Kirkland v. Oil Inv. Co.

41 S.W.2d 125, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1301
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 18, 1931
DocketNo. 12454.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 S.W.2d 125 (Kirkland v. Oil Inv. Co.) 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
Kirkland v. Oil Inv. Co., 41 S.W.2d 125, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1301 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

CONNER, C. J.

This suit was instituted by Lloyd Kirkland, for himself and as next friend for his mindr brothers and sisters and Clara Miller and Lavelle Muldrow, joined pro forma by their respective husbands, against the Oil Investment Company and others, to recover an undivided one-half interest in 1,507.4 acres of land situated in Archer county, Tex., which had been purchased by said Oil Investment Com *126 pany from L. J. Kirkland, the mother of plaintiffs. Since the date of its purchase, to wit, April 7, 1923, it was alleged that the investment company had been in possession of the property, and to have unlawfully removed from and under said land crude oil during the respective years since the date of its possession of the reasonable value of $270,006.50, one-half of which plaintiffs sought to recover by virtue of an alleged undivided one-half interest in the land. Plaintiffs further alleged that since April 7, 1923, the investment company had' conveyed to divers and sundry third persons and corporations, who were innocent of the plaintiffs’ rights, oil and gas leases, and collected rentals thereupon, appropriating the proceeds amounting to $51,-949, one-half of which they also 'sought to recover, less the sum-of $12,000, alleged to be one-half of the mortgaged indebtedness upon said land, which the defendant Oil Investment Company paid off at the time it took possession.

In addition to demurrers and a general denial, the defendants specially pleaded that R. C. Kirkland was the husband of L. J. Kirkland, now Mrs. L. J. Nickol, and that the plaintiffs are children of the marriage of R. C. and U. J. Kirkland; that R. C. Kirkland died on January 6, 1923, and that for several years prior to said death, L. J. Kirkland, the wife, was the owner of the land described in the plaintiffs’ petition; that she continued to be such owner until the sale of the land to the defendant Oil Investment Company. That at the time L. J. Kirkland acquired said land, it was mortgaged to the Texas. Land & Mortgage Company for about the sum of $17,500, which debt was assumed by the said L. J. Kirkland. That prior to the death of R. C. Kirkland, said loan and interest note was long past due, and payment thereof was being pressed at the time of the investment company’s purchase, whereupon, in answer to the suggestion, and to avoid total loss, L. J. Kirkland qualified as community administrator and sold the land to the defendant investment company at $20 per acre, making conveyance for herself individually and also as community administrator. It was further alleged that L. J. Kirkland, in making said sale, and the investment company making the purchase, acted in good faith and without design of defeating any right of the plaintiff children.

The land in question was conveyed by general warranty deed to Mrs. L. J. Kirkland by W. R. Pace and Mary E. Pace on the 17th day of July, 1914. The conveyance recited that it was for Mrs,. Kirkland’s “sole and separate use.” At the time, the land was incumbered by a mortgage due the Texas Land & Mortgage Company, Limited, of Dallas, in the sum of $17,500, which was assumed by Mrs. Kirkland as part of the consideration. Later on, to wit, the 28th day of September, 1914, R. O. Kirkland, by warranty deed and for a recited consideration of “$5,000 .cash and the further consideration of the love and affection I have for my wife, the said L. J. Kirkland,” conveyed the land to Mrs. Kirkland “for her sole and separate use.” Nothing having been paid upon the indebtedness to the mortgage company, R. C. and L. J. Kirkland secured an extension, maturing the indebtedness on January 5,1920,1921,1922, and 1924, and $11,500 on January 5, 1926, all to bear interest from January 5, 1917. Both L. J. and R. C. Kirkland bound themselves in the extension agreement for the payments there specified. Neither principal nor interest on the indebtedness due January 5, 1920 or 1921 or 1922, had been paid at the time of the sale to the appellee investment company, so that at that time there was some $6,000 principal, plus interest on the indebtedness, due- and unpaid.

Beginning with July 21, 1922, prior to the death of R. C. Kirkland, which, as stated, was on January 5, 1923, and up to March 9, 1923, when Mrs. E. J. Kirkland contracted .with the investment company for the sale of the land at $20 per acre, the mortgage company wrote and received some 71 letters to and from various and sundry parties, including Mr. Kirkland, Mrs. Kirkland, W. E. Forgy, an attorney at Archer City, A. A. Cooper, a land agent at Olney; E. C. Stovall, a land agent and owner near Graham; and Stehlik & Baber, land agents at Wichita Falls; and Z. T. Burkett, friend and adviser of Mr. and Mrs. Kirkland, who, for Mrs. Kirkland, negotiated the sale after Mr. Kirkland’s death. These letters are too voluminous to set forth, but they, without dispute, show that the mortgage company was pressing for payment, and that, unless Mrs. Kirkland could provide payment by a sale of the property, there was danger of its total loss to her. Z. T. Burkett, a stock farmer, testified to the effect that he lived near the home of the Kirkland’s, was an intimate acquaintance of Mr. Kirkland, and in daily attendance upon him most of the year preceding his death, and had discussed with him, prior to the time he became very ill, his situation with reference to the land and mortgage against it, and his desire to sell the land; that at the time- of Kirkland’s death, and for several months before, “he had $20.00 an acre on it” ; that the situation had been frequently discussed with Mrs. Kirkland after Mr. Kirkland’s death, and at various times she expressed herself to the effect that she would be willing to close a sale on that basis at any time. There was also evidence tending- to show that for some time efforts by various parties had been made to secure a purchaser of the land at $20 per acre, and that several people had visited the land and viewed it and refused to buy at that price, and that the first buyer’s effort to purchase at that price *127 was that of the Oil Investment Company. Mrs. Kirkland testified, among other things, that: “I sold the property because I was afraid I would lose it; I knew I wasn’t getting what I ought to have, but I was afraid I would lose it and maybe not even have a home for myself and children. I was afraid if I did not take what they offered I might not get anything.”

The evidence also shows that Mr. Burkett was the confidential adviser of Mr. Kirkland before his death, and of Mrs. Kirkland thereafter ; that Mrs. Kirkland was not experienced in business, and that, as she testified, she was “leaving everything to Burkett as I didn’t know what to do or how to start to do anything.” The evidence further tends to show that Burkett, with the assistance perhaps of Mr. Stehlik, a land agent of Wichita Falls, interested the officers of the appellee investment company, who were told by Bur-kett that they could have the land if closed at once at $20 per acre; that the officers of the company and Stehlik and Burkett repaired to the residence of the Kirkland’s and the offer by the company of $20 per acre was made and accepted by Mrs. Kirkland. No evidence has been called to our attention that Burkett had any pecuniary interest in the matter whatever, but Mrs. Kirkland testified that, immediately prior to the offer in behalf of the investment company, a Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W.2d 125, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kirkland-v-oil-inv-co-texapp-1931.