Jolesch & Chaska Co. v. Hampton

297 S.W. 271, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 549
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1927
DocketNo. 527.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 271 (Jolesch & Chaska Co. v. Hampton) 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
Jolesch & Chaska Co. v. Hampton, 297 S.W. 271, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 549 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

Suit by appellant to recover of appellee $1,532.81, and an attach'ment was issued and levied upon, among other property, 72 acres of land as the property of appellee, R. E. Hampton. Appellee answered, among other defenses, claiming said 72 acres attached was his homestead, and therefore not subject to attachment. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment rendered for appellant for $1,532.81 and a foreclosure of the attachment -on certain property, but denying, a foreclosure of the attachment lien' on the 72 acres, the court holding same was exempt to appellee as *272 a homestead. The correctness of this holding is the only Question involved in this appeal.

Appellants submit two propositions, contending in effect that the court erred (1) in holding under the evidence no lien attached to the 72 acres by the levy of the writ of attachment on same, in that it was the homestead of appellee, because the homestead exemption never attached to the property in question; (2) that if the homestead exemption did ever attach to said property, the same had been abandoned by appellee prior to the levy of the writ. In other words, appellant contends that the evidence was insufficient to show that said 72 acres was ever impressed with the homestead exemption in favor of appellee, and if it was, such right of exemption was lost by appellee by abandonment before the levy of the writ.

As bearing upon the questions here involved, the trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law which are in no way questioned by appellant, and which are therefore assumed to be correct, and from which we make the following condensed statement as our findings of fact: Appellee, R. E. Hampton, had a family consisting of wife and five children, and prior to 1925 owned no land. He was a farmer, renting land up to the time of his mother’s death. His mother died November 15, 1924, leaving a will in which she bequeathed to appellee the 72 acres of land in controversy, all of which was in cultivation, with improvements thereof consisting of a residence, necessary fencing, etc., and ready for occupancy. Said mother bequeathed to another son, Manton Hampton, a tract of 82.-07 acres adjoining and north of the above-mentioned 72-acre tract, on which was situated her dwelling, etc., on the north side thereof; and on the south side of this 82.07-acre tract was another set of improvements, consisting of a dwelling, barn, etc. Said will provided that this last-mentioned set of improvements should be removed to another 72-acre tract adjoining the east of the first-mentioned 72-aere tract, which was bequeathed to another son, Wade Hampton, on which there were no improvements. This will of Mrs. Hampton was duly probated in January, 1925. On October 15,1924, before her death, November 15, 1924, the mother of these Hampton boys entered into a written rental contract, by the terms of which she rented to her son; O. N. Hampton, certain lands for the years 1925 and 1926, which lands so rented included a strip of about 10 acres situated on the east side of the 72 acres bequeathed to appellee, and also about 2y2 acres on the south side thereof, on which was situated the house, barn, and other improvements belonging to said 72 acres bequeathed to appellee. Said' O. N. Hampton went into possession of said 2%-acre tract with the improvements thereon, when said rental contract was executed October 15,1924. After the death of the mother November 15, 1924, appellee promptly attempted to take possession of the 72 acres bequeathed to him, and in order to do so requested O. N. Hampton to vacate the 2y2 acres and the improvements situated thereon, and also said 10-acre strip, both of which were q part of the 72 acres willed to him, but was informed by C. N. Hampton of the written rental contract under which he claimed the right of possession of both for the next year, 1925, and also 1926, and that he would stand on the contract.

In order to adjust the matter and avoid a lawsuit, a compromise agreement was entered into by appellee and his brother, O. M. Hampton, Manton Hampton and . Wade Hampton, two other brothers, also being parties to said agreement, by the terms of which it was agreed, among other things, that O. N. Hampton should retain the 2%-acre tract with all improvements thereon, and that appel-lee should have possession of all his 72-acre tract so willed to him except the 2% acres with the improvements thereon, and all of the Manton Hampton 82.07-acre tract, using the Hampton homestead as his residence, and also another house on said 82.-07-acre tract for his tenant. About January 1, 1925, appellee with his family moved into the homestead on the 82.07-acre tract, and his tenant, Boswell, moved into the other house on said 82.07-acre tract, and during said year of 1925 appellee and his tenant farmed all of said 82.07-acre tract and all of appellee’s 72-acre tract so bequeathed to him . except the 2 y2 acres thereof with th'e improvements thereon, which remained in the possession of O. N. Hampton under said new rental contract during the year 1925.

About August 24, 1925, appellee, realizing his crops, on account of continued drouth, were an entire failure, and that he would be unable to live on the farm and feed his teams during the next year, sold his teams and farming implements and at the same time entered into an oral rental contract with Forrest Bros., by which he rented to them his 72-acre tract for one year only, to begin January 1, 1926, but especially reserving from said contract the residence on his said 72-acre tract, with the understanding that they might have it longer than a year if he did not return to the land and work it himself during the year 1927. Appellee thereafter, on September 1, 1925, removed from said land to Balias, where he leased a residence for a year, where he was living when the writ of attachment was levied. When appellee so removed- from said premises on September 1, 1925, he left thereon and in possession thereof his tenant, Boswell, to gather the crops raised thereon during the year 1925. At the time appellee moved to Dallas on September 1, 1925, he had a rental contract with his brother, Manton Hampton, by the terms of which he had rented the 82.07 acres for the year *273 1926, which contract remained in force until about November 15, 1925, when the defendant had formed the intention of selling his 72-acre tract and investing the proceeds in a new home in Dallas, at which time said rental contract was by mutual consent canceled. Prior to his removal to Dallas, on August 24, 1925, appellee executed a written instrument designating said 72-acre tract as his homestead, which was duly filed and recorded in the proper deed records.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 271, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jolesch-chaska-co-v-hampton-texapp-1927.