Kuehn v. Kuehn

259 S.W. 290
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1924
DocketNo. 6695. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 259 S.W. 290 (Kuehn v. Kuehn) 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
Kuehn v. Kuehn, 259 S.W. 290 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

BAUGH, J.

This is the second time this case has been before this court on appeal. A full statement of - substantially the same facts involved is found in 232 S. W. 918. A writ of error was granted, and the opinion of the Commission of Appeals is reported in volume 242, p. 719, of the Southwestern Reporter.

R. W. and Emma Kuehn were married about 1885 and lived together until 1914, during which time they accumulated most of the property involved in this suit. On July 28, 1915, they made a separation agreement whereby ■ all their property was conveyed to J. B. Odiorne, as trustee, with the provision that Emma Kuehn be paid $10,000 by the trustee. It also provided that R. W. Kuehn assume all community indebtedness, and .that after payment of the $10,000, the trustee convey all of said property to R. W. Kuehn. Emma Kuehn was granted a divorce on November 17, 1915, and on November 30, 1915, executed a confirmation deed to all said property to R. W. Kuehn, reciting a consideration of $10,000. Only $9,000 was ever paid her. On May 12, 1916, J. E. Odiorne, as trustee, conveyed all of said property to R. W. Kuehn. Kuehn and Odiorne wdre then partners in the cattle business. In 1916 and 1917 they became heavily involved and finally insolvent. In April, 1917, the appellant, North Texas Trust Company, obtained a judgment against them for $64,000, in Tar-rant county, Tex., attached all the lands appearing in the name of R. W. Kuehn, foreclosed its attachment lien, bought in said lands at sheriff’s sale, and credited the amount of its bid-on its judgment.

The appellee, plaintiff below, filed suit on December '23, 1918, against appellants, seeking to annul, cancel, and set aside said separation agreement, and the deed confirming same, and also that of the trustee to R. W. Kuehn, on the ground that the former were procured through fraud, misrepresentation, overreaching, duress, and undue influence. In her prayer for relief she asked:

(1)That said deeds be canceled; that hex title in the lands be declared superior to that of the North Texas Trust Company; that the value of her interest in the community property, both real and personal, on said July 28, 1915, be fixed, together with the profits derived from the lands since the North Texas Trust Company took possession of same; that said lands be partitioned and an amount set aside to her equal in value to her community interest at the date of the separation agreement, plus such share of the profits as she was entitled to.

(2) In the alternative plaintiff asked for cancellation of all said instruments so far as her individual half interest in the community real estate was concerned; that her interest in the personal property and profits from said land since the North Texas Trust Company took possession of same be fixed; that she have judgment against Kuehn for such value of the personalty and against the North Texas Trust Company for her share of the profits from the land since it took possession of same; that a partition of said lands be had, and that a lien be fixed and' foreclosed against the trust company’s interest in same, to secure her interest in the personalty and in the profits arising from the use of the lands.

(3) In the further alternative, that, if both the foregoing be found impracticable, then that the value of her interest in all the community property at the time she executed the separation agreement be fixed; that she have judgment against R. W. Kuehn for such value; that an equitable lien be fixed upon and foreclosed against the lands taken' from R. W. Kuehn by the North Texas Trust Company; and that so much of said lands be ordered sold as were necessary to satisfy such judgment.

Plaintiff admitted in her pleadings Receipt from R. W. Kuehn of $9,000, and asked that such amount be credited on her interest in the community property as same existed on the date the separation agreement was executed. The following, taken from appellants’ brief, substantially states the issues raised by the North Texas Trust Company, one of the'defendants, and appellee’s reply thereto:

“The defendant the North Texas Trust Company answered by general denial and further pleaded estoppel as against plaintiff, in that the plaintiff, long prior to the filing of this suit, and after she. had obtained a divorce from her former husband, R. W. Kuehn, conveyed to him by warranty deed the real estate described in her pleadings and permitted the title to said property to stand in his name and permitted him to borrow from the defendant company the sum of $64,000 while said property was standing in his name, and thus permitted him to obtain credit upon the faith of title appearing to be vested in him; the defendant further alleged that it recovered judgment against the defendant R. W. Kuehn and another in the sum of $62,400 and more, and under said judgment sold the lands in controversy, at which sale it became the purchaser without knowledge, actual or constructive, that the plaintiff was claiming any interest in the property; that it loaned to the defendant R. W. Kuehn the money for which such judgment was obtained after the plaintiff had executed a deed by which the title to the property in controversy was conveyed to the defendant R. W. Kuehn, believing said transfer to be legal and *293 without knowledge or notice of plaintiff’s claim to the property in controversy; that the plaintiff was estopped from setting up any claim in the property by reason of her conduct in conveying the same- to R. W. Kuehn and permitting him to use, occupy, and control the property as his own. This defendant denied specially that there was any undue influence brought to bear upon the plaintiff by her husband, the defendant R. W. Kuehn; that the defendant R. W. Kuehn never deceived or misled the plaintiff in any way in regard to the property settlement; that the plaintiff, knowing the facts connected with said settlement made such settlement under the advice and counsel of her attorneys.
“This defendant pleaded in reconvention for a judgment in the alternative against plaintiff establishing a sum of money paid out in discharge of a note and lien of $7,500, a charge upon the lands in controversy, paid by it. It furthermore pleaded that the lands in controversy in Williamson county were the sole and separate property of defendant R. W. Kuehn, and the plaintiff had no interest in the same. This defendant prayed the plaintiff take nothing, and in the alternative that it have judgment for the sum and amount of the note and lien which it had paid.
“The defendant R. W. Kuehn adopted the answer of his eodefendant, the North Texas Trust Company.
' “By a first supplemental petition, the plaintiff ’denied generally and pleaded specially that she had no knowledge or notice that the defendant R. W. Kuehn was claiming or using the lands in controversy as his own; that the defendant North Texas Trust Company relied upon the personal security and not to any extent upon the apparent ownership of the defendant R. W. Kuehn of the lands in controversy. She pleaded the pendency of cause No. 2060 in the district court of San Saba county, wherein she was plaintiff, involving the lands in controversy as notice of her rights, and likewise pleaded a lis pendens filed for record in San Saba county, on the 28th of July, 1916.

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W. 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kuehn-v-kuehn-texapp-1924.