Keller v. Lindow

133 S.W. 304, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 946
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 304 (Keller v. Lindow) 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
Keller v. Lindow, 133 S.W. 304, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 946 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinions

JAMES, O. J.

(after stating the facts as above). We conclude, in view of the judgment rendered, that there was testimony which warranted the court in finding as a fact that the land, shortly after the purchase by Lindow of an undivided half, became his homestead and although he, after improving and occupying it as such for a year or two, moved from it, he up to the time of his death intended to return to it as his home, and that he never formed an intention not to do so. To the extent of his title, which was an undivided half, it was therefore his homestead when the foreclosure and sheriff’s deed to Keller were made.

We conclude, further, that inasmuch as Keller had no lien on said undivided half, which- was homestead of Lindow and his wife, and inasmuch as the wife was not a party to the proceeding, the same was void as to such half and passed no title therein to Keller.

[307]*307We conclude, also, that the circumstances under which Mrs. Lindow (then Schott) conveyed to intervener Atkinson one-fourth of the land, by estoppel in pais, passed, her title, to that extent, to Atkinson, although her husband did not join her in the conveyance. There was testimony that she acted, in so doing, as a feme sole. She had but recently remarried, and not only concealed the fact from Atkinson, which she says she did under advice,, and therefore deliberately, but in an affidavit made by her at the same time and in connection with her employment of Atkinson, she described herself as a feme sole. Atkinson relied. upon this in taking the conveyance from her and in accepting the employment and in rendering services. Under like circumstances, and before Atkinson was informed to the contrary, she procured the loan of $55. Atkinson testified: “That Mrs. Lindow was introduced to me by Mr. Cullen, who brought her to me, and she was introduced to me as Mrs. Lindow. She told me that was her name and I believed that she was a single woman, and I did not learn any different until some weeks afterwards. After she was introduced to me, I made the contract with her that was offered in evidence. I brought this suit, examined the abstract, and rendered such service as I thought necessary, and did so in the belief that she was a single woman. After-wards, she came to me and told me she was about to lose her furniture on account of not having a little money, and wanted to borrow some money to save her furniture. I didn’t have any money, but my son, Norman, had a few dollars and I told him I believed it would be safe to make the loan of $50 and he did so, and I assured him that if he would make the loan that I would see it repaid. He did make the loan, and when the note came due I found that the Kellers had a second deed to the property from her as Mrs. Schott; so I had that trust deed foreclosed and bought it in and paid my son the $50. I think I paid him $55. I did that work and got her the money in the belief that she was a single woman, and I did not suspect that she had married again until she told me, after this suit was brought and after, she had gotten the $50. When I first heard she was married, I asked her about it and she told me that there had been some talk about it, but that she was not married.”

Mrs. Schott testified: “I first told you, Mr. Atkinson, that I had a second husband about a week or so afterwards. I told you that I had a husband. This was after I gave the trust deed for the $55, after the suit was brought. Suit had been brought some time.” She also testified: “When I came' to Mr. Atkinson to employ him in this matter, I did not tell him anything about my second marriage. I was advised not to. I know what feme sole means; it means a lone woman.”

It'appears that she deliberately held herself out as a single woman, in the transaction with Atkinson, concealed the fact of her being married, knowing that Atkinson was dealing with her under the impression that she was a feme sole, and as Mrs. Mollie Lin-dow made a statement of the circumstances of her title under oath, in which was set forth, that she was a feme sole, that she was married to Benjamin Lindow in December, 1893, that a short time after their marriage they moved upon 80 acres of this tract, and made it their home until some time in 1902, and among other facts stated that they never abandoned it as their homestead, and that it was the intention of her husband to return to it up to the time of his death.

We therefore conclude that the evidence warranted a finding by the trial judge that she was guilty of a positive fraud, inducing both transactions, and that she was therefore estopped from claiming the advantage that the status of a married woman would give her.

We conclude, in addition, that it was not shown by any testimony that the grantees in the deed of August 31, 1908, were purchasers without notice of the transactions of their grantor with Atkinson; the burden of showing this being upon them.

In view of the foregoing conclusions, ■ we overrule the assignments of error 1, 2, 4, 6, 9, and 10.

The eighteenth assignment is that plaintiff has brought this action in the form of trespass to try title, and the answer was the general issue, and the title of Ben Lindow having by foreclosure and sale passed to defendants, in whom the record title stands, and plaintiffs having pleaded no equities to set aside said decree of foreclosure and sale, the decree showing legal service on Lindow, in such state of pleading the holder of the legal title is entitled to recover, notwithstanding facts which, if pleaded, would have required equitable adjustment otherwise.

Under the nineteenth, it is insisted that the said foreclosure decree, being of a domestic court of general jurisdiction, imports absolute verity and cannot be attacked in a collateral proceeding.

There is no pretense of any question of the right of an innocent third party under the decree. The defendants are the heirs of the plaintiff in the decree, who was the purchaser at his sale. Keller did not even have a lien on the half which was in fact the homestead of Lindow and wife, and in these circumstances the inclusion of the homestead half in the decree, and the sale of it under the decree, were acts involving the transfer of the homestead contrary to the Constitution and laws of the state, not participated in by the wife; she not even being a party to the proceeding. The proceedings as to such half were a nullity and passed no title. The wife not being a party and not bound thereby as to any right she had was not re[308]*308quired to resort to equitable pleadings to open the decree in order to assert her right; and no special pleading in this case was necessary to that end. Campbell v. Elliott, 52 Tex. 151. The assignments are overruled.

Other assignments designated as the sixth, the thirteenth, and the fourteenth all complain of testimony by witnesses of statements made by Lindow, as to his intention to return to the land, upon the objection that a witness cannot be permitted to testify to statements of a deceased person concerning his intention, and, further, because the statements were self-serving. The testimony was proper on that issue. Thigpen v. Russell, and cases there cited, 118 S. W. 1080.

The eleventh is that the court erred in allowing Mrs. Schott to testify concerning her intention to return to the land, for the reason that testimony of an interested party in his interest, and self-serving, is inadmissible. This is also disposed of by the case just cited.

The seventh is that the court erred in admitting in evidence the testimony of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 304, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 946, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keller-v-lindow-texapp-1910.