Jarrett v. Hall

207 S.W.2d 261, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 859
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 1947
DocketNo. 4430
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 207 S.W.2d 261 (Jarrett v. Hall) 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
Jarrett v. Hall, 207 S.W.2d 261, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 859 (Tex. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinions

WALKER, Justice.

Appellee J. L. Hall brought this action against appellant N. H. Jarrett to recover title to and possession of approximately 91 acres of land, located partly in the L. F. Seegar Survey and partly in the Jesse Courtney Survey, in Shelby County.

Appellee Hall is referred to hereafter as plaintiff, and appellant Jarrett, as defendant:

We shall not attempt to state the details of the pleadings. Plaintiff alleged, upon various grounds, that defendant held the legal title to said land in trust for him, by agreement or by implication of law. His claim, as pleaded, was bottomed upon an agreement by defendant to lend him money with which to purchase the land for himself, allegedly made .by defendant before defendant acquired the legal title to the land. Defendant denied the agreement, denied the trust, and plead that he had rightfully acquired full title to the land for his own benefit.

The cause was tried to a jury, and such of the jury’s findings as are relevant to the issues made on this appeal are referred tó-belo w.

The trial court rendered judgment in plaintiff’s behalf against defendant for the title to and possession of the land in suit. The trial court also rendered judgment in defendant’s behalf against plaintiff for $1,-588.10, secured by a lien upon the land, and decreed a foreclosure of said lien and ordered the land sold to pay this indebtedness, with execution over against plaintiff for any deficiency. (The sum adjudged against plaintiff presumably consisted of two items, namely, $1,500 as the purchase price of the land, paid out by defendant upon acquiring the legal title to said land, and $88.10 as taxes levied upon the property, also paid by defendant.)

Defendant has appealed from this judgment and has assigned only one point of error for reversal, namely,, that for the reasons stated in his motion for an instructed verdict, there was no proof of a trust in plaintiff’s behalf, and that the judgment against defendant is therefore not supported by the evidence. Plaintiff says that defendant waived this point. Since we have some inclination to believe that defendant’s objections to the charge ought to be construed as a renewal of, and an insistence, upon his motion for instructed verdict, we shall dispose of the point of error upon its merits.

Evidence given in plaintiff’s behalf tends to prove the following matters:

(1) On October 8, 1940, G. F. Driskill and wife, who then resided upon the land and who are the common source of title to said land as between plaintiff and defendant, executed and delivered to defendant Jarrett their general warranty deed, purportedly conveying to defendant the fee simple title to the land in suit.

(2) Plaintiff and defendant had been acquainted and had done business with each other during the 9 or 10 years just prior to the date of this deed. Throughout this period the defendant was engaged in purchasing railroad ties, as he was, indeed, at all relevant times thereafter, and plaintiff, from time to time during this period, apparently each year, had cut and sold such ties to defendant. It was plaintiff’s practice, sometimes with defendant’s financial assistance, to buy small tracts of suitable timber and [263]*263to cut this timber into railroad ties which he then sold to defendant.

Perhaps 30 days before the date of Mr. and Mrs. Driskill’s deed, plaintiff undertook to buy from Driskill certain timber which he had found upon the land; and Driskill made plaintiff a counter offer to sell plaintiff the land itself, including- the timber and improvements, for $1,500. Plaintiff wanted to accept this offer, but he did not have this sum of money and told Driskill so, but he also told Driskill that he thought he could procure the money from a friend, whom he did not name.

Mr. Driskill was not acquainted with the plaintiff before these negotiations occurred.

(3) Defendant was the friend from whom plaintiff hoped to borrow the $1,500. On a Sunday afternoon following this offer from Driskill, plaintiff had a conversation with defendant, near defendant’s office in the town of Garrison, respecting his purchase of the land. Plaintiff made a full disclosure of his negotiations with Driskill. He told defendant, in substance, that he could purchase the land from Driskill for $1,500, that he wished to do so, and that he wished to borrow the purchase price from defendant. He also told defendant that there was enough timber on the land to repay such a loan. He knew, of course, that defendant was engaged at this time in buying and selling railroad ties and he expected this information about the timber to appeal to defendant, as in fact it did.

Defendant told plaintiff, in effect, that he would lend plaintiff the money if the timber on the land was sufficiently valuable, but that it would be necessary for him to have the value of the timber appraised. He promised to send some one on the following day to make this appraisal.

It was agreed at this time that if defendant made the loan to plaintiff, defendant would cut and remove the timber and would credit the market price of the timber, current when the timber was cut and removed, as a payment upon the loan. Both plaintiff and defendant expected the loan, if made, to be repaid in full from the proceeds of the timber, but it may be inferred from plaintiff’s testimony as a whole that both plaintiff and defendant thought plaintiff was personally obligated to repay the money loaned him by defendant and that the parties did not believe the timber upon the land to be the sole source of defendant’s reimbursement. Otherwise there would have been no reason for defendant’s agreeing to credit the proceeds of the timber upon the sum paid out by him. And plaintiff testified:

“Q. State whether or not your proposition to (defendant) was for a loan for the $1500.00 with which to pay the purchase price? A. Yes, sir”.

We think it is also to be inferred that plaintiff expected the timber to belong to him until defendant cut it.

(In other words, although some details of the agreement were not clearly stated, plaintiff’s testimony raised the issue that defendant agreed to lend plaintiff $1,500, that plaintiff agreed to repay this money to defendant, that the timber upon the land was to be the primary source of repayment to defendant but plaintiff was to be obligated to repay to defendant any excess of the debt above the proceeds of the timber, and that plaintiff was to be the owner of any excess of the proceeds of the timber above his indebtedness to defendant).

Plaintiff and defendant did not determine when defendant was to cut the timber, but defendant was not to be paid until the timber was cut. There is some testimony from plaintiff showing that he thought defendant was to be repaid in full whenever defendant cut and removed the timber. Having testified that two and one-half years after October 8, 1940, would have been an average time, and also a reasonable time, for defendant to have cut and removed this timber, he testified as follows on cross examination :

“Q. When was your contract coming to an end? You say two and one-half years? A. I said that was on an average, the way the timber deeds was drawed up.
“Q. If that is on the average, then your contract would mature in two and one-half years after the deed was made, if you are right wouldn’t it? A. It would mature when he cut the timber. That is when it was supposed to be paid for”.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
207 S.W.2d 261, 1947 Tex. App. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jarrett-v-hall-texapp-1947.