Hughes v. Bond

118 S.W.2d 443, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 678
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 1938
DocketNo. 1799.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 118 S.W.2d 443 (Hughes v. Bond) 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
Hughes v. Bond, 118 S.W.2d 443, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 678 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

LESLIE, Chief Justice.

On May 20, 1938, this court delivered an opinion in this case, affirming the judgment of the trial court. The appellant has filed a motion for rehearing, presenting in substance the contentions of his original briefs and calling our attention to certain inaccuracies in' the plat (incorporated in the opinion) of the town lots involved in this litigation. The lots are 75 feet in width and not 50 feet, as indicated by the plat in the original opinion.

We do not think this in any way affects the correctness of the legal conclusions by which the appeal was disposed of, but in the interest of accuracy we take notice of the error or oversight and restate the opinion and incorporate in it the unmodified plat which we find in the statement of facts.

P. P. Bond and wife, Gussie Bond, instituted this suit against S. W. Hughes and Frank Mills, Sheriff of Coleman County, to enjoin the sale under execution of certain property at Santa Anna, Texas, claimed by them as their homestead. The defendants answered, alleging that tlie property if ever homestead had been abandoned as such before levy, etc. They sought to have the property “decreed to be community property of the plaintiffs and subject to the judgment (execution) * * * and that said judgment lien be established and foreclosed * * *.” The case was tried on its merits and the temporary injunction made perpetual. The defendants appeal.

The parties will be referred to as in the trial court.

The controlling questions are (1) whether or not the building of the house on the west side of the property which was designated for homestead purposes and the resulting renting of the same was an abandonment of the homestead rights in said property, or any specific part thereof; and (2) whether or not sufficient facts are alleged and proved to show specifically the portion rented and abandoned, if any, so as to enable the court to enter a decree affecting that part.

*444 The property involved is the- south 83 feet of lots 7 and 8, block 14, of the town of Santa Anna. The following plat reflects the location, dimensions, etc., of the lots:

Plaintiffs acquired this property April 1, 1918, and occupied it as a family homestead. There was a residence on the east part of the property, or lot 8, and it will be referred to as the “old house.” About May, 1920, plaintiff made “improvements and betterments on the home place” which improvements crossed the dividing line of lots 7 and 8. Referring to the residence as later improved, plaintiff testified “as it stands now, part of the house extends over on both lots * * *.” This testimony is a bit ambiguous and may have been intended to express what he later states when he testified that “the garage that’s on the premises (at present) is a single building * * probably 48 feet east and west and narrow north and south.” It extends “over on both lots.” This building is used for garages and “in the middle of the building is a little servant’s partition” used “in connection with the homestead there.” There has never been any partition fence between lots 7 and 8, 'or any physical demarcation of that boundary.

About December, 1927, a five-room residence was constructed upon the west end of the property (lots 7 and 8). This will be referred to as the new house. According to the plaintiff’s testimony, it came to be located and built in this way: For himself, plaintiff testifies, he was unwilling to appropriate any part of the homestead (lots 7 and 8) as a location for the new house. That his wife had about $800 of her separate funds which she desired to invest in the house for the advantages of the rent to be derived therefrom. That he consented to the building of the house on a part of lot 7 with the understanding that it should not become a part of the real estate and that it should soon thereafter be removed to another lot. That it was “only built for a short time and it was to be moved off.” That it had been rented when tenants were available. That he personally contributed but a small amount from his salary to the construction of the building; that he did so at a time when he was solvent and that the house, as such, was to be the separate property of the wife. That as a homestead use he and his family cultivated a garden in the northwest part of said lot 7, using the vegetables, etc., for home consumption. The tenants who testified corroborate such testimony.

He further testified that the bank at Santa Anna, of which he was the cashier, became insolvent and he, in 1932, also became likewise. That as always, it is still the purpose and intention of himself and wife to remove the house from the homestead, and that she has acquired a lot for the same, but that the defendants’ judgment, execution,’etc., has clouded the title and made it inadvisable or impossible to remove the house until that matter is cleared up. That the “depression” and financial reverses have rendered it impossible for him to carry out the above plans, though they are making preparation to do so. That the wife alone rented the new house, but not- the premises about it.

The evidence further shows that to obtain sufficient funds to build the new house, estimated to cost about $2850, plaintiff, P. P. Bond, joined with his wife in the execution of a mechanic’s lien against the west 50 feet of .said part of lot 7. The obligation recites the funds were procured “to be used * * * in and for the erection, repairs and improvements on our homestead * * With the funds herein referred to the new house was constructed on premises unquestionably their homestead down to that date. The above loan was paid off and the mechanic’s lien released. That transaction or loan in no way enters into the one out of which this suit grows. The circumstances of that loan and mechanic’s lien were proved as bearing upon the issue of abandonment of the homestead, or a part thereof, as well as its bearing, if any, upon the question of segregation of some part of homestead alleged to have been abandoned.

*445 The execution sought to be enjoined is based upon a judgment which defendant Hughes obtained against plaintiff Bond upon a note which he, Hughes, purchased from the liquidating agent of the Farmers National Bank of Cross Plains. Plaintiff’s brother was Vice-President of that bank and had “an excess over-draft” therein which the banking authorities required him to remove. That at the instance of said brother he (P. P. Bond) signed the note as an accommodation .for his brother that it might be placed in the Cross Plains bank in order to take up the overdraft. That the understanding was his brother should immediately thereafter take up the note. That this was not done, and the bank became insolvent and the note passed into the hands of the liquidating agent of the bank. That defendant Hughes bought the note as “the fragile assets or refuse” of the assets of the failed bank. That it was reduced to a judgment and abstracted in Coleman County and that the amount of the judgment has subsequently been substantially reduced by funds derived from the sale of other property belonging to the plaintiff. There is nothing in the history of the obligation which in any way invalidates the obligation.

It is apparent, however, that the judgment is not based upon an obligation arising by reason of a vendor’s lien or mechanic’s lien.

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W.2d 443, 1938 Tex. App. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-bond-texapp-1938.