Kunkel v. Kunkel

515 S.W.2d 941, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2749
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 1974
Docket8481
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 515 S.W.2d 941 (Kunkel v. Kunkel) 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
Kunkel v. Kunkel, 515 S.W.2d 941, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2749 (Tex. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

REYNOLDS, Justice.

Our original opinion reversing the judgment of the trial court and rendering judgment for appellant is withdrawn, and the following opinion, issued sequentially to and as dispositive of appellee’s motion for rehearing, is substituted therefor:

Summary judgment voided a deed, prepared for execution by a husband and wife to convey an undivided one-third interest in 258.23 acres of their land allegedly constituting their community homestead, for lack of the wife’s signature thereon. The deed, executed by the husuand, was valid ab initio to convey an undivided one-third interest in all land exceeding the homestead limitation; and, their subsequent acts in fully releasing the vendor’s lien retained in the deed to secure payment of the vendor’s lien notes they signified were paid constituting formal recognition of the validity of the deed, the husband and wife thereby ratified the deed so that it became operative to convey an undivided one-third interest in the remaining homestead portion of the property. Reversed and rendered.

Paul Schur and his wife, Adele Schur, the parents of three sons and three daughters, owned as community property certain lands situated in Wilbarger County. By three separate deeds dated September 20, 1966, they undertook, according to the deed recitals, to convey to each of their three daughters and her husband an undivided one-third interest in their homeplace consisting of two tracts of land aggregating 258.23 acres, reserving all rents and revenues therefrom for their lifetimes. The consideration expressed in each deed was $25,190 represented by a series of seven interest-bearing vendor’s lien notes, for which the vendor’s lien was retained, payable at annual intervals beginning January 1, 1967.

Two of the deeds were regularly executed and acknowledged, and they are not in issue in these summary proceedings. The remaining deed, the one giving rise to this controversy, purported to convey an undivided one-third interest in the realty to appellant Calvin Kunkel and wife, appellee Clara Anita Kunkel, one of the Schurs’ daughters. Although this deed bears a joint acknowledgment form regularly- completed to certify that both Paul Schur and Adele Schur acknowledged executing the *944 deed, the name of Adele Schur is not signed on the deed, and the name of Paul Schur is twice subscribed thereon. The three deeds, filed for record the day they are dated, were recorded on September 29, 1966, the Schur-Kunkel deed being recorded in volume 247 on page 589 of the Deed Records of Wilbarger County.

The Schurs’ attorney, who was the notary certifying to the Schurs’ acknowledgments of the deeds, mailed to the Kunkels a copy of the deed in which they are the named grantees together with the seven vendor’s lien notes for their execution. The first six vendor’s lien notes were for the sum of $4,000 each and the seventh note was for the amount of $1,190. Each of the notes stated that it was given in part payment for the described property conveyed by the Schurs to Calvin Kunkel and wife, Clara Anita Kunkel.

By the attorney’s transmittal letter, the Kunkels were advised that the Schurs had divided their land among their six children as equally as possible according to the appraised value, and the land received by each was designated. The Kunkels were advised further that a gift of $22,000 of their notes would be made in 1966 and a gift tax return prepared, and the remaining sum of the notes would be given in 1967. As requested, the Kunkels signed the vendor’s lien notes and mailed them to Mr. Schur.

Thereafter, the first five $4,000 notes were noted “Paid in full this the 9-29-66” and the sixth $4,000 note was noted “$2,000 paid this the 9-29-66” above the signatures of Paul Schur and Adele Schur. On the same date the Schurs executed and acknowledged a partial release of the vendor’s lien retained to secure payment of the vendor’s lien notes “described in a certain Warranty Deed executed by Paul Schur, et ux to Calvin Kunkel and wife Clara Anita Kunkel dated the 20th day. of September 1966.” This unrecorded partial release was mailed to the Kunkels.

Later the sixth $4,000 note upon which $2,000 was shown paid on September 29, 1966, was noted “$2,000 PAID THIS THE 1-10-67” and the seventh note for $1,190 was noted “PAID IN FULL THIS THE 1-10-67” over the signatures of Paul Schur and Adele Schur. Two releases dated January 11, 1967, and February 1, 1967, respectively, were executed and acknowledged by Paul Schur and Adele Schur before their same attorney who completed the notarial certificate on the Schur-Kun-kel deed, and both releases were recorded. Other than their dates, the only difference between the two full releases is that the former refers to the partial release of September 29, 1966. Omitting the formal parts, both releases read:

“That in consideration of the payment in full according to the face and tenor thereof, of seven certain vendor’s lien notes described in a certain warranty deed executed by Paul Schur and wife, Adele Schur to Calvin Kunkel and wife, Clara Anita Kunkel dated the 29 (sic) day of September 1966, and recorded in Vol. 247 on page 589 of the records of Deeds of Wilbarger County, Texas
“Paul Schur and wife, Adele Schur the owners and holders of said notes, do hereby release the Vendor’s lien shown by said deed to exist upon the following described land, to secure payment of said notes viz:
“An undivided one-third interest in the North 258.23 acres of Sections 31 and 32, Block 12, H&TC Ry Co Survey, Wil-barger County, Texas.”

It is undisputed that neither Mr. Kunkel nor Mrs. Kunkel made any payment on the notes and that the vendor’s lien retained in the Schur-Kunkel deed was gratuitously released.

On March 31, 1971, the Schurs executed separate wills, each naming their six children as beneficiaries. Adele Schur died April 26, 1971, and Paul Schur died December 31, 1971.

*945 In October of 1972, Clara Anita Kunkel secured a divorce from Calvin M. Kunkel in Randall County. The decree of divorce did not mention the property described in the Schur-Kunkel deed, but it contained this provision: “Any property or any rights of the parties not expressly adjudicated and vested by this decree have not been adjudicated and decreed by this judgment and are not included in the pleadings before this Court or in this judgment.”

Subsequently, appellee Clara Anita Kun-kel initiated these proceedings against appellant Calvin M. Kunkel in the form of a trespass to try title action, alleging that she was the owner of the full one-third interest in the 258.23 acres of land. Alternatively, she sought judgment declaring that the Schur-Kunkel deed is void for the reasons, among others, that (1) it purported to convey the Schurs’ homestead without the joinder of the wife, Adele Schur, or (2) there was no consideration for the deed, and that the property thereby passed and vested under the terms of the wills of the Schurs. Other reasons were pleaded for voiding the deed and there were allegations of the construction that should be given the deed if the court should find it valid.

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Bluebook (online)
515 S.W.2d 941, 1974 Tex. App. LEXIS 2749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kunkel-v-kunkel-texapp-1974.