Hays v. Marble

213 S.W.2d 329, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1420
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 6, 1948
DocketNo. 5888.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 213 S.W.2d 329 (Hays v. Marble) 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
Hays v. Marble, 213 S.W.2d 329, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1420 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinions

*332 STOKES, Justice.

This suit involves the title and possession of the east half of Section 127, Block A in Swisher County, containing 320, acres. The land- was owned by William Hoefer at the time of his death which occurred November 20, 1930. William Hoefer was twice married. There were five children born to the first marriage and his first wife died about the year 1874. The second wife died prior to the death of William Hoefer. There were nine children born to the second marriage and during the cover-ture of William Hoefer and his second wife, he purchased the land in controversy. On December 7, 1940, R. R. Hoefer, one of the children of the second marriage, on behalf of himself and purportedly as agent for -the legal heirs of William Hoefer, entered into a written .contract with the' appellant, John S. Hays, in which he agreed to sell and appellant agreed to purchase the half section of land for a consideration of $22.50 per acre, $3,200 to be paid in cash upon the closing of the transaction and the balance to be evidenced by a note due on or before ninety days after date, bearing interest at the rate of 4% per annum. The contract was made upon the contingency that appellant should procure a loan from the Federal Land Bank for the amount evidenced by the note. The contract was placed in a bank at Tulia in connection with $1,000 earnest money deposited by appellant. The brothers and sisters and half-brothers and half-sisters of R. R. Hoefer lived in widely scattered sec-. tions of the country, some in California, some in Oklahoma, Kansas and other localities and, after the contract of sale was executed, R. R. Hoefer had a deed prepared in accordance with the contract, attached it to a route letter in which each of the heirs was instructed as to the manner of its execution and mailing to another of the heirs. Two of the children died leaving heirs or legatees so that there are now fourteen .heirs and one legatee who are the sole and only heirs and successors of William Hoefer and his deceased wives, all of whom are either plaintiffs or cross-defendants in this suit. A. F. Nossaman procured the interest of one of the heirs through a sheriff’s sale and he is likewise a party here.

The suit was filed by H. L. Marble and E. M. Jackson, for themselves and as agents and representatives of twelve of the heirs of William Hoefer as an action in trespass to try title, alleging they had purchased the interests of all of the heirs of William Hoefer, deceased, and others, and prayed for judgment decreeing the title to them. Appellant answered by a plea of not guilty and further alleged that he was in possession of the land as the purchaser under the contract of sale executed by R. R. Hoefer for himself and as agent of the heirs of William Hoefer, deceased. He impleaded Nossaman. Henry Gransbury, the legatee, and the remaining heirs . of William Hoefer and prayed for specific performance of his contract against them and all of the heirs of William Hoefer, deceased. He tendered the entire purchase price of $7,200 and prayed that Marble and Jackson be denied any recovery upon the ground that any rights or interest they might have was acquired long after he had purchased the land under the contract of sale, with full knowledge and notice of his rights and subject thereto. Appellees supplemented their pleadings by denying that R. R. Hoefer was the agent of any of them or that he had any authority to bind théro to the contract of sale.

A jury was impaneled to try the case but at the close of the testimony, the court sustained a motion of the appellees for an instructed verdict and upon the return of such verdict by the jury, judgment was rendered in favor of the appellees, and denying appellant any recovery upon his reconvention and plea for specific performance of the contract of sale. Appellant complains of the action of the court in giving to the jury an instructed verdict and assigns reversible errors upon numerous other ground which will appear from our discussion of the issues. He contends that, if R. R. Hoefer did not have authority to bind the other heirs and owners of other interests in the land to the contract of sale, all of them had, by various acts and conduct, ratified and confirmed the same and were therefore bound by its terms and pro *333 visions. He asserts further that he was in possession of the land, cultivating it and using it from the time the contract was executed until the suit was filed and that appellees, Marble and Jackson, were at all times fully aware of his possession and knew he was occupying and holding possession under the contract of sale. The record shows that the deed was started upon its rounds soon after the contract was executed and that it was signed and acknowledged by ten of the heirs, two of whom were married women and were joined therein by their husbands. It was returned to R. R. Hoefer about a year after the contract was executed and retained by him until 1947 when it was delivered to his attorneys shortly before this suit was instituted.

Appellant does not claim that R. R. Hoefer had authority from any of the other heirs of William Hoefer or other owners of interest in the land to execute the contract of sale at the time it was executed, but he asserts that all of those who signed and acknowledged the deed thereby ratified and confirmed the contract and adopted the act of R. R. Hoefer in executing it as their agent and that, by their acts and conduct, the others had also ratified it.

Ratification consists of the adoption by the reputed principal of the benefits of and liabilities involved in an act done or performed, or a contract made, by the reputed agent on behalf of the reputed principal but without his authority. Gallup v. Liberty County, 57 Tex.Civ.App. 175, 122 S.W. 291; Evans v. McKay, Tex.Civ.App., 212 S.W. 680. It is not a method of proving authority. It assumes that the agent’s act was not authorized when it was performed but, by subsequent conduct of the principal, it attaches to such act of the agent the same legal consequence as if the principal had previously given to the reputed agent authority to perform it on behalf of the principal.- One may ratify the acts or contract of another, purporting to be performed or made on his behalf, whether the other was his agent and exceeded his authority as such or was not his agent at all. It presupposes that -the party so acting did not have previous authority to perform the act or make the contract but it .is equivalent to authority previously conferred and relates back to the date of the act performed or the contract made between the reputed agent and a third party. City of Laredo v. Macdonnell, 52 Tex. 511; Smith v. Estill, 87 Tex. 264, 28 S.W. 801; Lynch Davidson & Co. v. Denman Lumber Co., Tex.Civ.App., 272 S.W. 803.

The deed executed by the ten heirs of William Hoefer, deceased, was fully in accordance with the contract executed by R. R. Hoefer and appellant. It conveyed the same land to appellant and recited the same consideration, payable in the manner provided by the contract. Although it was never delivered to appellant, it was signed and acknowledged in accordance with the statutes of this State and none of the grantors made any objection to its terms or to its being delivered to appellant until about the time this suit was instituted by them. There is no contention that appellant, by any act of his, delayed the completion of his purchase and no evidence that he did so. The delay was due solely to the acts and conduct of the heirs of William Hoefer, deceased, particularly to lack of attention on the part of R.

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Bluebook (online)
213 S.W.2d 329, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hays-v-marble-texapp-1948.