no delivery-of said deed was made. Suit was brought in two counts, in trespass to try title and for cancellation of the deed. Later, two of Mrs. Hayes’ children intervened as plaintiffs in the *170 suit. Mark Hayes, Jr., answered said suit with a plea of not guilty, general denial, and certain special denials, and also filed a cross action in trespass to try title. At the time of the trial, Pennock abandoned his suit in trespass to try title and proceeded to trial on his alternative remedy of cancellation and rescission of the deed.

Mrs. Hayes shortly before her death executed and acknowledged a deed to her grandson, Mark Hayes, Jr., and placed it among her own papers in her home. She did not make manual delivery of the deed to her grandson. Mark Playes, Jr., pleaded numerous facts which he alleged to constitute constructive delivery and, on special exception by Pennock, all his pleadings in that regard were stricken. Mark Hayes, Jr., then filed what he. termed his trial amendment No. 1, in which he pleaded various facts relied on by him as constituting constructive delivery of the deed. These pleadings were also stricken by the court on exceptions by Pennock, to which action of the court Mark Hayes, Jr., excepted.

The case was tried to a jury and at the conclusion of the testimony the court, on motion of Pennock, took the case from the jury and rendered judgment for Pennock as administrator of the estate, cancelling the deed and dismissing the intervenors from the suit. Mark Hayes, Jr., has properly perfected his appeal to this court. A great deal of testimony offered by the appellant, Mark Hayes, Jr., was excluded by the court on objection of Pennock, the ap-pellee. The controversy is thus before us largely in the form of exceptions to the action of the court in sustaining the appel-lee’s exceptions to appellant’s pleading and in exceptions to the action of the court in excluding the testimony tendered by the appellant. The questions for decision on appeal are whether the circumstances set out in the stricken pleadings of the appellant amounted to a constructive delivery of the,deed by Mrs. Hayes, and whether the testimony excluded by the court was admissible.

That part of appellant’s pleading which was stricken by the court reads as follows:

“By way of further special denial to the aforesaid alternative pleadings of the plaintiff and the interveners, and specially in answer to paragraphs six, seven and eight (6, 7 & 8) thereof, this defendant Mark Hayes, Jr., says that it is not true that said deed dated February 1, 1944, to him, conveying the property involved was not delivered to him by the said Mary Odia Hayes during her lifetime. And in this connection this defendant says the said Mrs. Mary Odia Hayes at or about the time of her signing and acknowledging said deed dated February 1, 1944, made a constructive delivery of said deed to the defendant Mary Hayes, Jr., in that said deed was properly and duly signed and acknowledged by the grantor and she stated at the time to her attorney James H. Rachford, who had acted as scrivener in preparing the instrument for her and who took her acknowledgment, that she wanted her only grandson, the defendant Mark Hayes, Jr. (Whom she regarded as a son and who was then a minor away in the U. S. Military Service) to have the property described in the deed and she was going to leave the deed among her papers where it could be found to be delivered by her children and/or said James H. Rach-ford to Mark Hayes, Jr., at her death; that in addition, both before and after making of said deed the grantor therein had often expressed her desire and purpose of giving said property to Mark Hayes, Jr., the defendant ; that because of the, above matters she had the intention upon her part to have said deed delivered to defendant for the purpose of passing .title to him. (That in fact she did leave said deed among her papers and same was found by her children after her death.) That the said Mary Odia Hayes by virtue of her acts and conduct aforesaid invested this defendant, Mark Hayes, Jr., at the time, the date of the deed, with title to the land involved herein, the right of possession and enjoyment however, thereof, for the defendant’s benefit, being postponed until her déath. That therefore and thereby proper delivery of said deed was constructively made to him and vested him with title to said premises, which he still owns by virtue of the above, and is entitled to its possession by virtue thereof.”

The appellee’s exception to this pleading was in part as follows:

“(a) Because the above quoted allegations in so far as the pleader attempts to set forth the statement which Mrs. Mary Odia Hayes is alleged to have made to her attorney James H. Rachford, when the deed referred to was signed and acknowledged, shows upon its face that such statement, if in fact it was made at all, was a privileged communication passing *171 between attorney and client, and plaintiff, administrator of the estate of the said Mary Odia Hayes, now deceased, here and now claims such privilege, and by reason thereof such allegations should be stricken.
“(b) Because that portion of the above quoted allegations which set forth that the said Mary Odia Hayes, during her lifetime regarded the defendant, Mark Hayes, Jr., as a minor son, could form no basis of recovery in so far as defendant is concerned in that it is nowhere alleged in said paragraph or anywhere in defendant’s answer that the said Mary Odia Hayes during her lifetime was the legally appointed guardian of the person and estate of defendant and therefore not entitled to the possession of defendant’s property, and more particularly not entitled to hold said deed which she had signed and acknowledged to her in her possession as trustee for defendant without making a proper delivery of same as required by law and by reason thereof said allegations are wholly immaterial, irrelevant and are highly prejudicial to plaintiff and should be stricken.
“(c) Because said above quoted allegations affirmatively show that there was no delivery of said deed either actual or symbolical by the grantor Mrs. Mary Odia Hayes, but on the contrary, said allegations clearly show that it was the intent of said grantor to retain possession of said instrument during her lifetime without delivering the same to the said Mark Hayes, Jr., either actually or symbolically, and by reason thereof said allegations are irrelevant, immaterial, and highly prejudicial to plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
192 S.W.2d 169, 1945 Tex. App. LEXIS 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-pennock-texapp-1945.