In re Buie

287 F. 896, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1762
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedMarch 2, 1923
DocketNo. 1708
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 287 F. 896 (In re Buie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Buie, 287 F. 896, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1762 (N.D. Tex. 1923).

Opinion

ATWELL, District Judge.

The bankrupt claims as exempt six tracts of land. Tract No. 1 contains 1% acres. Tract No. 2'.contains 2% acres. Tract No. 3 contains 13 acres. Tract No. 4 contains 66% acres. Tract No. 5 contains 51 acres. Tract No. 6 contains 51 acres. These tracts are close together, and are in Kaufman county, and, aggregating less than 200 acres, are claimed by the bankrupt as homestead.

Tracts 1 and 2 are contiguous. Upon tract 1 is a store building, in which the bankrupt and his wife conducted a country store. Close to the store building, and for use in connection therewith, was a small ice-house or refrigerator, about 6 feet square. Upon tract 2 was the house in which the bankrupt actually lived. There is no fence between the house and the store. Tract No. 3 is about 200 yards from tract No. 2. Tract No. 4 is from one-half to three-quarters of a mile from tracts 1, 2, and 3. Tracts 5 and 6 join, and make one farm of 102 acres, and are about a mile from tracts 1 and 2.

The bankrupt named his store, after he built it on tract 2, “Cedar Vale,” and by that name the community is known. It is the point of the intersection of two public roads, one of which goes to the county [898]*898site of Kaufman county, and the other of which is known as the Wills Point public road. That the physical facts may be better understood the following plot is insertéd:

It will be noticed that the Wills Point road intersects the Kaufman-Canton road from the south, then runs east on the Kaufman road for the distance of the length of the 13-acre Buie tract, and then goes north; the Kaufman road continuing east. At this second intersection of the two roads was situated the bankrupt’s store, and just back of it, on the Wills Point road, was the bankrupt’s residence, and just back of the residence is a small tenant house belonging to 'the bankrupt. 'Just east of the bankrupt’s store and on tract No. 2 is a blacksmith-shop belonging to the bankrupt. East of that are the remains of an old gin that had burned some time before bankruptcy, and continuing. on east is a dwelling belonging to a farmer, situated on his farm.

South of the Kaufman-Canton road is a 178-acre farm belonging to one Kelley, and where the farm corners with Buie’s 13-acre tract Kelley has his residence, and a few yards from the Kelley residence on the east is a tenant house, and west of Kelley’s residence, and on a little tract sold by Buie out of his 13-acre farm, is the residence of another farmer, who has a 600-acre farm about one-half a mile distant. To the west of that about 50 yards is a tenant house belonging to Buie on his 13-acre farm, and about one-half mile further west is the residence of another farmer on a 135-acre farm.

The referee, in his findings concerning the matter I am now pre-senting, reported as follows:

“The 1%-acre tract is situated on the Kaufman and Canton highway, where it is intersected by the Wills Point public road, in Kaufman county, Texas. On this tract the bankrupt built a store building several years ago, in which he maintained a general store to the date of the petition in bankruptcy. On [899]*899this tract was also the bankrupt’s private garage and wood pile; also, an icehouse, 6 feet by 6 feet, used in connection with the store, and a blacksmith shop owned by the bankrupt and used during the several years at times as a public shop and at other times as a private shop. The blacksmith shop was usually, and at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, used as a public shop. The shop is located on a different lot from the store.
“Adjoining this tract is the 214-acre tract on which the bankrupt has had his family residence for several years. There is no fence between this tract and the ‘store’ tract. The bankrupt has resided on this tract since he built the store. The blacksmith sliop is on the same side of the road that the store and residence of the bankrupt are on. Between the blacksmith shop and the residence of the bankrupt there was, at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, a warehouse and a gin site, with the remains of a cotton gin, which had been almost entirely destroyed by fire about a year previously. In addition to the houses referred to, there were five residences on this side of the road within about half a mile. In addition to the residence of the bankrupt on this side of the road, the bankrupt has a tenant house on the 2%-acre tract, and there were two other farm residences within a radius of about one-half mile — one on a farm of about 200 acres and the other on a farm of about 135 acres, both occupied by the farm owner; also, two other houses.
“On the other side of this road there is, at the intersection of the two roads, a tract of land of about 200 acres on which a Mr. Kelley resides, and on which he also conducts a retail store, the store being conducted in his smokehouse, which is situated in his yard. On this same side of the road, on a tract of about one-half an acre, which tract is out of the 13-aere tract referred to as the tract 3 listed by the bankrupt, resides one H. H. Heidle, who owns a farm of about 600 acres about three-fourths of a mile from his residence. He farms the 600 acres of land and located his residence on the one-half acre tract to get out of the bottom land for his home. These two last-mentioned residences are opposite the bankrupt’s store building, just across the road. There are three other residences on the same side of the road as the Kelley store, same being tenant houses, within about 300 yards from the store. One is the tenant house of Kelley on his farm, another the tenant house of the bankrupt on the 13-acre tract, and a tenant house pn the Hamilton farm. All of the houses referred to, on each side of the road, with the exception of the tenant houses, have the usual barns and outbuildings.”

No plot or subdivision of the land into lots has ever been made. The land upon which the burned gin is located is owned by a company. The population, within a radius of 300 yards of the bankrupts store building, is 17. The country all through that section of the county, on into the town of Kaufman, is thickly settled. Cedar Vale has no post office, no voting box, no schoolhouse, no church, no railroad, and no improvements, save the ones mentioned above.

At one time, and just before moving to his present residence, the bankrupt lived upon tract No. 4. For several years prior to bankruptcy, the bankrupt conducted a store on tract No. 2. He carried a stock of approximately $4,000 or $5,000, and his annual sales were approximately $10,000 or $15,000, upon which he made a profit of approximately 10 per cent. He farmed tracts 3, 4, 5, and 6such farming being done by himself and his children and by hired hands and by share croppers. To share croppers he furnished the land and provisions and implements with which to make the crop and received one-half of such crop. From tracts 5 and 6 he secured all of the firewood he burned at his residence. For the purpose of farming these tracts of land, he kept 14 head of horses and the necessary implements.

While he was in the fields his wife ran the store when her health [900]*900permitted; at times they had a hired hand in the store, when her health made it impossible for her to be there, and when the bankrupt was in the fields.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Schott
449 B.R. 697 (W.D. Texas, 2011)
Perry v. Dearing (In Re Perry)
345 F.3d 303 (Fifth Circuit, 2003)
Proefrock v. American National Bank
258 N.W. 482 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1935)
Cooley v. Buie
291 S.W. 876 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
287 F. 896, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-buie-txnd-1923.