Kainer v. Blank

24 S.W. 851, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 1, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 385
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 11, 1894
DocketNo. 305.
StatusPublished

This text of 24 S.W. 851 (Kainer v. Blank) 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
Kainer v. Blank, 24 S.W. 851, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 1, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 385 (Tex. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellants to have a deed which they had made to certain lots in Schulenberg, Fayette County, Texas, to John Blank, under whom appellee claims, declared to be a mortgage and set aside as invalid, on the ground that the property was the appellants’ homestead. Appellee claimed that the deed was not intended as a mortgage, but as a sale with the privilege to Kainer and wife to buy it back within a fixed time, upon payment of the sum which was the consideration of the deed, and interest.

*3 Appellee in her answer also claimed a lien upon the property for material furnished for its improvement by one Baumgarten upon contracts therefor, made with the owners, which had been acquired by Blank.

Blank was a wholesale liquor dealer in New Orleans, and Kainer was engaged in business in Schulenberg and had become indebted to Blank in the sum of $600 for goods purchased. About the time the deed was made Blank wrote to Kainer, informing him that unless the debt was paid or secured, no further credit would be allowed. Kainer, on receipt of this letter, requested a notary to write a mortgage upon his homestead to secure the debt to Blank. The notary informed Kainer that a mortgage upon the homestead would be void, and suggested that he make a deed,, and that Blank should sign an agreement to reconvey when he (Kainer) should pay the debt. To this Kainer agreed, telling the notary “to fix it up right, as he wanted further credit and wished to secure Blank.” An absolute deed with covenants of warranty, reciting a paid consideration of $600, was prepared and signed and acknowledged by Kainer and wife, and by the former was forwarded to Blank at New Orleans. At the same time an instrument to be signed by Blank was sent to him, and • in due time was executed by him and returned to Kainer. It is as follows:

“ Whereas, Joseph Kainer and Anna Kainer, husband and wife, of said county and State, have this day, the 10th day of March, A. D. 1888, sold and conveyed to me, the undersigned, lots 8, 11, and 12 of May’s. Addition of the town of Schulenberg, for the sum of $600; now there-. fore, be it known, that if said Joseph Kainer, his heirs, administrators, or assigns, shall truly pay or cause to be paid to me, my heirs or administrators, the sum of $600, with 10 per cent interest from date, on or before the 10th day of March, 1889, then and in such case I hereby promise to make him, his heirs or assigns, a good valid title for said above mentioned lots.
“Witness my hand and seal, at New Orleans, this the 12th day of March, 1888.
“ John Blank.”

None of the letters which passed between the parties are in evidence. In October, 1887, Kainer had let the premises to one Neuhaus for a term to expire December, 1891. Neuhaus, after the deed was executed, remained in possession, recognizing and treating Kainer as the owner, and paying the rent to him.

There is testimony, found by the trial court to be true and which we. accept as true, to the effect that Kainer, after the deed was made, requested and obtained from an agent of Blank permission to receive the, rents, agreeing to keep the premises in repair, and to pay to Blank out. *4 of the rents a sum equal to 8 per cent interest on the $600 and on other sums stated below. This agreement must have been subsequent to January 2, 1890, as will appear further on.

The value of the property at the date of the deed was $1200 to $1500, and the consideration of $600 was inadequate; but one Baumgarten had claims due on two contracts previously executed, one by Kainer and wife and the other by the party from whom they purchased the property prior to their purchase, which were supposed by them to operate as liens upon the homestead; and the court below held, that in view of this fact the consideration for the deed was adequate. But there is no evidence that Blank knew of these claims, or that he assumed the payment of them; and the fact that he agreed to reconvey the property to Kainer for $600 shows that he did not. Kainer continued liable for the debt due to Baumgarten, and it can not be taken as a part of the consideration for the deed to Blank.

Kainer, subsequent to the date of the deed to Blank, paid $50 to Baumgarten on this debt. He also regularly paid taxes, and caused repairs to be made on the homestead. There is evidence that Blank’s agent also paid some taxes on the property, but the dates and the amounts of the payments do not appear. It is not shown that he paid them regularly as they became due.

In January, 1890, Blank, being informed of the Baumgarten claims, paid to the latter the amount due on them, amounting to $682, and upon one of them is endorsed simply the fact of such payment, but on the other is endorsed a transfer by Baumgarten of the debt and of the lien to secure it. It was after the payment and transfer of these claims that the agreement was made between Blank’s agent and Kainer that the latter might collect the rents, and out of them pay Blank a sum equal to the interest on the $600 consideration recited in the deed and on the amount paid by Blank to Baumgarten.

Kainer, under this agreement, paid only $50 out of the rent, at some time not mentioned. Kainer failed in business in December, 1889. Blank died in the fall of 1891.

Prior to Blank’s death no demand for rent was made by him of the tenant in possession of the premises. Afterwards the tenant was notified by Mrs. Blank’s agent that Kainer was not paying the interest on the $600 and the amount paid Baumgarten, as he had agreed to do, and that thereafter the rent should be paid to her, and none has since been paid to either party.

Except as the fact may be inferred from these circumstances, there is no evidence that the parties considered that the debt due from Kainer to Blank when the deed was made was satisfied and cancelled by that transaction.

One of the contracts for material with Baumgarten was made by one *5 Black and wife, from whom appellants purchased the property, and the debt matured on the 14th day of January, 1885.

The other was made by appellants with Baumgarten after they became the owners of the lots in controversy, and this debt matured on the 1st day of October, 1887.

In both cases the material was furnished and used before the contracts were made and acknowledged by the wives, and the property was homestead at the date when such material was so bought and used and the contracts executed.

Opinion. — Under these facts, all of which are either found by the trial judge or shown by uncontradicted evidence‘ we think it clear that the transaction between Kainer and Blank was an effort to mortgage the homestead, and not a sale, either absolute or conditional. About all of the facts from which the courts are accustomed to hold a transaction taking the form of this one to constitute a mortgage appear in this case.

It is conclusively shown by the testimony of the notary, as well as by that of both of the plaintiffs, that they did not intend to sell their homestead absolutely, but only to secure the debt, and obtain further credit.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W. 851, 6 Tex. Civ. App. 1, 1894 Tex. App. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kainer-v-blank-texapp-1894.