In Re Neale

274 F. Supp. 969, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11447
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedOctober 6, 1967
DocketBK 3-408
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 274 F. Supp. 969 (In Re Neale) 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 Neale, 274 F. Supp. 969, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11447 (N.D. Tex. 1967).

Opinion

WILLIAM M. TAYLOR, Jr., District Judge.

This is a review of an order entered by a referee in bankruptcy. The sole question presented is whether a certain piece of property owned by William F. Neale, Sr., a bankrupt, is an exempt “homestead”, as defined by the law of the State of Texas, and thereby exempt from bankruptcy proceedings under the Bankruptcy Act, § 6, 11 U.S.C.A. § 24. 1

*971 An involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed against Mr. Neale on April 14, 1965, and an adjudication of bankruptcy was entered by the referee on September 10, 1965. In his report of exempt property to be set aside to the bankrupt, the trustee did not include some 200 acres of land in McLennan County, Texas, owned by Mr. Neale. Subsequent to the adjudication of bankruptcy, the bankrupt sought a review of the trustee’s action in excluding the 200 acres as property exempt from bankruptcy proceedings under state law. On March 10, 1966, the referee held with the trustee and denied allowance of the homestead exemption to the 200 acres. This lawsuit followed. The order of the referee is herein affirmed.

The facts are not in dispute. The issue presented revolves around the legal consequences of the established facts.

In 1935, Mr. Neale’s father died leaving to his son a farm in excess of 1,000 acres in McLennan County, Texas. The 200 acres which the bankrupt here claims is an exempt homestead is part of this farm. Its value, with the improvements thereon, is not less than $225,000.

Following the administration of his father’s estate in 1936, Mr. Neale and his wife took possession of the farm. From their home in Dallas County, Texas, the Neales moved a part of their furniture into a house on the farm and spent weekends and summer months there.

In 1938, the farm house was torn down and a large, modern house was constructed. Mr. and Mrs. Neale spent a considerable amount of time at the farm during 1938 and 1939 supervising the construction and landscaping of the house.

From 1936 until the appointment of a receiver in September, 1965, Mr. Neale operated a dairy farm on the McLennan County land. On the 200 acres in issue, in addition to the foregoing house, were situated feedlots, a dairy barn, tool sheds, and hay barns. This acreage was also used as pasture land for the more than 100 cows which constantly kept on the farm, as well as one some 650 of the remaining 800 acres.

From 1939 until the filing of the involuntary petition, Mr. Neale and members of his family spent many weekends, some week days, and an undetermined number of summer months at the house on the 200 acres.

Both Mr. Neale and his wife paid their poll tax in McLennan County in the years of 1936-1939, 1941, and 1943-1959. After Mr. Neale’s 60th birthday in 1959, he was exempt from the Texas poll tax requirement. Mrs. Neale continued paying her McLennan County poll tax in 1960-•1961 and 1963-1965. Their voting precinct was No. 19, in which the farm was situated. From 1936 to 1965 the Neales voted in McLennan County in most of the gubernatorial and presidential elections. Mr. Neale attended precinct conventions in Precinct No. 19, and was elected as a McLennan County delegate to the State Democratic Convention in 1956,1960, and 1962.

The bankrupt caused the farm in Mc-Lennan County to be rendered as his homestead for ad valorem tax purposes in the years 1937-1960 and 1963-1966. Rendition of the farm as homestead for the years 1961 and 1962 was omitted due to the death of an employee whom Mr. Neale had charged with such responsibility. In January, 1963, the bankrupt executed a power of attorney to W. J. Miranda, authorizing him to “inventory and to render for assessment and taxation any and all real and personal prop *972 erty owned by me in McLennan County, Texas, and to make declaration and designation of my homestead in McLennan County, Texas.” The dairy farm operations were conducted by Mr. Neale through managers, foremen, and farm hands.

In 1927, two years after his marriage to Mrs. Neale, the bankrupt and his wife moved from Houston, Texas, to Dallas, Texas, and since that time they have resided without interruption in Dallas County. They purchased a house in University Park in 1927 and resided there until 1934, at which time they sold that house and bought another in Highland Park. The Neales resided in this house and filed a homestead exemption for ad valorem tax purposes until 1945, at which time they sold it and purchased another in Highland Park. In 1946 and 1947 they claimed such an exemption on their second house in that town, but did not claim the exemption from 1948 to 1956, the years in which they continued to occupy that house. The two deeds to this house named Mrs. Neale as titleholder.

From 1956 to 1958 the Neales lived in an apartment in Dallas. In 1958, they purchased a house in Dallas in the names of their son and daughter. The children signed the notes on the house. The Neales moved in and paid an annual rent of $6,000 to their children, which was paid by a $6,000 gift each year in the form of a credit on the notes. The notes were held by Wm. F. Neale & Company or Southwestern Warehouse Company, its subsidiary. The credits on the notes held by the children were made on the books of these companies. Mr. Neale further reduced his children’s indebtedness by crediting the amount paid by him in ad valorem taxes on the property. The bankrupt also took a $3,000 homestead deduction on this property for ad valorem tax purposes.

In 1964, the Neales sold the house they purchased for their children and moved into an apartment in Dallas. Mrs. Neale received approximately $55,000 for the sale of this property, which in 1958 had been purchased for $95,000. The Neales resided in the apartment at the time the involuntary petition was filed.

The Neales’ daughter has not lived in Dallas since her marriage in 1954. She and her husband reside in Newton Center, Massachusetts. The son, William F. Neale, Jr., is married and has lived with his wife in Dallas since 1958 in the same house. He has a homestead tax deduction on this property.

From 1927 to 1965, Mr. Neale carried on extensive business activities in Dallas from which he derived the principal part of his income. Mr. Neale owns and controls 8 companies and partially owns and controls 5 others. Prior to bankruptcy, these companies were going concerns and yielded a most substantial income to the bankrupt.

In 1963, Mr. Neale borrowed some $309,750 from one of his companies. This loan was secured by a deed of trust executed by the bankrupt on 800 acres of the farm in McLennan County. The 200 acres in issue before this court were a part of the property upon which the deed of trust was secured. Thereafter, the company holding the note assigned it and the deed to the Bankers Trust Company. After the assignment Mr. Neale signed notes totaling $309,750, payable to Bankers Trust and executed another deed of trust on the McLennan County farm and 200 acres to secure the notes.

The performance of this secured transaction by the bankrupt weighed heavily on the referee’s determination that the 200 acres were not Mr. Neale’s homestead. The referee, in his Conclusions of Law, stated

To find that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
274 F. Supp. 969, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-neale-txnd-1967.