Joines v. Burke

540 S.W.2d 798, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3120
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 1976
Docket1034
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 540 S.W.2d 798 (Joines v. Burke) 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
Joines v. Burke, 540 S.W.2d 798, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3120 (Tex. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION

NYE, Chief Justice.

This is a declaratory judgment suit brought by the plaintiffs, Robert R. Joines and wife, Nettie Mae Joines, against defendant, Kathleen Burke, seeking to obtain a judgment declaring that a contract for the sale of certain real property belonging to the plaintiffs located in Jackson County, Texas, was unenforceable, null and void. Trial was before the court without intervention of a jury. The trial court entered judgment declaring that the contract, made the basis of this suit, obligated the defendant purchaser, at her expense and upon her initiative, to undertake a title suit (the same referred to in the contract). The court found that the delay in initiating the suit was not unreasonable nor was it undue delay. The effect of the judgment was to deny the plaintiffs sellers the relief sought and left the parties where the court found them, i. e. both the sellers and purchaser subject to the contract. From this judgment, the plaintiffs (sellers) have duly perfected their appeal.

The plaintiffs reside on approximately 100 acres of land located in a townsite of Francitas in Jackson County, Texas. Plaintiffs have lived on the land since April of 1927. Plaintiffs’ title to the land was alleged to be a limitation title as opposed to record title. On November 18, 1969, the plaintiffs entered into a contract for sale of the land with the defendant. The contract provided that the plaintiffs would sell and convey such property to the purchaser for $125.00 per acre, payable by the purchaser upon the entry of a final judgment adjudicating title to the subject property to be vested in the sellers. The contract, under the heading “Special Conditions” had the following provisions:

“It is recognized that Seller has a limitation title as opposed to record title and Seller agrees to cooperate with Purchaser at all reasonable times and places in an effort to diligently obtain a judgment of the District Court of Jackson County, Texas awarding legal title to Seller so that this contract may be consummated as rapidly as possible.”

The sellers complain of the trial court’s refusal to set the contract aside because of the unreasonable delay of the purchaser in performing her part of the contract. The evidence before us is relatively undisputed, but it is unclear in some instances because the sellers (appellants) failed to include in this record some of the exhibits introduced into evidence in the trial court.

After the execution of the contract (November 18, 1969), the purchaser hired the County Surveyor, Mr. Atkins, to survey the subject property. The exact date the purchaser hired Mr. Atkins does not appear in the record, but on June 2, 1970, the survey appears to have been completed. During this time, the purchaser had also begun *800 doing some title research work herself and by the time the survey had been completed, she had examined the title to eight (8) blocks of the subject property. The property to be conveyed under the contract was a part of an old subdivision out of the original townsite of Francitas, Texas. The total acreage was about 100 acres which the sellers had under fences. The sellers reserved 10 lots in one certain block of the townsite. The record indicates that there were numerous record owners of the lots and blocks that made up the 100 acre tract. Although the sellers reserved and excepted from the sale, 10 lots in one particular block, the purchaser was to clear the title to this particular excepted tract simultaneously with the other property.

On September 21, 1970, some 10 months after the execution of the contract, an attorney then retained by the sellers wrote a letter to the purchaser in which he stated:

“I would suggest to you (purchaser) and Mr. Joines (seller) that you release your contract with him at once, as he has a buyer who will take the property title as is. Let us hear from you at once.”

Sometime around May 4, 1971, the purchaser retained this same attorney as her attorney for the purpose of completing the title research work necessary for the filing of the trespass to try title suit.

This attorney testified that such work was performed in the fall and winter of 1971 through February 1972. The purchaser testified that at that time, the attorney told her that the necessary research work on the title to this property had been completed and that he was ready to file the suit. The attorney notified the purchaser that the cost of the lawsuit had increased approximately $2,000.00 due to the increased number of defendants requiring service. Even in view of the increased cost, the purchaser requested that the attorney should go forward with the lawsuit. The attorney then declined because he did not want to file the suit as a number of the probable defendants were clients of his. He suggested that another attorney file the suit. The purchaser agreed.

About one month later on March 16,1972, the sellers received a letter from the first attorney, a Mr. Hamblen, wherein Hamblen stated that the purchaser was willing to go ahead with the deal, or she would turn the property back to the sellers upon the payment to her of $3,000.00 which she claimed she had put into the property. In April 1972, the purchaser received a letter with a quit claim deed enclosed from the sellers requesting that she sign the quit claim deed thereby releasing the contract of sale and removing cloud on the sellers’ property. (The contract of sale had been placed of record.) The purchaser refused to sign the same.

Hamblen testified that prior to the March 16,1972, letter, he assumed from the sellers’ attitude that the sellers were not going to cooperate in the bringing of the title suit. He further testified that as early as September of 1970, while the title research work was going on, the sellers contacted him and stated that they did not want to go through with it; that they had found another purchaser. The record shows that the purchaser never filed a trespass to try title suit.

On January 17, 1973, the plaintiffs (sellers) filed this lawsuit against the defendant, purchaser. In plaintiffs’ first amended petition, they assert among other things that the contract for sale is invalid or should not be unenforceable because the purchaser materially breached the contract by failing to close the transaction within a reasonable length of time after the execution of the same. In this connection, plaintiffs alleged that purchaser waited approximately two (2) years to commence the title research necessary to file a title suit and that by the time purchaser tendered performance, circumstances had so altered that the reasons that prompted plaintiffs to make the contract no longer existed. The plaintiffs prayed that the trial court enter judgment declaring the contract unenforceable and null and void and that such constitutes a cloud on plaintiffs’ title.

The purchaser answered asserting that prosecution of the action to obtain the judg *801 ment referred to in the contract was beyond her sole control and the failure to obtain such judgment was not due to any action or inaction on her part, but resulted from other causes beyond the control of the purchaser, including the lack of cooperation in the prosecution of such suit by the sellers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
540 S.W.2d 798, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 3120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joines-v-burke-texapp-1976.