Kegans v. White

131 S.W.2d 990, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 815
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 16, 1939
DocketNo. 1907.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 131 S.W.2d 990 (Kegans v. White) 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
Kegans v. White, 131 S.W.2d 990, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 815 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

LESLIE, Chief Justice.

Lessie Lee White, joined pro forma by her husband J. C. White, J. T. Kegans, W. P. Kegans and G. A. Kegans, Jr., instituted this suit in the County Court against Tennessee Rebecca. Kegans, a feme sole, to recover the “reasonable value of the occupancy and use” of their one half interest in 150 acres of land, alleged to amount to about $300 “including the occupancy and use of the improvements thereon.” This was for the use of the premises for the year 1936. The defendant filed a plea in abatement and otherwise denied liability. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for $225 with six per cent interest per annum thereon from January 1, 1937. The defendant appeals.

Appellant is the former wife of G. A. Kegans, Sr., who is the father of the ap-pellees. In a divorce suit between G. A. Kegans, Sr., and appellant, the Nolan County District Court, on October 17, 1935, by way of a property settlement, awarded appellant the right to use and occupy the land in controversy for a period of five years.

The appellant filed a plea in abatement on the ground that the petition was in effect a partition suit, or a suit involving title and possession of land, and that the County Court had no jurisdiction to determine the issues raised. The plea in abatement was overruled. The petition was also excepted to on the ground that the trial court had no jurisdiction to try the cause. The appellant in answer, by cross-action, sought without effect to make her former husband, G. A. Kegans, Sr., a party to the suit. Other questions are presented but they are not controlling, and only that portion of the pleadings and testimony will be referred to as are essential to an understanding of this opinion.

The first proposition is based upon the1 action of the trial court in overruling defendant’s plea in abatement. The proposition is to the effect that the appellees’ right of recovery was predicated upon a dispute as to the title and possession of real estate, rendering it necessary for the court to adjudicate and determine the question of title in order for the appellees to recover, and that, therefore, the county court had no jurisdiction to try the cause.

The first material allegation in plaintiffs’ petition is “that they (plaintiffs)- now own and did at all times hereinafter mentioned own an undivided one half interest in the following described land and premrj ises situated in Nolan County, Texas, viz.”,, the 150 acres in controversy.

The allegations in this pleading and in a subsequent one set forth in great detail the basis of plaintiffs’ claim, to right, title, and possession of the one half interest in the 150 acres of land: That G. A. Kegans- and Eula Kegans, parents of the plaintiffs',> were married in 1903, and their mother died intestate in July, 1917; that at her-death the community estate of the parents had, in connection with other accumulated properties, about $6,000 in the bank at Trent, Texas, in the name of their father G. A. Kegans, Sr., who, about two years (September, 1919) after the death of the mother, bought said 150 acres of land therewith, taking a deed in his own name, but did not record the same as he desired to speculate on the land, and did not want the interest of the minors (plaintiffs herein) to appear, thereby rendering it necessary, to obtain court orders authorizing the sale' of the interest owned by them in the land,, etc. .

That the 150 acres of land was purchased from M. L. Adrian for about $5,700 cash; and the Adrian deed to G. A. Kegans, Sr. was kept in the bank at Trent, Texas. That during such time, Tennessee Rebecca Kegans, the appellant, was the wife of' H. F. Burton; that G. A. Kegans, Sr., after explaining to the Burtons the interest of the Kegans children in the land, sold it to the Burtons and- had M. L. Adrian execute a deed to H. F. Burton, December 16,-1919, for a consideration of about $1,800 cash, delivered to Kegans, and ten promissory vendor’s lien notes for $570 each, payable to the order of G. A. Kegans, Sr, That thereupon said G. A. Kegans, Sr., destroyed the deed Adrian had made direct *992 to him, and which had been withheld from records.

That April 18, 1922, H. F. Burton, joined by his wife (the present appellant, Tennessee Rebecca Kegans), conveyed said land to J. F. Mashburn for a consideration of $400 cash and the assumption of the ten $570 notes executed by Burton to Kegans. There is no allegation or evidence that Mashburn was not a bona fide purchaser of the land.

That on October 8, 1924, Mashburn and wife conveyed the land to R. A. Venable for $1,500 cash and the execution to said J. F. Mashburn his 14 promissory vendor’s lien notes, 13 for $500 each, and one for $250. There is no allegation or evidence that Venable was other than a bona fide purchaser. “That in consideration of the cancellation of the 10 notes for $570 each given by H. F. Burton in part payment for said land, the said fourteen notes of the said R. A. Venable were transferred and delivered by J. F. Mashburn to G. A. Ke-gans and that the vendor’s lien was retained in the deed from J. F. Mashburn and wife to R. A. Venable to secure the payment of said fourteen notes. That the said 14 notes were a continuation and extension of the obligation and lien on said land originally given and fixed in the sale of the same by G. A. Kegans to H. F. Burton.”

That said H. F. Burton, at a date unknown to plaintiffs, obtained a divorce from his wife, Tennessee Rebecca, who, on January 23, 1928, married said G. A. Ke-gans, Sr., father of the plaintiffs. That thereafter, on December 29, 1930, in consideration of the cancellation by G. A. Kegans, Sr., of the 14 Venable notes, Venable transferred the 150 acres of land back to G. A. Kegans, Sr. “And plaintiffs show that in the manner and under the circumstances related the funds belonging to the community estate of their father G. A. Kegans and their mother Eula Kegans, deceased, were invested after the death of their said mother in said 150 acres. That they became one half owners of said 150 acres when such investment was made, and that such one half ownership continued and extended in and to the vendor’s lien notes hereinbefore described and to the lien retained on said 150 acres securing payment of said notes so that when said 150 acres was finally transferred back to the said G. A. Kegans in consideration of cancellation of the R. A. Venable’s vendor’s lien notes they became one half owners of said land and premises.”

In the divorce suit between G. A. Kegans, Sr., and the appellant herein, Tennessee Rebecca Kegans, in addition to the decree of divorce, property rights were adjudges and it was therein decreed that the 150 acres was “the separate property of the plaintiff” (G. A. Kegans, Sr.). The plaintiffs in the instant suit (the children of G. A.-Kegans and his first wife) were not parties to the divorce suit.

Thereafter on May 22, 1937, in-a suit between Lessie Lee Kegans (now Lessie Lee White) and her brothers and sisters against G. A. Kegans, Sr., et al., an undivided one half interest in said 150 acres was awarded said children as against the father. The appellant was not a party to that suit. The instant suit was filed July 30, 1937.

On the trial, the appellees for the purpose of showing “as between the plaintiffs in this suit and G. A. Kegans, Sr.

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131 S.W.2d 990, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kegans-v-white-texapp-1939.