Jones v. Lanning
This text of 201 S.W. 443 (Jones v. Lanning) 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.
Opinion
Appellee, Mrs. W. A. Banning, brought this suit against appellants, B. Jones and wife, Mary K. Jones, to foreclose a lien claimed by virtue of a filed, recorded, and indexed judgment for $600 upon ten lots, deeded to Mary K. Jones for her separate use and benefit, in the city of San Antonio, Tex. The trial was by the court without a jury. Judgment was in favor of appellee to the extent of foreclosing lien against the four lots segregated from the homestead by the alley. Judgment was in favor of appellants to the extent of holding the six lots exempt from lien because used as homestead.
Appellants claimed that the ten lots were the separate property of the wife, Mary K. Jones, and that all ten lots constituted the homestead of appellants and their seven children from the moment of purchase continu-' ously up to the time of the trial.
The evidence discloses that all ten of the lots belonged to the community estate of L. Jones and wife. The evidence also shows that four of the lots were separated by an alley from the six lots on which appellants actually resided; that the four lots were not used as a part of appellants’ homestead, but the other six were. The evidence further shows that at the time appellants purchased the ten lots they owned no home, but were living, as a tenant at sufferance, in a place which they had sold in October, 1913, possession of which appellants had promised to deliver upon delivery of the deed in October, 1913. In December, 1913, they contracted to acquire the ten lots in controversy for the purpose of using the said property as their homestead. There was a residence upon the property contracted for. Possession of the house and ten lots was not actually surrendered to appellants in 'December, 1913, but the deed was put in escrow until a certain note of $12,000 could be hypothecated. Delivery of possession was further delayed by the failure of the tenant to vacate until early in March, 1914; but as soon as the tenant vacated appellants moved in.
The trial court found that the four lots separated from the homestead by an alley were not used as a homestead or a part of the homestead, and were therefore not exempt from the judgment lien. There is evidence to sustain this finding of the court.
The court found that appellants owned no home at the time they dedicated the property here involved, except this property, and that they purchased this property with the intention of making it their home, and that 1 the intention was consummated as soon as feasible after acquiring it for the purpose. Freiberg v. Walzem, 85 Tex. 264, 20 S. W. 60, 34 Am. St. Rep. 808; Gardner v. Douglass, 64 Tex. 76.
None of the assignments and none of the cross-assignments present erroneous action of the trial court.
The judgment is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
201 S.W. 443, 1918 Tex. App. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-lanning-texapp-1918.