Johnson v. Lockhart, Admr.

50 S.W. 955, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 596, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 221
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 50 S.W. 955 (Johnson v. Lockhart, Admr.) 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
Johnson v. Lockhart, Admr., 50 S.W. 955, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 596, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 221 (Tex. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

*597 PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

In May, 1883, Susan A. Dirmeyer, joined by her husband, sold and conveyed to A. Bernard lot 11, in block No. 490, in the city of Galveston, the price of the property being $2000, of which $1500 was paid at the time of the sale, and the balance was secured by a promissory note of the vendee, payable twelve months from the date of the sale, with a vendor’s lien reserved in the deed of conveyance; and a deed of trust was also executed by the vendee, Bernard, to one D. Cavitt, Avhereby the mortgagor stipulated in case of failure by him to pay said vendor’s lien note upon its maturity, that the said Cavitt should take possesion of the said lot and sell the same in satisfaction of said debt. Bernard at the time of the conveyance entered upon the premises, and continued to occupy the same until his death, in October, 1894. In the meantime Cavitt had died, whether before or after the maturity of the note is not definitely shown by the evidence. Bernard remained in undisturbed possession of the lot, using and enjoying it as his property, paid the taxes thereon, paid insurance on the property against fire, and made valuable improvements to the lot and kept the premises in repair. The evidence shows that for several years after the purchase of the property, Bernard Avas a thriving and prosperous man, and his bank account shows sums to his credit more than sufficient at the maturity of the note, to pay the same, and that such was the state of his account for some time after the note matured; but in the latter years of his life his financial condition was much changed, and he on several occasions was known to borrow small sums to make payment of his taxes. The deed of conveyance from Dirmeyer to Bernard, and also the deed of trust from him to Cavitt, were drawn by the appellant, Wm. R Johnson, who was at the time a real estate agent in the city of Galveston, and who represented Mrs. Dirmeyer in the sale of the property, and shortly thereafter negotiated for her Bernard’s note for the $500, the unpaid balance of the price of the lot. The note and the deed of trust to Cavitt were assigned in June, 1883, by Mrs. Dirmeyer to I. S. LeClere, this transfer being also in the handwriting of the appellant. In January, 1894, LeClere for value transferred the note to appellant, and in his possession it has since remained. Appellant was never the agent of Bernard. He was doing a large and profitable business as real estate agent in Galveston at the time of the purchase by Barnard from Mrs. Dirmeyer, and is still pursuing the occupation of real estate agent; but since 1893 his business has • not been so profitable, and between that date and the trial, to quote his language when testifying, “he had several times wanted five hundred dollars bad.” He is an intelligent, capable, and prominent business man. He knew Cavitt well, and knew he was dead, but could not recall the date of his death; knew Bernard, met him occasionally; and knew lot 11 in block 490; and had doubtless passed the premises several times since its sale to Bernard. Shortly after the death of Bernard, the appellee Lock-hart, at the request of the appellee Carter, who is a creditor of his estate, qualified as administrator of Bernard’s estate, and returned an inventory to the court, including the property in litigation, and afterwards obtained *598 an order for the sale of same. The sale was made and confirmed by the court in January, 1895, but upon discovery by the purchaser that there was no release upon record of the deed of trust upon the property executed by Bernard in 1883 to Cavitt, he declined to consummate the sale; and the administrator, Lockhart, observing that the deed to the property was in the handwriting of the appellant, directed Carter to inquire of appellant as to the lien upon the lot. What was said by appellant in response to Carter’s inquiry the evidence leaves uncertain, further than that Johnson knew nothing of a release, and referred Carter to- the records of the county. TJpon this inquiry being made of him, Johnson began to inquire himself into the matter, and finding the note in his safe with his other notes, and discovering no release on file in the clerk’s office, he presented the note to Lockhart for payment, when the latter informed him, as the note was barred, he could not allow it as a claim against the estate of his intestate, and suggested that he would reject the claim, and that Johnson might bring suit and have the matter judicially determined. This was in the spring of 1895, and nothing being done by Johnson, and there being no other assets of the estate, and the debts thereof being pressing, Lockhart, towards the close of the year 1895, instituted suit against Johnson, alleging that the note had been paid, but no release having been made of the deed of trus-t, the assertion by Johnson that the note was still unpaid created a cloud upon the title to the property, and he prayed for the cancellation of the purchase money note and removal of cloud upon the title of the estate of Bernard to the property. In the meantime Johnson had, in December, 1895, acquired title to the lot by purchase from Mrs. Dirmeyer, and in January, 1896, he answered Lockhart’s suit, and in his answer he asserted the right to rescind the contract of sale made with Bernard by Mrs. Dirmeyer, and alleged that the note given for the balance of the purchase money by Bernard had never been paid, and made exhibit of the same; and upon this issue and others not necessary to be here stated, the cause was tried hy the judge of the court, and judgment was rendered against Johnson, and which judgment upon appeal to this court, as will be seen in the report of the decision in 40 Southwestern Reporter, was reversed and the cause remanded. Upon the return of the mandate the plaintiff amended his petition, and Johnson instituted suit against appellees Carter and wife, who- were in possession of the property, to eject them therefrom, and the two suits were with consent of the parties consolidated. Upon trial of-the cause verdict and judgment were rendered against Johnson canceling 'the note and quieting the title of the administrator Lockhart to the property, and a new trial being denied him, Johnson appeals to this court.

The first assignment of error is, the court erred in not sustaining special exceptions to the pleadings of appellee Lockhart, because there is no allegation in said pleadings of the time, or date, or place, or manner of the alleged payment of said note. We think the appellee Lockhart is excused from the observance of the rule of pleading invoked by appellant by the nature and purpose of his suit as disclosed in the averments -of his plead *599 ings. The petition, among other allegations, avers “that plaintiff’s intestate continued in uninterrupted and peaceable possession of the lot purchased from Mrs. Dirmeyer from May, 1883, until his death in October, 1894; and that his possesison was accompanied with claim of title adverse to all persons, and of all which appellant had full knowledge; and notwithstanding which appellant liad never asserted any right in or claim to said property until after the death of Bernard and that of the trustee, Cavitt, and of every other person who might be able to testify as to the payment of said note, as well as to the acts and declarations of the said Bernard relating to said property, which evidenced a possession and a claim of right by Bernard hostile to Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.W. 955, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 596, 1899 Tex. App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-lockhart-admr-texapp-1899.